User:Daniel Mietchen/Biographical sketch: Difference between revisions

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[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] is a [[data scientist]] working for the [[University of Virginia]]. Trained in [[Biophysics]] at [[Humboldt University]] in Berlin, he did a [http://scidok.sulb.uni-saarland.de/volltexte/2009/2416/ PhD] in [[Physics]] at [[Saarland University]], focusing on applications of [[Magnetic resonance microscopy|Magnetic Resonance Microscopy]] to [[biological system]]s and their [[evolution]].
 
[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] is a [[data scientist]] working for the [[University of Virginia]]. Trained in [[Biophysics]] at [[Humboldt University]] in Berlin, he did a [http://scidok.sulb.uni-saarland.de/volltexte/2009/2416/ PhD] in [[Physics]] at [[Saarland University]], focusing on applications of [[Magnetic resonance microscopy|Magnetic Resonance Microscopy]] to [[biological system]]s and their [[evolution]].
   
Thematically, his [[scientific research|research]] ranges from [[fossil]]s and [[embryonic development]] to [[cold hardiness]], [[music perception]], [[brain morphometry]], [[vocal learning]] and more recently to [[biodiversity informatics]], [[semantic integration]] and [[data science]] more broadly. This entails the transdisciplinary collaboration with researchers from around the globe, which sparked his early interest in the integration of research workflows with the [[World Wide Web]], particularly by way of collaborative platforms like [[wiki]]s. Within the [[open research]] community, his focus is on [[data sharing]] — especially in [[emergency response|response to emergencies]], to enhance [[reproducibility]] and to contribute to [[sustainable development]] — as well as on streamlining publication workflows [[doi:10.3897/rio.1.e7547|all around the research cycle]], on the interplay of [[research policy]] and [[infrastructure]] and on facilitating the reuse of [[open access]] and [[open science]] materials in educational contexts like [[Wikimedia]] platforms, with special emphasis on [http://opendefinition.org open licenses] and technical [[interoperability]].
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Thematically, his [[scientific research|research]] ranges from [[fossil]]s and [[embryonic development]] to [[cold hardiness]], [[music perception]], [[brain morphometry]], [[vocal learning]] and more recently to [[biodiversity informatics]], [[semantic integration]] and [[data science]] more broadly. This entails the transdisciplinary collaboration with researchers from around the globe, which sparked his early interest in the integration of [[scientific research|research]] and [[education]] workflows with the [[World Wide Web]], particularly by way of collaborative platforms like [[wiki]]s. Within the [[open research]] community, his focus is on [[data sharing]] — especially in [[emergency response|response to emergencies]], to enhance [[reproducibility]] and to contribute to [[sustainable development]] — as well as on streamlining publication workflows [[doi:10.3897/rio.1.e7547|all around the research cycle]], on the interplay of [[research policy]] and [[infrastructure]] and on facilitating the reuse of [[open access]] and [[open science]] materials in educational contexts like [[Wikimedia]] platforms, with special emphasis on [http://opendefinition.org open licenses] and technical [[interoperability]].
   
 
He has worked at the [[:de:Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik|Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering]], at the [[Korea Basic Science Institute]], at the [[Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences]], at the [[University of Jena]], at the [[Museum für Naturkunde Berlin]], at the U.S. [[National Institutes of Health]], and served as [[:m:Wikimedian in Residence on Open Science|Wikimedian in Residence on Open Science]] at the [[Open Knowledge Foundation]] Germany.
 
He has worked at the [[:de:Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik|Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering]], at the [[Korea Basic Science Institute]], at the [[Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences]], at the [[University of Jena]], at the [[Museum für Naturkunde Berlin]], at the U.S. [[National Institutes of Health]], and served as [[:m:Wikimedian in Residence on Open Science|Wikimedian in Residence on Open Science]] at the [[Open Knowledge Foundation]] Germany.
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== Version 2 ==
 
