Community Announcements

Tell the iDigBio community about your upcoming events, projects or other items pertinent to biodiversity and biological collections.

Anyone with an iDigBio account may create a community announcement. Once logged in, you can create a new community announcement here: New Community Announcement

Postdoc in biodiversity informatics

The Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center (BioKIC) at Arizona State University (ASU) invites applications for a postdoctoral position in biodiversity informatics and data publishing. The position is part of a new Biodiversity Data Science Initiative launched at ASU and led by Beckett Sterner and Nico Franz. The initiative will develop a next-generation solution to overcome the performance limits of taxonomic names as fundamental categories for grouping all forms of data about living things into scientifically meaningful units. Prevalent existing solutions bundle data by names alone, without accounting for changes in their scientific meanings, which causes incorrect data packaging and decision-making. Taxonomic intelligence provides the mapping between names and concepts that is necessary to resolve names accurately into meanings despite changing relationships across time and experts. The initiative will focus on building and promoting an innovative web platform that leverages theoretical advancements and prototype software for taxonomic concept alignment, with the goal to establish a scalable taxonomic intelligence service that will carry value for scientific audiences, science publishers, government agencies, and environmental consulting firms. The platform will accelerate the growth of high-quality, reproducible biological data by driving the adoption of taxonomic intelligence metadata in scientific datasets and journals.

Exploratory e-mail inquiries are strongly encouraged. Interested applicants should send a one-page research statement, clearly indicating their qualifications and motivation to join the project, Curriculum Vitae, and contact information for three references to beckett.sterner@asu.edu. The review of applications is now on a rolling basis and will continue until a suitable candidate has been found. The start date is flexible, though with a preference for an immediate start.

 

Workshop Announcement: Data Carpentries and Genomics at UF

The UF Carpentries Club is offering a two-day Data Carpentries workshop in Genomics.  This workshop is focused on helping the UF community get started learning to work with genomics data, data management, and analysis for genomics research.  Including best practices for organization of bioinformatics projects and data, use of command line utilities, use of command line tools to analyze sequence quality and perform variant calling, and connecting to and using Hi. Need to learn some new programming for a class? Want to collaborate effectively with your peers? We were there once too. Come start learning with us.

 

There will be a two-day workshop on Thursday and Friday, April 11 – 12, 2019, hosted in room 150 of the Emerging Pathogens Institute.

 

Seats are limited to 24 participants and there is a $46 registration fee, payable by credit card, which will include breaks and lunch on both days (in registration, note if you any dietary restrictions - vegetarian, vegan, or gluten-free).

 

Registration is required. Please plan to attend the entire two days. Also please be aware that is will be the first time these lessons will have ever been taught. We will do our best to stick with the marked schedule, but please be prepared if lesson exceed the allotted time.

 

For the schedule and more details about the workshop and requirements, visit https://uf-carpentry.github.io/2019-04-11-ufepi-genomics/.

 

Click here for more details and to register http://reg.conferences.dce.ufl.edu/SSP/1400071955.

 

Thursday-Friday, April 11-12, 2019

9:00 AM – 4:30 PM

UF Informatics & Biodiversity Institutes

E251 Computer Science and Engineering Bldg. (CSE)

432 Newell Road

Gainesville, FL 32611

 

3 OPEN POSITIONS (Software Engineer, Data Analyst, Mobile App Developer)

3 OPEN POSITIONS (Software Engineer, Data Analyst, Mobile App Developer)

 

The Map of Life project is seeking a Full-stack Software Engineer, Data Analyst, and Mobile App Developer to join our growing team of developers and scientists at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.

Full details for each of the positions and how to apply can be found at: 

https://bgc.yale.edu/opportunities

 

Open Position at the New York State Museum Research and Collections Division

The New York State Education Department’s Office of Cultural Education is seeking candidates for a Museum Scientist 2 position in the New York State Museum’s (NYSM) Research and Collections Division. The Research and Collections Division is responsible for curation of New York State’s natural and cultural history collections. Under the supervision of the Director, Research and Collections Division, the incumbent of this position will serve as manager of the MIMSY XG database, an Oracle relational database that is used to inventory and track the Museum’s collections. Details on the position and application instructions are available at this address: http://www.nysed.gov/hr/employment/museum-scientist-2-1551097755 Applications are due by March 18, 2019.

Registration open for "Strategic Planning for Herbaria” online course

The Society of Herbarium Curators and iDigBio are pleased to announce a 7-week "Strategic Planning for Herbaria” online course. 

Take this opportunity to introduce new purpose and excitement into your organization.  Prepare to relate your collection’s compelling vision to stakeholders and discuss long-term goals and strategies with administrators.  

The “Strategic Planning for Herbaria” course will occur on Fridays from 2:00–3:00 Eastern Standard Time from April 5–May 17, 2019.  We anticipate that the course will require 3–5 hours of work per week, including the 1 hour in-class.  The goal is to produce a short (5–10 pages) strategic plan for each represented herbarium.  Each plan will address vision, mission, stakeholders, strategies, goals, objectives, evaluation, and sustainability, among other things. The process is at least as valuable as the product, and you might find that the exercises benefit your herbarium in unexpected ways. This is the third year that this course will be offered.

The course will be capped at 15 participants to ensure adequate opportunities to participate in discussions.  We are looking for creative, committed participants who can help us to continue building momentum for this as an annual event.  If multiple individuals from an herbarium are interested in participating in the course, we ask that one formally apply and the others participate in the out-of-class exercises and brainstorming sessions.    

To apply, please fill out this short Google Form by March 18.  Admission decisions will be made shortly thereafter.

With best regards,

Austin Mast (Past-President, Society of Herbarium Curators) and David Jennings (Project Manager, iDigBio)

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