Archive for August 2nd, 2007

Resource of the Week: A Hub for “Third Sector” Research

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Resource of the Week: IssueLab
By Shirl Kennedy, Senior Editor

DocuTicker, our sister site, “offers a hand-picked selection of resources, reports and publications from government agencies, NGOs, think tanks and other public interest organizations.” We’ve often been asked where we find “so much stuff” to post on there. Well, we can tell you that it’s never a problem finding enough stuff to post. The real problem is finding enough time to cull through the never-ceasing torrent of materials emanating from a staggering range of sources.

We use a variety of techniques to try and keep up with the flow — RSS, page change notifiers, e-mail alerts…and when we find a site that aggregates materials from a variety of other sites, we are quick to latch onto it. When it also offers an RSS feed…well, as far as we’re concerned, that’s as good as it gets. Which is why we like IssueLab — and we think you will, too.

IssueLab, which has been around for just about two years, is a project of the Chicago-based New Media for Nonprofits, which basically assists third sector organizations in creating and managing an online presence. Gabriela Fitz, IssueLab co-director, describes the site as “an online publishing forum focused solely on research being produced by the third sector. Its mission is to bring nonprofit research into focus by giving a broad audience easy and open access to this extensive body of work.” We would describe it, more simply, as a searchable archive of full-text nonprofit organization research and policy papers.

Says Fitz — and she’s right — there is a great deal of interest in nonprofit sector research. And as we know from our experience with DocuTicker, there is plenty of it available. But unless you take the time to browse a bunch of different organization websites, you can’t really know what is available. On the flip side, nonprofits have had no easy way to disseminate their research to a wider public, thus increasing their visibility. IssueLab solves both of these problems.

Fitz explains the concept:

After seeing the organizations we worked with over the years produce engaging and valuable research, only to have it end up tucked away on their web sites or sitting on a shelf, we decided it was time to launch a free service for nonprofits to bring both their current and historical work to a broader audience.

We believe that the third sector, which has been mandated to address social inequities and engage the public in imagining solutions to these inequities, brings a unique perspective to their research. And we think it’s about time that research – with an agenda – gets the attention it deserves.

IssueLab is a no-brainer to use. From the home page, you can do a keyword search or click the dropdown menu to browse by any of a broad range of issues — Aging, Animals, Arts and Culture, Children and Youth, Computers and Technology, Consumer Protection, Crime and Safety, Disability Issues, Disaster Relief, Economic Development, Education and Literacy, Employment and Labor, Energy and Environment, Gay/Lesbian/Bi/Trans, General. Government Reform, Health and Medicine, Housing and Homelessness, Human Rights and Civil Liberties, Immigration, Media, Men, Nonprofits and Philanthropy, Parenting and Families, Peace and Conflict, Resolution, Poverty and Hunger, Prison Reform, Race and Ethnicity, Religion, Science, Sports, Substance Abuse and Recovery, Transportation, Welfare and Public Assistance, Women.

A detailed record exists for each resource in the database, including publishing organization, publication data, authors, a brief summary, how to obtain the publication (e.g., link for direct download, e-mail address, contact info), some brief information about the organization (and a website link), and links to other research by the same entity in the IssueLab archives, along with publication dates and summaries (if you click the link to add them to the display). Note that both current and historical materials are available, which makes this a particularly useful site if you’re interested in seeing how certain issues have evolved over time.

IssueLab offers a free monthly e-mail newsletter that provides updates on new research and different nonprofit organizations. An archive is available. We like the RSS feed, which provides ongoing access to the newest additions to the site.

Nonprofit organizations are encouraged to add their materials to the IssueLab database (for free); once you register, you can begin uploading materials immediately, but they will not be added to the database until vetted by IssueLab. This keeps incomplete listings and spam from inclusion. Detailed information for potential contributors is available.

We get a steady stream of e-mails from folks who want their organization’s reports posted on DocuTicker. We are usually happy to oblige, provided the document in question has at least some content value. We adhere to pretty much the same guidelines as IssueLab:

Acceptable works include policy analysis reports, white papers, case studies, fact sheets, data sets, and the like.

