Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

December 11, 2014

Bringing biodiversity information to life

Filed under: Biodiversity,Challenges — Patrick Durusau @ 2:37 pm

Bringing biodiversity information to life

From the post:

The inaugural GBIF Ebbe Nielsen Challenge aims to inspire scientists, informaticians, data modelers, cartographers and other experts to create innovative applications of open-access biodiversity data.

Background

For the past 12 years, GBIF has awarded the Ebbe Nielsen Prize to recognize outstanding contributions to biodiversity informatics while honouring the legacy of Ebbe Nielsen, one of the principal founders of GBIF, who tragically died just before it came into being.

The Science Committee, working with the Secretariat, has revamped the award for 2015 as the GBIF Ebbe Nielsen Challenge. This open incentive competition seeks to encourage innovative uses of the more than half a billion species occurrence records mobilized through GBIF’s international network. These creative applications of GBIF-mediated data may come in a wide variety of forms and formats—new analytical research, richer policy-relevant visualizations, web and mobile applications, improvements to processes around data digitization, quality and access, or something else entirely. Judges will evaulate submissions on their innovation, functionality and applicability.

As a simple point of departure, participants may wish to review the visual analyses of trends in mobilizing species occurrence data at global and national scales recently unveiled on GBIF.org. Challenge submissions may build on such creations and propose uses or extensions that make GBIF-mediated data even more useful to researchers, policymakers, educators, students and citizens alike.

A jury composed of experts from the biodiversity informatics community will judge the Round One entries collected through this ChallengePost website on their innovation, functionality and applicability, before selecting three to six finalists to compete for a €20,000 First Prize later in 2015.

You can’t argue with the judging criteria:

Innovation

How novel is the submission? A significant portion of the submission should be developed for the challenge. A submission based largely (or entirely) on work published or developed prior to the challenge start date will not be eligible for submission.

Functionality

Does the submission work and show or do something useful?

Applicability

Can the GBIF and biodiversity informatics communities use and/or build on the submission?

Deadline: Tuesday, 3 March 2015 at 5pm CET.

An obvious opportunity to introduce the biodiversity community to topic maps!

Oh, there is a €20,000 first prize and €5,000 second prize. Just something to pique your interest. 😉

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