Newsletter no. 8, February 2012

Agricultural Information Management Standards (AIMS)
Newsletter
no. 8, February 2012

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What is a Content Management System (CMS)?

 


Monthly Spotlight
 

A software package that allows an individual or a community of users to easily publish, manage and organize a wide variety of content on a website.

About CMS

What is a CMS?

Why do you need a CMS?

Web content management explained

CMS comparison White Paper


CMS & AIMS

AgriDrupal



Upcoming Events

Lithuania. Conference "The Value of Unique Scholarly Identifiers to Academics, Institutions and Countries"

Malaysia. ICOSE 2012 : International Conference on Ontological and Semantic Engineering

India. 57th All India Library Conference

India. International Conference on Digital Information and Wireless

USA. SPARC Open Access Meeting 2012


More at Events Service


 

AgriDrupal develops set of features to implement document repository

The AgriDrupal community developed a set of features that packages the essential AgriDrupal functionalities into a few modules that can be downloaded and installed on any Drupal website.

The first set of features is called "Document-Like Information Objects (DLIO)" and is available at www.agridrupal.org. The DLIO Features deploy the following AgriDrupal core functionalities in any website: document repository management; indexing of any content with AGROVOC; OAI-PMH provider interface for the local document repository; repository importing functionalities; XML exports using the AGRIS AP metadata set.

In the near future the AgriDrupal team will make more features available, like managing news and events with standard-compliant feeds, and managing experts and institutions with suitable metadata and AGROVOC terms.

 
 

News


The AIMS website evaluated: summary report e-consultation online

In December 2011 the AIMS team held a closed e-consultation, now publicly accessible, to evaluate the AIMS website. Different aspects of AIMS, like audience, objectives, content and technical aspects, were examined by 18 information management experts from various countries and communities of practice. The summary report can now be downloaded from the AIMS e-consulation page.

AGROVOC topic map: a new web application

The Humanities GIS Research Group (Japan) has developed a web application based on AGROVOC, called AGROVOC topic map. It includes browsing and search functionalities in all AGROVOC languages, and graphic views of the concept hierarchies (Vizigate). The system uses AGROVOC URIs, and includes links to Wikipedia.

Workshops in Asia and Latin America link to CIARD initiative

In 2011, information management in agriculture received further support in the Asia Pacific region, through the conduct of three sub-regional workshopsin Bangladesh, Thailand and Fiji. Their goal was to highlight the importance of Open Access and share success stories on the use of ICT-enabled agricultural extension. In Brazil a regional workshop was organized with the scope of creating a platform for all agricultural institutions in the region to exchange efforts on capacity building and knowledge management.  All workshops linked to the CIARD initiative.

Old VocBench web services synchronized to latest version of AGROVOC

The VocBench team completed the porting of the old web services that were not synchronized to the latest version of AGROVOC. VocBench terms are accessible via web services hosted at research partner MIMOS Berhad and can be called from any client application. Users can experiment with the services.

FAO and UNESCO-IOC/IODE meet to discuss AgriOcean DSpace

In January, FAO and UNESCO-IOC/IODE met in Oostende, Belgium to discuss the joint project of AgriOcean Dspace and its future developments. The outcome was that a new version will be released with improved features such as, improved batch import and enhanced authority control. In pursuant to this meeting, an improved easy-to-install version on Google Code for Windows is now available.

More news at Of Interest

5 Questions in 5 Minutes with Elizabeth Ascencio Jurado

 

Who are the users of AIMS and what do they think about agricultural information management standards? In this section AIMS users from all around the world answer five questions on the benefits and use of the AIMS website.

Tell us something about yourself... what is your background and role in the organization you are working for?

My name is Elizabeth Ascencio Jurado, I work in Lima (Peru) as an Agricultural Information Management Specialist at the Agricultural Dictatorate of Environmental Affairs (Ministry of Agriculture). I am responsable for the management of the Comunication Services, Broadcasting, Documentation of the land and soils information, along with the agro-environmental issues that the institution generates. In adition to fostering the creation of networks and agrarian information systems within the agricultural sector.

Years ago, I was in charge of the library especialized in natural resourses, the former National Institute of Natural Resources of Peru (INRENA). Later on, I became the responsable of the institutional library of the recently created National Water Authority, a decentralized public agency of the Ministry of Agriculture (MINAG). Within this area, I designed an investigation project for knowledge management aimed to create water culture in Peru.

All these years of work in the agricultural sector have been useful to learn, analyze and apply the standards that fit better each task. This is how we started with WebAgris, AGRIS AP, AGROVOC, for the physically registered literature. And more recently AgriOcean DSpace, for the digital information available in the Internet.

The humanistic education received as a librarian with a Master’s Degree on Educational Management and a Master of Information Management and Knowledge, obtained at the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in cooperation agreement with the Paul Valery Montpellier III University in France, has made me sensible to value information as an input to development and a better quality of life for the population in general. Also, on how the information can be transformed into new knowledge by managing it according to the models of GCand with the use of platforms which support its management.

How did you get in contact with AIMS?

FAO was an important point of reference for me, I got in contact with its activities thanks to the support provided in my country to develop skills and capacities of our people in the agricultural sector. We carried out workshops back then with AGROREDPERU on AGRIS AP, Open Access, Scientific Production through AGORA among other matters. All these activities were crowned with the realization of RIBDA 2009, an international event that gathered 300 information management experts form America and Europe. That specific moment reinforced the knowledge of the quality and solidity with which FAO handles information and validates its standards for the management.That is where the AIMS portal ends up being very useful and a necessary source of daily practice to carry out our work. I daily consult it and read the e-mails sent, as well as referencing colleagues in Peru for consultation.

What is your opinion on AIMS?

It achieves its objectives, trains new agents on agricultural information, reports on progress made in standards, events, news, communicates best practices, etc. It is agile, communicative, participatory, multidisciplinary and comprehensive, because it allows the connection of people with similar interests while favoring the creation of a specialized knowledge network of in GIA. Its technical solidity gives us confidence to turn to it for consultation whenever we require solutions to specific problems.

According to you, what is the most important benefit that AIMS provides to the agricultural information management community?

Its strength lies in the awareness that on the other side of the line and of the sea, we have a group of people with the expertise required to consult issues of agricultural information management, with models of appropriate technological tools, experiences, best practices and open participation in communities enrolled in AIMS. Its benefit is that we know we can count on the support needed to technically process the agrarian literature with the thoroughness and quality of documentary data, handling it for inclusion in the platforms and can be then retrieved by item.

How do you think that information management standards can contribute to agricultural research for development?

The use of a common language to facilitate communication of agricultural knowledge, is its first success factor to generate new knowledge. It is the greatest contribution that the objectives of AIMS can give to the development of Agrarian scientific Research. Also, giving researchers tools that enhance interoperability and scientific communication treated in different forms and levels, thus transforming the implicit knowledge of an individual into explicit, allowing the flow between systems and giving value to agricultural information generated in a given country. My main concern is that it becomes a common and daily practice, used with familiarity by agents at all levels, especially by the researchers. That is why, the Ministry of Agriculture in Peru, (MINAG), facilitates its dissemination and emphasises the necessity of application for the agrarian information generated.


The scope of the AIMS Newsletter is to bring under the attention of the AIMS community recent news, events and achievements in the field of agricultural information management. If you have any contribution, suggestion, or need assistance with the newsletter, please contact us at [email protected]

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