Unacceptable works are those that do not directly deal with a public policy issue. For instance, brochures about your organization or your programs will not be included in the IssueLab archive.

A general rule of thumb: If your publication doesn’t respond to a policy question or issue, if it doesn’t add to a current policy debate, it most likely will not be approved for inclusion in IssueLab.

We do maintain editorial oversight of Issuelab. This means that we reserve the right to not publish something that is intentionally hateful.

So if you’ve been informing us about your organization’s publications, you should seriously consider adding them to IssueLab’s database as well — if you haven’t already been contributing.

Fast Facts and Stats: U.S. Bridge Statistics from Various Sources; Transportation Research Thesaurus

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Latest Releases:
+ List of Steel Deck Truss Bridges (FHA)

+ Inventory of Steel Deck Truss Bridges (FHA)

NTSB
+ Select NTSB Investigations Into Bridge Collapses/Collisions (PDF; 1 page)
Most reports are linked from this page.
See Also: Subscribe to Various NTSB E-Mail Alerts

Bureau of Transportation Statistics
+ Table: Condition of U.S. Highway Bridges*, (Updated July 2007) (Source: National Transportation Statistics, 2007)

+ Condition of U.S. Highway Bridges: 1995-2005*

+ Toll Roads, Bridges and Tunnels (via National Transportation Figure)*
Kilometers of toll roads or number of bridges/tunnels.

+ Structurally Deficient and Functionally Obsolete Bridges: All Roadways, 1993–2003*
From 2005 Transportation Statistics Annual Report.

*Also available in XLS format.

Federal Highway Administration
+ U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary E. Peters Calls on States to Immediately Inspect All Steel Arch Truss Bridges

+ Immediate Inspection of Deck Truss Bridges

+ Highway Trust Fund, FY 2006 Financial Report

+ Bridge Technology

+ 2006 Status of the Nation’s Highways, Bridges, and Transit: Conditions and Performance

Includes:

++ Office of Bridge Technology Electronic Library

++ National Bridge Inspections Standards Regulation (NBIS)

++ National Bridge Inventory (NBI)
++++ Tables of Frequently Requested NBI Information

++ Bridge Railing Statistics

++ Annual Materials Report on New Bridge Construction and Bridge Rehabilitation

+ Long-Term Bridge Performance Program
Includes “virtual library” of documents.

Transportation Research Board

++ Transportation Research Thesaurus

+ Dynamics and Field Testing of Bridges (6 pages; PDF)

+ Bridge Construction (4 pages; PDF)

+ Concrete Bridges (8 page; PDF)

+ Steel Bridges (4 pages; PDF)

+ Modern and Comprehensive Bridge Design Specifications (2 pages; PDF)

++ See Also: The Transportation Research Information Services (TRIS) Database

The world’s largest and most comprehensive bibliographic resource on transportation information. TRIS is produced and maintained by the Transportation Research Board at the National Academies with sponsorship by State Departments of Transportation, the various administrations at the U.S. Department of Transportation, and other sponsors of TRB’s core technical activities.

+ Transportation Research Board Publications Index
Limit by date. A search for bridges provides links to numerous publications.
See Also: Topic Snapshot (Beta) – Highways
See Also: You can also search the entire web domain by using search box at top of page.

State of Minnesota
+ Bridge Plans
Copies of engineering plans for bridge projects. For historical reference use, primarily by engineering firms and local government entities.
+ Bridges and Structures
Bridge CADD standards, special provisions, bridge management and bridge inspection

Full Text Book: Digital Bridges
Bridges of the 19th Century. Lehigh University.

UPDATE:

MSNBC.com’s New Clickable Map

of Every Bridge in the U.S. that has been rated as “structurally deficient” or “functionally obsolete,” and carries at least 10,000 vehicles a day.
1. Choose a state on the map.
2. Scroll down below the map to “Click here to see major state bridges on list.”
Background about the data and database here.
Thanks to Bill Dedman for the news tip.

