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2022 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 102478
Author(s):  
Sung Un Kim ◽  
Youngok Choi ◽  
Jeremy Myntti

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Claire Hall

<p>Community archiving is a movement with its origins in the grass-roots activities of documenting, recording and exploring community heritage in a way that focuses on community participation and ownership of records. This research was about a Māori archiving community of practice from Taranaki and investigated how the training they received created outcomes for their taonga archives and families. It did this by answering three research questions designed to identify how post-custodial trends in community archiving resonated with, or differed from, the methods employed by 11 former students of Te Pūtē Routiriata o Taranaki community archive in New Plymouth. This research took a qualitative oral history approach to data gathering and used thematic analysis to examine evidence gathered from three generations of whānau archivists. It investigated whether community archiving had enhanced their collections of whānau history passed down from generation to generation and connected the close family groups that were looking after them. This study proposes a concept of whānau-led collection management as a model of practice for flax-roots communities and public heritage institutions that work with taonga Māori. It explains the link between collectively caring for archival collections and positive outcomes for whānau engagement with te reo Māori and other forms of cultural identity building. It draws on international examples to suggest ways that practices of community archiving, such as digitisation and digital archiving, can bridge the gap between community-led and institutional methods of caring for tangible and intangible cultural heritage.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Claire Hall

<p>Community archiving is a movement with its origins in the grass-roots activities of documenting, recording and exploring community heritage in a way that focuses on community participation and ownership of records. This research was about a Māori archiving community of practice from Taranaki and investigated how the training they received created outcomes for their taonga archives and families. It did this by answering three research questions designed to identify how post-custodial trends in community archiving resonated with, or differed from, the methods employed by 11 former students of Te Pūtē Routiriata o Taranaki community archive in New Plymouth. This research took a qualitative oral history approach to data gathering and used thematic analysis to examine evidence gathered from three generations of whānau archivists. It investigated whether community archiving had enhanced their collections of whānau history passed down from generation to generation and connected the close family groups that were looking after them. This study proposes a concept of whānau-led collection management as a model of practice for flax-roots communities and public heritage institutions that work with taonga Māori. It explains the link between collectively caring for archival collections and positive outcomes for whānau engagement with te reo Māori and other forms of cultural identity building. It draws on international examples to suggest ways that practices of community archiving, such as digitisation and digital archiving, can bridge the gap between community-led and institutional methods of caring for tangible and intangible cultural heritage.</p>


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Krystyna K. Matusiak ◽  
Sarah Werling ◽  
Lisa Donovan ◽  
Sam Carlson
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rastko Ciric ◽  
Romy Lorenz ◽  
William Thompson ◽  
Mathias Goncalves ◽  
Eilidh MacNicol ◽  
...  

Abstract Neuroimaging templates and corresponding atlases play a central role in experimental workflows and are the foundation for reporting standardised results. The proliferation of templates and atlases is one relevant source of methodological variability across studies, which has been recently brought to attention as an important challenge to reproducibility in neuroscience. Unclear nomenclature, an overabundance of template variants and options, inadequate provenance tracking and maintenance, and poor concordance between atlases introduce further unreliability into reported results. We introduce TemplateFlow, a cloud-based repository of human and nonhuman imaging templates paired with a client application for programmatically accessing resources. TemplateFlow is designed to be extensible, providing a transparent pathway for researchers to contribute and vet templates and their associated atlases. Following software engineering best practices, TemplateFlow leverages technologies for unambiguous resource identification, data management, versioning and synchronisation, programmatic extensibility, and continuous integration. By equipping researchers with a robust resource for using and evaluating templates, TemplateFlow will contribute to increasing the reliability of neuroimaging results.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Ciric ◽  
R Lorenz ◽  
WH Thompson ◽  
M Goncalves ◽  
E MacNicol ◽  
...  

