- Title Pages
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
-
1 E-Science, Cyberinfrastructure, and Scholarly Communication -
2 Cyberscience: The Age of Digitized Collaboration? -
3 From Shared Databases to Communities of Practice: A Taxonomy of Collaboratories -
4 A Theory of Remote Scientific Collaboration -
5 Collaborative Research across Disciplinary and Organizational Boundaries -
6 A National User Facility That Fits on Your Desk: The Evolution of Collaboratories at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory -
7 The National Virtual Observatory -
8 High-Energy Physics: The Large Hadron Collider Collaborations -
9 The Upper Atmospheric Research Collaboratory and the Space Physics and Aeronomy Research Collaboratory -
10 Evaluation of a Scientific Collaboratory System: Investigating Utility before Deployment -
11 The National Institute of General Medical Sciences Glue Grant Program -
12 The Biomedical Informatics Research Network -
13 Three Distributed Biomedical Research Centers -
14 Motivation to Contribute to Collaboratories: A Public Goods Approach -
15 Ecology Transformed: The National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis and the Changing Patterns of Ecological Research -
16 The Evolution of Collaboration in Ecology: Lessons from the U.S. Long-Term Ecological Research Program -
17 Organizing for Multidisciplinary Collaboration: The Case of the Geosciences Network -
18 NEESgrid: Lessons Learned for Future Cyberinfrastructure Development -
19 International AIDS Research Collaboratories: The HIV Pathogenesis Program -
20 How Collaboratories Affect Scientists from Developing Countries - Conclusion Final Thoughts: Is There a Science of Collaboratories?
- Contributors
- Index
International AIDS Research Collaboratories: The HIV Pathogenesis Program
International AIDS Research Collaboratories: The HIV Pathogenesis Program
- Chapter:
- (p.350) (p.351) 19 International AIDS Research Collaboratories: The HIV Pathogenesis Program
- Source:
- Scientific Collaboration on the Internet
- Author(s):
Matthew Bietz
Marsha Naidoo
Gary M. Olson
- Publisher:
- The MIT Press
This chapter presents a case study of an international HIV/AIDS research collaboration. It focuses on studying and supporting the communication needs of geographically spread participants of the HIV Pathogenesis Program (HPP). The HPP is a collaborative research effort between South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The chapter also discusses the lessons that have been learned by scientists from their association with this project. It describes the involvement of experts in the HPP, along with the methods used by these experts to study the work ethics and needs of the scientists engaged in the project.
Keywords: communication needs, South Africa, United Kingdom, United States, scientists
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- Title Pages
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
-
1 E-Science, Cyberinfrastructure, and Scholarly Communication -
2 Cyberscience: The Age of Digitized Collaboration? -
3 From Shared Databases to Communities of Practice: A Taxonomy of Collaboratories -
4 A Theory of Remote Scientific Collaboration -
5 Collaborative Research across Disciplinary and Organizational Boundaries -
6 A National User Facility That Fits on Your Desk: The Evolution of Collaboratories at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory -
7 The National Virtual Observatory -
8 High-Energy Physics: The Large Hadron Collider Collaborations -
9 The Upper Atmospheric Research Collaboratory and the Space Physics and Aeronomy Research Collaboratory -
10 Evaluation of a Scientific Collaboratory System: Investigating Utility before Deployment -
11 The National Institute of General Medical Sciences Glue Grant Program -
12 The Biomedical Informatics Research Network -
13 Three Distributed Biomedical Research Centers -
14 Motivation to Contribute to Collaboratories: A Public Goods Approach -
15 Ecology Transformed: The National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis and the Changing Patterns of Ecological Research -
16 The Evolution of Collaboration in Ecology: Lessons from the U.S. Long-Term Ecological Research Program -
17 Organizing for Multidisciplinary Collaboration: The Case of the Geosciences Network -
18 NEESgrid: Lessons Learned for Future Cyberinfrastructure Development -
19 International AIDS Research Collaboratories: The HIV Pathogenesis Program -
20 How Collaboratories Affect Scientists from Developing Countries - Conclusion Final Thoughts: Is There a Science of Collaboratories?
- Contributors
- Index