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From: "Deepsea Dawn" <[log in to unmask]>
To: "Angela Cope" <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Saturday, October 31, 2009 11:12:41 AM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
Subject: Call for Maps: Places & Spaces: Mapping Science Exhibit, 6th Iteration on “Science Maps for Scholars” (2010)
From: Katy Borner < [log in to unmask] >
Date: October 31, 2009 9:10:35 AM PDT
Places & Spaces: Mapping Science Exhibit
Call for Maps: 6th Iteration on “Science Maps for Scholars” (2010)
http://scimaps.org/flat/call
Background and Goals
The Places & Spaces: Mapping Science exhibit was created to inspire cross-disciplinary discussion on how to best track and communicate human activity and scientific progress on a global scale. It has two components: physical exhibits enable the close inspection of high quality reproductions of maps for display at conferences and education centers; the online counterpart ( http://scimaps.org ) provides links to a selected series of maps and their makers along with detailed explanations of how these maps work.
Places & Spaces is a 10-year effort. Each year, 10 new maps are added, which will result in 100 maps total in 2014. Each iteration of the exhibit attempts to learn from the best examples of visualization design in existence. To accomplish this goal, each iteration compares and contrasts four existing maps with six new maps of science. Themes for the different iterations/years are as follows:
• 1st Iteration (2005): The Power of Maps
• 2nd Iteration (2006): The Power of Reference Systems
• 3rd Iteration (2007): The Power of Forecasts
• 4th Iteration (2008): Science Maps for Economic Decision Makers
• 5th Iteration (2009): Science Maps for Science Policy Makers
• 6th Iteration (2010): Science Maps for Scholars • 7th Iteration (2011): Science Maps as Visual Interfaces to Digital Libraries
• 8th Iteration (2012): Science Maps for Kids
• 9th Iteration (2013): Science Maps for Daily Science Forecasts
• 10th Iteration (2014): Telling Lies With Science Maps
Places & Spaces was first shown at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers in April 2005. Since then, the physical exhibit has been displayed at more than 175 venues in over 15 countries, including eleven in Europe, plus Japan, China, Brazil, Canada, and the United States. A schedule of all display locations can be found at http://scimaps.org/flat/exhibitions/ .
Submission Details
The 6th iteration of the Mapping Science exhibit is devoted to science maps that address the needs of scholars. Among others, scholars are researchers, authors, editors, reviewers, teachers, inventors, investigators, team leaders, and science administrators. To fulfill these roles, scholars benefit from a deeper understanding of and more global perspective on science. As science becomes more interdisciplinary and international, scholars must become “sciencetrotters” as well as globetrotters, crossing existing boundaries with ease. They must be fluent in multiple science languages and cultures to harvest the best data resources, theory, tools, and expertise independent of their origin. Maps of science can guide scholars in knowledge access and management activities as well as their evaluation of certifiable novelty and impact.
We invite maps that show a visual rendering of a dataset together with a legend, textual description, and acknowledgements as required to interpret the map. Science map dimensions can be abstract, geographical, or feature-based, but are typically richer than simple x, y plots. Scientific knowledge can be used to generate a reference system over which other data, e.g., funding opportunities or job openings, are overlaid or be projected onto another reference system, e.g., a map of the world, but must be prominently featured. See http://scimaps.org/static/docs/all-maps.pdf for an overview of all 50 existing maps.
Each initial entry must be submitted by Jan 9th, 2010 and needs to include:
• Low resolution version of map
• Title of work
• Author(s) name, email address, affiliation, mailing address
• Copyright holder (if different from authors)
• Description of work: Science policy maker needs addressed, data used, data analysis, visualization techniques applied, and main insights gained (100-300 words)
• References to publications in which the map appeared
• Links to related projects/works
Entries should be submitted via email to the curators of the exhibit: Katy Börner ( [log in to unmask] ) and Elisha F. Hardy ( [log in to unmask] ) using the email subject header “Mapping Science Entry”.
Review Process
All submissions will be reviewed by the exhibit advisory board and invited scholars from academia, industry, and government. Submissions will be judged in terms of
• Scientific value – quality of data collection, analysis, result communication. Appropriate (innovative?) application of existing algorithms and/or development of new approaches.
• Value for scholars – what major insight does the map provide and why does it matter? Is the map easy to understand by scholars and the exhibit audience?
Final Submission
Authors of winning entries will be contacted end of January and invited to submit final entries by March 31st, 2010. Each final entry comprises:
• Title of Work
• Author(s) name, email address, affiliation, mailing address
• 24 x 30 inch, 300 dpi, landscape version of map
• Official map description (200 words)
• Biographies and photos of all authors (100 words each)
• Signed copyright and reproduction agreement
Map makers are welcome to use the expertise and resources of the exhibit curators when designing their final maps. The layout and production of the 6th iteration maps are expected to be ready for display by April 30th, 2010.
Important Dates
Submit initial entries: January 9th, 2010
Notification to mapmakers: January 31st, 2010
Submit final entries: March 31st, 2010
6th Iteration ready for display: April 30th, 2010
Exhibit Advisory Board
• Deborah MacPherson, Accuracy&Aesthetics
• Kevin Boyack, SciTech Strategies, Inc.
• Sara Irina Fabrikant, Associate Professor of Geography and head of the Geographic Information Visualization and Analysis (GIVA) group at the GIScience, Geography Department, University of Zürich, Switzerland
• Peter A. Hook, Law Librarian, Indiana University
• André Skupin, Associate Professor of Geography, San Diego State University
• Bonnie DeVarco, BorderLink
• Chaomei Chen, Associate Professor in the College of Information Science and Technology, Drexel University
• Dawn Wright, Professor of Geography and Oceanography, Oregon State University
Please feel free to send any questions you might have regarding the judging process to Katy ( [log in to unmask] ) and Elisha ( [log in to unmask] ). Make sure to keep the subject header.
--
Katy Borner
Victor H. Yngve Professor of Information Science
Director, CI for Network Science Center, http://cns.slis.indiana.edu Curator, Mapping Science exhibit, http://scimaps.org School of Library and Information Science, Indiana University
Wells Library 021, 1320 E. Tenth Street, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA
Phone: (812) 855-3256 Fax: -6166
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