UPDATE: Bird’s Eye View of I-35W Bridge Before Collapse (via Microsoft Live Earth)

UPDATE: National Bridge Inventory (via CARR-L and Neat New Stuff on the Net)

News: Minneapolis Bridge Collapse: Live Streaming Audio/Video Coverage from Local MSP TV & Radio Stations

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

If you would like to watch or listen to live local coverage of the bridge collapse in Minneapolis, these stations are offering live video streams:

Television
+ WCCO-TV

+ KSTP

+ KARE

+ Fox 9

Radio
Minnesota Public Radio ||| Live Stream

WCCO Radio

KSTP Radio

Newspapers
Minneapolis Star-Tribune

St.Paul Pioneer Press

Other
Live Traffic Cams and Incidents (via Mn/DOT)
See Cameras 628 and 634

Now Available: Proceedings from the “Web Information Seeking and Interaction” Workshop

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

The workshop was held in in conjunction with the 30th Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference in Amsterdam an took place on Friday, July 27, 2007.

The workshop was organized by:
++ Kerry Rodden, Google
++ Ian Ruthven, University of Strathclyde
++ Ryen W. White, Microsoft

Full-Text papers are already available in the proceedings (68 pages; PDF). Titles include:

+ Adaptive Personalization of Web Search
by Shady Elbassuoni, Julia Luxenburger and Gerhard Weikum

+ ‘I’ll just Google it!’: Should lawyers’ perceptions of Google inform the design of
electronic legal resources?
by Stephann Makri, Ann Blandford and Anna L. Cox

+ Increasing the speed of Information Access on the web using HTML feature extraction
by Andreas Komninos and Chris Milligan

+ Separating Human and Non-Human Web Queries
by Yuye Zhang and Alistair Moffat

+ Interaction Pool: Towards a user-centred test collection
by Hideo Joho, Robert Villa and Joemon M. Jose

+ Using Subjunctive Interfaces to Show Web Retrievals in Context
by Aran Lunzer

+ Naming the Topic or Reversing Query Terms from Result Documents – Successful
Strategies in Web Search
by Anne Aula

+ Exploring How Mouse Movements Relate to Eye Movements on Web Search
Results Pages
by Kerry Rodden and Xin Fu

+ Revisiting informativeness as a process measure for information interaction
by Luanne Freund and Elaine G. Toms

+ Measuring the Navigability of Document Networks
by Mark D. Smucker and James Allan

+ Evaluating Engagement in Interactive Search
by Heather L. O’Brien and Elaine G. Toms

+ Clickthrough based measures of search engine performance
by Erik Graf, Craig Macdonald and Iadh Ounis

+ Comparing System Evaluation with User Experiments for Japanese Web Navigational
Retrieval
by Masao Takaku,Yuka Egusa, Hitomi Saito and Hitoshi Terai

+ Position paper: Web Page Relevance: What are we measuring?
by Diane Kelly

+ Position paper: User interactions with results summaries
by Frances Johnson

+ Position Paper: Towards Evaluating the User Experience of Interactive Information
Access Systems
by Leif Azzopardi

PublicRadioFan Podcast Directory Nears 1000 Podcasts Listed

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

PublicRadioFan is a wonderful database that we’ve been writing about for years. It’s not only browsable but also shows you what’s airing or streaming at any given time on public radio stations around the globe. You can personalize the page for your time zone, direct links to favorite programs, etc.

In the past couple of years, PublicRadioFan has been gathering direct links to podcasts (here the podcast format is being used as an alternative delivery vehicle) for public radio programs from broadcasters around the globe.

If you’ve never visited PublicRadioFan and its podcast directory, it’s more than worthy of your attention and as the title of this post points out, nearly 1,000 podcasts are now listed as the directory continues to expand.

Two Bibliographies From European Reading Room at Library of Congress Now Online

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

1) Czech and Slovak Literature in English. A Bibliography. Second Edition.
By George Kovtun. The first edition of this document was published in 1988.

Czech and Slovak Literature in English is a bibliography of Czech and Slovak works in translation, reaching back to the first known work in 1832 and ending in 1986. This bibliography was intended to be as complete as possible, but had no claims to being comprehensive. Previously, the only comparable bibliography had been published in 1967 and had covered works published only through 1960.

