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Social media How it can help you do science Ross Mounce @rmounce http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3520-2046

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Social media

How it can help you do science

Ross Mounce @rmounce

http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3520-2046

Talk structure & content

* A short introduction to the social web

* Simple generic points, widely applicable

* Mode & tool specific tips- mostly on Blogging, Tweeting & GitHub

Disclaimers (many): This is a 20min talk. I can’t cover everything. What I’m going to say is based mostly upon just opinion.

You can see my slides again online at: (I’ll also tweet this link from @rmounce) http://www.slideshare.net/rossmounce/social-media-for-science

Most of the ‘ideas’ in this talk are not original, nor mine. Propagate as you wish!

This is a standard open science slide I’ve adapted from Cameron Neylon.Use it when giving talks to make your preferences known to your audience.

Source: http://cameronneylon.net/blog/some-slides-for-granting-permissions-or-not-in-presentations/ Tip #1: include

*clickable* links

What is social media?

Interaction among people in which they create, share, and/or exchange information

and ideas in virtual communities and networks…

...exchange of user-generated content

* Blogging * Social Networking Sites* Microblogging * Content Communities

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media

Examples of the social web

Don’t worry about all the different networks/tools

Source: http://arbent.net/blog/social-media-circles-icon-setThese are just some of many

The focus of this talk

Tip #2: Always label/explain images if possible Many web-users & academics are blind or visually-impaired

Twitter YouTube LinkedIn

Google+ WordPress GitHub

Choose the right tool for the job

Each social network/tool has its strengths and weaknesses:

Twitter is great for quick real-time discussion & sharing links - but it’s not a platform for detailed debate or lengthy code.

LinkedIn is good for reaching a more senior / higher-up audience, and also job recruiters. Awful for discussion.

Youtube + Soundcloud are brilliant for second by second analysis, discussion & sharing of audio/video, but little else.

Different people use things differently

Sounds simple, but it’s important to bear in mind.

1.) Personally, I use Facebook exclusively just for friends.It’s a closed-ish private-space for me.

2.) But others happily use it as a public-facing profile to interact with anyone and everyone.

3.) Others still maintain a separate ‘personal’ & ‘public’ fb persona.

Be conscious that other people may do things differently...

Be nice. Be careful what you say Social media has the power to immense good and bad(Both for yourself and others)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter_Joke_Trial

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Miller_(psychologist)#Twitter_obesity_controversy

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joyce_Evans

RT’s != endorsement

Always remember your purpose

The social web, networks and tools are there to help people interact and communicate

No one tweets for the sake of tweeting

Or blogs for the sake of blogging

Do it to communicate your work, and raise your profile. Help and be helped.

Twitter

Twitter is an invaluable tool for academics

e.g. #icanhazpdf

When you can’t access a paperjust tweet the URL + #icanhazpdf + your email address(someone kind will then email you the paper)Delete your tweet after you receive what you need

http://www.samuelpean.com/icanhazpdf-reddit-scholar-pirateuniversity-org-aaaaarg-org-how-scientist-community-bypasses-journals-paywalls/

Twitter

It’s fantastic at meetings & conferences

Send tweets with the meeting hashtag e.g. #MastEcoBES13 so others can find/interact on the meeting ‘tweetstream’

Retweet (RT) things you agree with / or want others to read. Add your own comment to a RT if there’s space.

Original tweet

My comment on this

Twitter

Meetings & conferences

It enables useful and frank discussion of talks

It empowers remote following & remote participation.

Good panel sessions will take questions from Twitter as well as the in-house ‘live’ audience of conference goers.

Twitter

Getting help and helping others (mutual benefits!)

A recent example (26th Nov 2013)

I have 10,000+ DOI’s and I want to get BibTeX -> how?

Step 1.) Ask Q on twitterStep 2.) Read near-instant replies from clever people

Take a bow @neilfws @invisiblecomma @egonwillighagen

Step 3.) Try suggested solutions… Encounter extra problem...

Twitter

Tweet the new problem

(special characters in the DOI were screwing-up my curl request)

Problem solved!

Important sidenote: Twitter fosters brilliant cross-disciplinary communication.Dan is a QMUL postdoc at the Centre for Digital Music. w/o Twitter this interaction would NEVER happen

https://twitter.com/rmounce/status/405290108989214720

Twitter

https://twitter.com/mclduk/status/405293960597209088

More than just solving my problem though…

Helping me do that curl request had mutual benefit for Dan -> awarenessof an automated method to get bibdata given DOI’s

...and also two of Dan’s followers

Twitter

Twitter is simply brilliant. I won’t force you to join-up… but if you don’t, I think you’re missing out

Blogging

Twitter is limited to just <140 character messages.

For extended discussion, incorporating multiple media, the blog post is a much better form and longer lasting

You can embed code, audio, video, pictures, GIF’s…

Try and always include at least 1 picture to break-up your text

Wordpress, Blogger or Tumblr are good platforms to start with

Blogging

Blog posts can be and *are* cited in the literature.It’s an excellent space to rapidly communicate new ideas.

http://iphylo.blogspot.co.uk/2011/04/dark-taxa-genbank-in-post-taxonomic.html

http://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22dark+taxa%22&btnG=&hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5

(Incidentally, Rod Page first dragged me on to Twitter - thanks Rod!)

Blogging

Impact

Blog posts on popular platforms can receive more attention than your average Nature News article

Easy steps towards open scholarship Patients leave a microbial mark on hospitals(LSE Impact of Social Sciences blog) (Nature News, 23 May 2013) published 24 May 2013

http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2013/05/24/easy-steps-towards-open-scholarship/

Data source:

http://www.nature.com/news/patients-leave-a-microbial-mark-on-hospitals-1.13057

Google+ & YouTube

Google+ has a lot of critics… “ghost town” etc

But I’ve got 15,000+ followers (circlers) there, so I like it :)

It’s great for paper discussions

Also for journal clubs via Google+ Hangouts Hangouts can be recorded and automatically made available at YouTube after the event

https://plus.google.com/u/0/+RossMounce/posts

See here for a 14 comment thread! https://plus.google.com/+RossMounce/posts/BfeU1Tt8oGU

http://breakingbio.com/

e.g. The Phylo / Macro Journal Club http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dmf7eKk23Gc

LinkedIn

A horribly creepy network - be careful what permissions you grant LinkedIn

I suspect it’s one of the few online networks that more ‘senior’ academics use - so you need a presence here

It’s also really important for keeping connections andjob prospects for beyond academia

Make sure you upload your CV here

http://www.itworld.com/it-managementstrategy/254094/wtf-linkedin-doing-my-data

GitHub

Social coding has arrived! Try it!

Why use Git? ->

Pearse & Purvis. 2013. phyloGenerator: an automated phylogeny generation tool for ecologists. MEE

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/2041-210x.12055

Code openly available on GitHub both pre- and post-publication

Enables ‘pull requests’ (suggest code changes) ‘forking’ and ‘issue tracking’

http://www.scfbm.org/content/8/1/7

GitHub

Any questions?

If there’s time…

ask me how I got on BBC Radio 3 for a live panel discussion on open access with David Willetts MP

(that wouldn’t have happened without Twitter!)

Communicate and interact - it’s good for science!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b01n1rth/Night_Waves_Open_Accesss_Anne_Applebaum_Berenice/