Neuroimaging templates and corresponding atlases play a central role in experimental workflows and are the foundation for reporting standardised results. The proliferation of templates and atlases is one relevant source of methodological variability across studies, which has been recently brought to attention as an important challenge to reproducibility in neuroscience. Unclear nomenclature, an overabundance of template variants and options, inadequate provenance tracking and maintenance, and poor concordance between atlases introduce further unreliability into reported results. We introduce TemplateFlow, a cloud-based repository of human and nonhuman imaging templates paired with a client application for programmatically accessing resources. TemplateFlow is designed to be extensible, providing a transparent pathway for researchers to contribute and vet templates and their associated atlases. Following software engineering best practices, TemplateFlow leverages technologies for unambiguous resource identification, data management, versioning and synchronisation, programmatic extensibility, and continuous integration. By equipping researchers with a robust resource for using and evaluating templates, TemplateFlow will contribute to increasing the reliability of neuroimaging results.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 91
Author(s):  
Nurul Farida

Kajian di bidang kearsipan memiliki cakupan yang sangat luas. Kecenderungan topik penelitian atau kajian yang dilakukan dapat menjadi gambaran akan kondisi yang terjadi di bidang kearsipan. Jurnal Khazanah: Jurnal Pengembangan Kearsipan dan Journal of the Archives and Records Association sebagai salah satu jurnal yang terakreditasi dipilih untuk diteliti lebih lanjut mengenai kecenderungan topik penelitian yang ada pada keduanya. Penelitian ini dilakukan untuk memberikan referensi kepada peneliti di bidang kearsipan mengenai kecenderungan penelitian kearsipan pada saat ini. Penelitian dilakukan menggunakan analisis Co-word melalui 2 aplikasi, yakni Pajek dan VOSviewer. Berdasarkan penelitian diketahui bahwa dalam kurun waktu 4 tahun terakhir,  pada jurnal Khazanah: Jurnal Pengembangan Kearsipan terdapat 111 kata kunci yang berbeda dan membentuk 492 garis penghubung. Sepuluh kata kunci dengan link terkuat pada jurnal Khazanah: Jurnal Pengembangan Kearsipan, antara lain: arsip (60), Universitas Gadjah Mada (24), arsiparis (18), informasi (18), NSPK (14), pengolahan (13), arsip digital (12), kearsipan (12), sosialisasi (12), dan edukasi (12). Pada Journal of the Archives and Records Association, terdapat 188 kata kunci yang berbeda dan membentuk 1.120 garis penghubung. Sepuluh kata kunci dengan link terkuat pada Journal of the Archives and Records Association, antara lain: archive (85), community archive (48), local authority archives (42), affect (36), digitization (34), museums (24), Wales (22), impact (19), organization (18), dan fiduciarity (18).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Brus ◽  
Jani Gustafsson ◽  
Osku Kempinen ◽  
Gijs de Boer ◽  
Anne Hirsikko

Abstract. Small Unmanned Aerial Systems (sUAS) are becoming very popular as affordable and reliable observation platforms. The Lower Atmospheric Process Studies at Elevation - a Remotely-piloted Aircraft Team Experiment (LAPSE-RATE), conducted in the San Luis Valley of Colorado (USA) between July 14th – 20th, 2018, gathered together numerous sUAS, remote sensing equipment and ground based instrumentation. Flight teams from the Finnish Meteorological Institute and the Kansas State University co-operated during LAPSE-RATE to measure and investigate the properties of aerosol particles and gases at the surface and in the lower atmosphere. During LAPSE-RATE the deployed instrumentation operated reliably, resulting in a scientifically sound observational dataset. Our observations included aerosol particle number concentrations and size distributions, concentrations of CO2 and water vapor, and meteorological parameters. All data sets have been uploaded to the Zenodo LAPSE-RATE community archive (https://zenodo.org/communities/lapse-rate/). The dataset DOIs for FMI airborne measurements and surface measurements are available here: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3993996, Brus et al. (2020a), and for KSU airborne measurements and surface measurements are available here: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3736772, Brus et al. (2020b).


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