2) Hungarians in Rumania and Transylvania; a bibliographical list of publications in Hungarian and West European languages
by Elemér Bakó and William Sólyom-Fekete. With a preface by Edward J. Patten.

Hungarians in Rumania and Transylvania was compiled by two Library of Congress staff members, Elemér Bakó, the Finno-Ugrian Area Specialist in the Slavic and Central European Division, and William Solyom-Fekete, Legal Specialist in the European Law Division, Law Library, on the basis of a Congressional directive (House Resolution 497, October 10, 1968) to “prepare a comprehensive bibliography of books, periodicals and documents published by Hungarian authors or by Western authors writing on the history, culture, economics and ethnology of the Hungarian population of Rumania, particularly in Transylvania.”

Source: European Reading Room, The Library of Congress

New Database: 2008 Presidential Election Campaign Donations Comparison By Gender

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

New Database: 2008 Presidential Election Campaign Donations By Gender
Simply use the pull-down menus to select two candidates. Click go and tables/charts will appear.

Source: opensecrets.org

Databases: EurLife Database With Quality of Life Indicators Updated

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Database Update: EurLife Database of Quality of Life Indicators Updated

The database, which deals with the objective living conditions and subjective well-being of European citizens, has been updated. New indicators have been added, as well as data for more recent years. National coverage has been expanded to include the 27 EU Member States and Turkey. The database will be updated again in 2008 with results from the second European Quality of Life Survey.

Topics covered in the database include:
+ Health
+ Employment
+ Education
+ Family
+ Housing
+ Environment
and many others.

Source: Eurofound (European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions)

Intute Database Grows with Addition of More than 12,000 New Physics Abstracts

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Intute Database Grows with Addition of More than 12,000 New Physics Abstracts

Approximately 12,000 new abstracts have been added to the Intute: Science, Engineering and Technology publisher abstracts database, which comprises physics references and data taken from the Institute of Physics Publishing journal archive. These new entries represent the first 6 months of 2007.

Direct to Cross-Search Database from Intute Science, Engineering, and Technology
What does the cross-search database include?

1. Search the titles of every IoP journal article published since 1960. Each journal article retrieved is hyperlinked to an abstract. PDF full text is available if your institution subscribes to the relevant journal. The database is updated monthly. The database currently contains more than 185,000 journal abstracts

2. Search thousands of journal abstracts from the Royal Society of Chemistry (all journals) – updated monthly

3. In collaboration with the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), Intute now brings you the chance to search the RSC Library and Information Centre books and images catalogue. The catalogue contains approximately 25,000 items on all areas of chemistry including over 2,000 digitised images of important chemists, alchemical scenes and equipment

Direct to Intute, Non-Commercial Web Directory

Direct to Virtual Training Suite from Intute

See Also: TechExtra
Many more resources in computing, engineering, and mathematics.

UK: Simon Edwards appointed consultant to BIC’s e4libraries project

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Simon Edwards appointed consultant to BIC’s e4libraries project

Simon Edwards, who has worked with BIC on its highly successful e4books project for the last three years, has been appointed as lead consultant on its new venture, e4libraries, a project funded by the Museums Libraries and Archives Council as part of the Better Stock, Better Libraries (BSBL) programme which is aimed at increasing the efficiency of the library supply chain by encouraging the wider use of e-commerce, promoting interoperability between systems and maintaining a robust standards infrastructure. His first task will be to produce a scoping report and discussion document in the autumn which will define the programme of activity which BIC will adopt in its future work with the library sector.

Source: MLA

See Also: Direct to BIC [Book Industry Communications] Web Site

Briefs: ALCTS Serials Section announces name, mission change; Another Air Fare Service/Database; LookSmart CEO Resigns

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

+ Start-up hawks below-market airfares
Say hello to CFares. You have to have a membership (one type is free, the other is $50/year to access be able to purchase the lowest “platinum” fares. Searching is free.
Other air fare databases we’ve mentioned include:
+ Farecast
Pricing plus market intelligence.

