Hi All,

Apologies for any cross-posting but thought some of you might be interested. 
Please do vote if you have a favorite idea from our entries.

Best

Robert

**********************************
Robert H. McDonald
Associate Dean for Library Technologies and Digital Libraries
Associate Director, Data to Insight Center-Pervasive Technology Institute
Executive Director, Kuali OLE
Indiana University
Herman B Wells Library 234
1320 East 10th Street
Bloomington, IN 47405
Phone: 812-856-4834
Email: [email protected]
Skype/GTalk: rhmcdonald
AIM/MSN: rhmcdonald1


________________________________


The Finalists are IN!

The judges have selected ten finalists for the Apps for Library Idea Challenge 
- http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/

The Apps for Library Idea Challenge launched in May.  Librarians were asked to 
describe an app idea, the value for users and a typical user/workflow in order 
to compete for prizes and hopefully see their app idea built and launched.  40 
ideas were submitted and vetted by the SciVerse Applications team.  The 
international panel of judges then narrowed the field to ten 
finalists<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/>.

We are now entering the next phase of the competition... the Collaborative 
phase.  We invite you to review the finalist app ideas and share your opinion 
(positive or negative) on whether such ideas are viable.  Such feedback will 
help evolve the app concepts and will subsequently inform the voting that’ll 
start on October 17th.  All eligible (substantive) comments will be entered 
into a drawing for one of ten gift cards for USD 50.  If you have any other 
questions or comments please get in touch with me 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>).

In their own words, the finalists are:
Determining the number of authors per 
article<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/determining-the-number-of-authors-per-article/>
This application would count the number of authors per article per year in a 
broad topical search results set. For example, in the search set [(rna or 
"ribonucleic acid") and (2000-2011)], what % papers have 1 author, % papers 
have 2 authors, % papers have 3 authors, up to what % have 10 authors, by year.
Journal Abbreviation 
Translator<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/journal-abbreviation-translator/>
Journal titles in the reference sections of papers are frequently presented in 
an abbreviated format (e.g. J Am Coll Surg for Journal of the American College 
of Surgeons (New York NY). Often it is necessary to ascertain the full title of 
a journal before, for example, searching for holdings on a library catalogue 
which do not generally include title abbreviations. This App will allow users 
to quickly and simply look up titles for given abbreviations, or vice versa 
within the SciVerse platform.
Journals/Conferences @ Your 
Fingertips<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/journalsconferences-your-fingertips/>
Identify the top 20 journal/conference titles relating to the user’s search 
results, by counting the no. of articles retrieved from each journal and 
provide a ranking for the top 20 journal/conference titles that these articles 
appear in. Automatically provide RSS feeds on the latest Table of Contents for 
these top 20 journals to the user.
JTOCs 2 Go<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/jtocs-2-go/>
Set up and easily customize a journal table of contents service (presumably 
based on Scopus collection but ideally regardless of publisher or source 
platform). Links can be configured to an institutional license (OpenURL or 
Proxy) to enable full-text access and linked into existing apps such as Share, 
SciverNote, and Mendeley Readers (either individual citations or batch).
SciVerse Live Chat<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/sciverse-live-chat/>
The idea is an app that using live chat technologies connects library 
assistants with researchers.  The application workflow could be: 1. A library 
assistant creates an account (it requires institution’s IP range) and logins 
using the SciVerse live chat website. 2. When a researcher needs help, he 
simply has to click the “Live Chat” app. Then, he will be connected with a 
local library assistant. 3. During the session, the library assistant will be 
able to see information such as user’s query.
SciVerse Search with 
Support<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/sciverse-search-with-support/>
Would combine the functionality of the SciVerse apps with the ability to IM a 
librarian if the library uses AIM or Meebo to provide instant message reference 
services. In the preferences screen, the user could add the screen name of the 
library’s AIM or Meebo account, and have it available when they need assistance.
Search Aid<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/search-aid/>
This is to support search in SciVerse, Scopus, etc. and should be optional. 
When selected, each word in a query is checked against a thesaurus/dictionary 
for alternative terms. Alternative terms (synonyms) should be combined with OR 
in the query.
Visualization of 
Facets<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/visualization-of-facets/>
Provide intuitive visualization of result sets, with drag-and-drop capabilities 
to combine concepts. Show relative size of sets based upon results, overlap of 
concepts, and citation relationship of concepts as space between sets.
Vocabulary Mapping<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/vocabulary-mapping/>
An application that would analyze a keyword search and generate some form of 
tag cloud with recommended controlled vocabulary terms. If this were somehow 
able to visually convey the number of records under each term, and the 
interrelation between them, I think that would be beneficial. I’m trying to 
describe something that would be a cross between a traditional tag cloud, like 
that of Delicious, and something possibly like either LivePlasma.com 
recommendation engine or AquaBrowser’s sidebar.
Yumetrics or 
SciMetrics<http://www.appsforlibrary.com/entries/yumetrics-or-scimetrics/>
I would like to see a researcher be presented with his/her own hit/citation 
data, updated dynamically in the online continuum from pre- to post-pub, 
whenever they are logged into the website, which may mean being able 
easily/instantly to call it up through an app. Not only is the information of 
professional interest to the user, there is also a semi-tangible bit of 
stroking that is simply pleasing, thus giving the user a pleasant experience. 
The value of that cannot be overestimated.
Click through to see the full details, value for the user, typical workflows 
and images related to the ideas.  Don’t forget to add your comments.
Stay tuned for the voting and selection of the winners.  These will be 
announced at the Charleston Conference<http://www.katina.info/conference/> on 
November 2-5.

Reply via email to