== Version 2 ==
[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] is a biophysicist interested in integrating [[scientific research|research]] workflows with the [[World Wide Web]], particularly through open licensing, open standards, open collaboration, public version histories and forkability. With research activities spanning from the subcellular to the organismic level, from fossils to developing embryos, from biodiversity informatics to [[data science]] more broadly and how this all fits with [[sustainable development]], he experienced multiple shades of the [[research cycle]] and a variety of approaches to collaboration, sharing and reproducibility in research contexts. He has also been [[:d:Special:CentralAuth/Daniel_Mietchen|contributing]] to Wikipedia and its sister projects for more than a decade and is actively engaged in increasing the interactions between the Wikimedia and research communities, particularly around [[Wikidata]]. All of this informs his current activities as a data scientist for the [[University of Virginia]].
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[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] is a biophysicist interested in integrating [[scientific research|research]] and [[education]] workflows with the [[World Wide Web]], particularly through open licensing, open standards, open collaboration, public version histories and forkability. With research activities spanning from the subcellular to the organismic level, from fossils to developing embryos, from biodiversity informatics to [[data science]] more broadly and how this all fits with [[sustainable development]], he experienced multiple shades of the [[research cycle]] and a variety of approaches to collaboration, sharing and reproducibility in research contexts. He has also been [[:d:Special:CentralAuth/Daniel_Mietchen|contributing]] to Wikipedia and its sister projects for more than a decade and is actively engaged in increasing the interactions between the Wikimedia and research communities, particularly around [[Wikidata]]. All of this informs his current activities as a data scientist for the [[University of Virginia]].
   
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
 
{{Commonscat|Daniel Mietchen}}
 
{{Commonscat|Daniel Mietchen}}
 
* [[:d:Special:CentralAuth/Daniel_Mietchen|Overview of contributions to Wikimedia projects]]
 
* [[:d:Special:CentralAuth/Daniel_Mietchen|Overview of contributions to Wikimedia projects]]
** [https://tools.wmflabs.org/guc/?by=date&user=Daniel_Mietchen Sample edits]
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** [https://tools.wmflabs.org/guc/?by=date&user=Daniel_Mietchen Some sample edits]
 
** Wikidata
 
** Wikidata
 
*** [https://bambots.brucemyers.com/NavelGazer.php?username=Daniel+Mietchen Edits by properties and languages]
 
*** [https://bambots.brucemyers.com/NavelGazer.php?username=Daniel+Mietchen Edits by properties and languages]

Latest revision as of 05:17, 18 October 2019

Version 1[edit]

Daniel Mietchen is a data scientist working for the University of Virginia. Trained in Biophysics at Humboldt University in Berlin, he did a PhD in Physics at Saarland University, focusing on applications of Magnetic Resonance Microscopy to biological systems and their evolution.

Thematically, his research ranges from fossils and embryonic development to cold hardiness, music perception, brain morphometry, vocal learning and more recently to biodiversity informatics, semantic integration and data science more broadly. This entails the transdisciplinary collaboration with researchers from around the globe, which sparked his early interest in the integration of research and education workflows with the World Wide Web, particularly by way of collaborative platforms like wikis. Within the open research community, his focus is on data sharing — especially in response to emergencies, to enhance reproducibility and to contribute to sustainable development — as well as on streamlining publication workflows all around the research cycle, on the interplay of research policy and infrastructure and on facilitating the reuse of open access and open science materials in educational contexts like Wikimedia platforms, with special emphasis on open licenses and technical interoperability.

He has worked at the Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering, at the Korea Basic Science Institute, at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, at the University of Jena, at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, at the U.S. National Institutes of Health, and served as Wikimedian in Residence on Open Science at the Open Knowledge Foundation Germany.

He led a team that received one of the Accelerating Science Awards for their Open Access Media Importer Bot in 2013. The project is currently being expanded to integrate scholarly publications more closely with Wikimedia platforms like Wikisource, Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata, which helped spawn WikiCite and the Initiative for Open Citations. He is part of the team that was named SPARC Innovator in June 2016 for their development of the journal Research Ideas and Outcomes (or RIO for short), which allows to publish research from all stages of the research cycle across all fields of research.

Version 2[edit]

Daniel Mietchen is a biophysicist interested in integrating research and education workflows with the World Wide Web, particularly through open licensing, open standards, open collaboration, public version histories and forkability. With research activities spanning from the subcellular to the organismic level, from fossils to developing embryos, from biodiversity informatics to data science more broadly and how this all fits with sustainable development, he experienced multiple shades of the research cycle and a variety of approaches to collaboration, sharing and reproducibility in research contexts. He has also been contributing to Wikipedia and its sister projects for more than a decade and is actively engaged in increasing the interactions between the Wikimedia and research communities, particularly around Wikidata. All of this informs his current activities as a data scientist for the University of Virginia.

See also[edit]