+ dohop

+ Yapta
Client download required. Monitors various databases for price changes. IE only.

+ Air Ninja
A directory to help you find which low-cost carriers fly between various city pairs. Global in scope.

+ LookSmart CEO Resigns
Hills out, West in.

+ ALCTS Serials Section announces name, mission change (via ALA)

+ Google Dumps The Supplemental Results Label (via Search Engine Land)

A New Issue of JISC Inform is Now Available (#18)

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

A New Issue of JISC Inform is Now Available (#18)

Articles include:

+ A window to the world

Excerpts from Professor Drummond Bone’s speech to the national repositories conference in June, along with excerpts from an exclusive interview.

+ Breaking new ground
Full version of Mark Chillingworth’s article on Web 2.0 technologies

+ Podcast: Put it in the Depot!
Interview with EDINA director Peter Burnhill on the Depot.

Agency For Healthcare Research Developing New Database; Issues Report on State-Level Privacy and Health Info

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

From Health Data Management:

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality is seeking industry ideas it can feature in a new program to accelerate the development and adoption of innovations in health care.

The Washington-based agency’s Health Care Innovations Exchange will feature a searchable repository of innovative activities and tools designed to help organizations identify ideas that meet their specific needs. The program also will feature innovator networks and educational materials designed to help organizations learn about the process of innovation and what they can do to cultivate a culture that supports innovative approaches to care.

Source: HDM (via iHealthBeat)

See Also: New Reports Identify State-level Privacy and Security Solutions for Secure Exchange of Health Information

The Department of Health & Human Services’ (HHS) Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) today released a set of reports titled Privacy and Security Solutions for Interoperable Health Information Exchange. The reports review 34 state Health Information Exchange plans and identify the challenges and feasible solutions for ensuring the safety and security of electronic health information exchange. This work was funded under a contract with AHRQ, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and RTI International.

Look for Full Text Reports Here.

Government Stats and Facts: Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse Adds New Search Tools and RSS Feeds

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

The Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) is based at Syracuse University and does independent/non-partisan research looking at federal enforcement, spending, and staffing.

Two announcements from TRAC today.
1) RSS Feeds for the new TRAC Monthly Bulletins.
You can also select to have the news of a new bulletin (about 100 feeds) sent via email. There is also one “overall” feed. Important and useful info for anyone interested in how the U.S. Government operates.

2) Next, the introduction of the “TRAC Data Interprete.” From the announcement:

Obtain a bird’s-eye view of the latest data available. You start by selecting whether you’re interested in prosecutions, convictions or convictions which have resulted in significant sentences. As you choose your area of interest (federal agency, district, judge, program, detailed program or lead charge) the Interpreter will tell you how many cases there are in the most recent month, and how many more selections are possible in the areas you haven’t explored yet.

Browsing in this way is completely free: you don’t need to purchase a bulletin to find out if there’s information at any level. While there is a modest fee for generating some of the “drill-down” reports, subscribers to our TRACFED data service will incur no additional charge. You can also use the Data Interpreter to access our free top-level bulletins on subjects such as white collar crime, immigration and terrorism, and agencies such as DHS, IRS or FBI.

Source: Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse

Canada: New Database: Genealogy: Lower Canada Land Petitions

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

New Database: Genealogy: Lower Canada Land Petitions

From the website:

When New France became a British colony in 1763, the land system changed. New lands were now granted as part of townships instead of seigneuries. Many early settlers, both military and civilian, submitted petitions to the Governor to obtain Crown land. The Lower Canada Land Petitions contain petitions for grants or leases of land and other administrative records. This research tool provides access to more than 95,000 references to individuals who lived in present-day Quebec between 1764 and 1841.

From the help page:

This research tool is estimated to be at best 85% accurate and complete. Names of petitioners and claimants were indexed, but those of surveyors and authors of many supporting documents were not. Records in volumes 10 to 28 (sub-series Minute Books and Loose Minutes) were not indexed. Certain records in volumes 10 to 28 relating to seigneurial tenure, exploration and surveying are of particular importance for legal or geographical research questions.

