Published in conjunction with the below manuscript, this database includes all the output files from a grid search across a design domain governing elastomeric tilted beams according to a Fourier series-based parameterization. For full details, please reference the text. For a description of this database's organization, please see "ReadMe.txt."
Yoo, D., Hertlein, N., Chen, V. W., Willey, C. L., Gillman, A., Juhl, A., Anand, S., Vemaganti, K., and Buskohl, P. R. (2021). "Bayesian Optimization of Equilibrium States in Elastomeric Beams." ASME. J. Mech. Des. 143(11): 111702. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4050743
Data collected to identify use of special education vouchers in OH, GA and FLA and if information provided regarding loss of least restrictive environment civil rights.
The Workshop is an online platform where members of the public offer their own responses to artworks and other content included in the exhibition Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... Many of the voices in the Workshop belong to Greater Cincinnatians who are Black, Indigenous, or people of color. Responses will accumulate throughout the run of the exhibition, and will remain online after the exhibition closes.
The explanatory texts that appear on the walls of the museum are customarily written by curators, who balance factors including the artist’s point of view, institutional expectations, their own training and perspective, and the need to communicate with members of the public. Most but not all of the curators who wrote the explanatory texts in Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... were trained in practices of social critique similar to those used by the artist, and are White. The purpose of the Workshop is to create space for more voices, views and ways of speaking about art to be heard.
A presentation from the Society of Ohio Archivists 2020 meeting.
The University of Akron University Archives and the University of Cincinnati Libraries will present and analyze challenges faced by institutions looking to create, implement and improve their digital preservation program. Armed with the NDSA Levels of Digital Preservation and the Digital Preservation Capability Maturity Model (DPCMM), both institutions discuss strategies to tackle common issues such as minimal staffing, limited resources, procrastination, and legacy digital content. Each institution will also discuss strategies used to handle unique challenges faced in crafting their individual digital preservation policies.
Presentation recording available: https://youtu.be/czemLLqXNh8
A presentation at the joint Upper Midwest Digital Collections Conference and Minnesota Digital Library Annual Meeting in 2020.
The diversity of a digital collection is often assessed by considering the diversity of its content. In order for collections to be truly inclusive, however, they need to emphasize usability alongside broad representation. The University of Cincinnati Libraries discusses how diversity and accessibility are intersectional considerations of digital collections, and introduces newly implemented workflows and standards designed to create accessible, inclusive digital collections that broaden usability for all.
Presentation recording available (Starts at 14 minutes, 30 seconds): https://youtu.be/srIPaD7RvYo
The files in this work represent the presentations and workshop content from the 5th UC Data Day held 2020-10-23.
The theme was “World Changing Data: How Digital Data Will Change Our Future”.
The Keynote speaker was Glenn Ricart, of US Ignite - "Smart Runs on Data"
Interactive Panel featuring: Michael Dunaway (moderator) - Whitney Gaskins (Asst Dean, CEAS - Incl Excellence & Comm Engagmnt) - Zvi Biener (Assoc Professor, A&S Philosophy) - Prashant Khare (Asst Professor, CEAS - Aerospace Eng & Eng Mechanics)- Sam Anand (Professor, CEAS - Mechanical Eng) - Achala Vagal
(Professor Clinical - GEO, COM Radiology Neuroradiology)
Power Sessions:
George Turner - Indiana University - High-Performance Computing at UC
Erin McCabe - University of Cincinnati - Text Mining, Natural Language Processing & AI
link to slides - https://bit.ly/dataday_slides
link to code - https://bit.ly/dataday_code
Videos of the day can be found on the UC Libraries STRC1 youtube channel - https://www.youtube.com/c/STRC1/videos
The data sets were derived from coronavirus related scientific literature using the CORD-19 dataset released by the Allen Institute of Artificial Intelligence as of July 14, 2020, using the Elasticsearch engine hosted by the Digital Scholarship Center (DSC). Through indexing the full-text and the metadata of the article corpus, the research team generated a full-corpus model and 7 different models corresponding to key viral outbreaks from the past several decades' coronaviruses (SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV, and SARS- CoV-2) and non-coronaviruses (HIV, Zika, H1N1, and Ebola). The targeted subsets of the articles used two or more occurrences of virus-specific keywords drawn from conventions established by the World Health Organization.
The data sets were derived from coronavirus related scientific literature using the CORD-19 dataset released by the Allen Institute of Artificial Intelligence as of July 14, 2020, using the Elasticsearch engine hosted by the Digital Scholarship Center (DSC). Through indexing the full-text and the metadata of the article corpus, the research team generated a full-corpus model and 7 different models corresponding to key viral outbreaks from the past several decades' coronaviruses (SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV, and SARS- CoV-2) and non-coronaviruses (HIV, Zika, H1N1, and Ebola). The targeted subsets of the articles used two or more occurrences of virus-specific keywords drawn from conventions established by the World Health Organization.