Source: Library and Archives Canada

Real Estate: Statistics: Trulia Trends Report (July 2007)

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Trulia, the real estate + market intelligence database has released their Trends Report for July.

Key Findings
As usual, the Trulia Trends report (PDF) gives us an interesting snapshot of what’s happening across the country in both consumer search behavior online and median list prices.

Homes on Trulia’s top 10 list of most searched homes ranged from a $245,000 Midtown coop in New York City to a Bel Air trophy estate priced at 163x that amount at $40,000,000. A snapshot of the 10 hottest homes:

The priciest home on the list was a one of a kind, Bel Air, $40,000,000 estate is on 3.2 acres, has a sunken tennis court, 33 bedrooms, 41 full bathrooms, three living rooms and five main master suites.

The second most expensive home on the list is a Manhattan Beach, 872 square foot fixer upper with 2 beds and 2 baths priced at $1,079,000.

For $279,000, home shoppers can bid farewell to Manhattan, and cross the bridge over to Brooklyn into a historic studio coop in a Park Slope brownstone with pre-war detailing and charm!

The five-bedroom, three-bathroom, Colonial style home in West Bloomfield, MI his the lowest price per bedroom ratio with each bedroom costing a mere $67,000. The average cost per bedroom for the top ten most searched homes is $400,556!!

Other findings include:
+ After getting pushed out of the top spot last month by Manhattan, Chicago once again reigns supreme as the most searched city in the America for real estate.
+ Taking a look at list price changes, Miami Beach, FL which was the biggest gainer in median price month-over-month with a 17% increase from May to June.
+ Something must be in the water in Virginia, with Alexandria, Falls Church and Arlington all surging over 45% in month-over-month search queries on Trulia.com. Perhaps the upcoming presidential election has confident staffers scrambling to purchase before the real work gets started in 2008.

Direct to Trulia Trends Report (3 pages; PDF)

Source: Trulia

Free Companion Web Site for the McGraw Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology 10th edition (MHEST)

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

In a recent blog post, Cheryl LaGuardia points out that the 10th edition of the McGraw Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology is now available. OK, that’s nice. But Cheryl goes on to point out that the encyclopedia offers a FREE web site that’s a “companion” to the complete encyclopedia. Again, the full text is fee-based but the companion site is free.

LaGuardia writes:

This site is targeted at librarians, students, teachers, and researchers, and is updated regularly, with a Spotlight feature (currently about forensics), a What’s New section (that outlines content new to the 10th edition), and Supplemental Articles (here’s an example that focuses on “intelligent search engines”) updating important articles written since the latest release of the EST.

Source: Library Journal

Briefs: U.S. Diplomats and their Diplopedia; EBSCO has purchased ten of Sage Publishers’ top indexes.; Jacksonville Site of First “Say Hello” Local Voice Portal; Google Finance Canada Launches;

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

+ EBSCO has purchased ten of Sage Publishers’ top indexes (via Library Journal)

+ Diplomats Using Diplopedia (via FCW)
This is an INTERNAL wiki being used at the U.S. Department of State.
From the article:

State’s Office of eDiplomacy launched the wiki last September and there are now more than 1,400 active articles and 255 agency employees registered as editors, according to the program’s organizers.

More about e-diplomacy in this 2003 article (on page 13; PDF).

++ Google Finance Canada Launches (via Google Blog)
See also: The Wall Street Journal Markets Data Center offers Canadian Quotes and News from Canada and other Parts of the World
See Also: Yahoo Finance Canada
See Also: MSN/Sympatico Finance
See Also: Canadian Business (Tons of data, many lists)
See Also: GlobeInvestor
From The Globe and Mail

+ Jacksonville Site of First “Say Hello” Local Voice Portal (via LocalMobileSearch)
See also: All sorts of other tools for your phone. Most free.

Lists & Rankings: DCs Top 50 Lobbyists

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Hired Guns: D.C.’s Top 50 Lobbyists
First some background about being a DC lobbyist and then brief profiles of each lobbyist on this list.

Source: Washingtonian