Love Data Week 2024 hosted by Maynooth University Library. 

Love Data week 2024 will take place from the 12th - 16th of February. The theme for 2024 is My Kind of Data.

Programme - 

Daily

My Kind of Data - Statistics from MU Library
Poster Exhibition

Location: Foyer, John Paul II Library and Online HERE

‘Saint Patrick’s College Maynooth Matriculation and Ordination Records: the challenges of interpreting imperfect student data’
Online Exhibition

For Love Data Week 2024, the Clericus project examines student data from SPCM covering the period 1795-2000. Presented in the form of a line graph, at first glance the data suggests very noticeable trends across and between yearly matriculation and ordination numbers. However, when these are examined in greater detail, it becomes clear that the aforementioned trends can be misleading and require more nuanced analysis in order to make sense. The Sway poster presentation submitted by the Clericus team disentangles these trends and highlights the issues encountered when dealing with incomplete student records.

View the exhibition HERE.

Events and Webinars

Monday 12 February 10 - 11am (In person)

Live 3D Printing Demonstration
Dr. Heidi Campbell, Digital Engagement Curator, Maynooth University.

Join us in the foyer of the John Paul II library to experience some live 3D printing. See how a 3D printer works and get a free trinket (while stocks last). 

Location: Foyer, John Paul II Library
No booking required. 

Tuesday 13 February 12:00 - 12:30pm (Online)

Managing and Sharing your Qualitative Data
Fran Callaghan

This session will focus on practical tools and techniques for managing and sharing your research data, with a particular emphasis on qualitative data sets. Topics include data management planning tools, anonymisation options, and selecting a suitable long term archive in which to share your data. The session will then introduce the Irish Qualitative Data Archive as one possible archive. 

View the recording HERE

Tuesday 13 February 2:30 - 3pm (Online)

Urban Sense
Stephanie Keogh and the Terrain-AI team based in the National Centre for Geocomputation

The Urban sense project is one of several initiatives being developed by Terrain-AI*, a large-scale research project focused on understanding emissions of greenhouse gases across terrestrial environments, led by MU Professors Tim McCarthy and Rowan Fealy. As part of this project 20 greenhouse gas sensors have been deployed across both residential and commercial areas in Dublin. The sensors, which measure greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane, as well as air quality parameters and weather variables, will provide a real-time visual pulse of the city, reflecting differences in land use, seasonal cycle in vegetation growth, weather events and even hourly patterns of traffic moving in and around the city streets. Our event will showcase the Urban Sense platform and allow attendees to explore the temporal and spatial patterns of GHGs under different weather events and human activity across the Greater Dublin Area.  For more information about the project please see here.

*Terrain-AI is funded under the Strategic Partnership Programme by Science Foundation Ireland and Microsoft under Grant number SFI 20/SPP/3705.

View the recording HERE.

Wednesday 14 February 10:30 - 11am (Online)

Help - My Survey is Full of Bots!
Dermot Lynott

Can you trust your own survey data? How can you tell if the responses are genuine or not? In this webinar I’ll talk about recent experiences of conducting online surveys, that were very quickly flooded with automated, bot responses. I highlight the different ways that we identified these bots, and provide some suggestions for how researchers can reduce the influence of bots, and ensure they are getting good quality data from their surveys. 

View the recording HERE

Wednesday 14 February 11:30 - 12noon (Online)

The Data behind the Rankings: Looking at the Data of Scopus & SciVal
Ciarán Quinn

This brief talk will look at the Bibliometric Data (documents & publications) contained in the Scopus Dataset and how its used in the rankings. Rankers use these datasets to examine numbers of citations for publications, number of publications produced, number of publications in the top 10% of journals, current research collaboration profiles and researchers institutional affiliation. Currently Research quality accounts for 30%  (citation impact (15%), research strength (5%), research excellence(5%) and research influence (10%)) in the Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings so they are a significant part of the rankings.  Scopus data has been used by the THE since 2014. We will also look at what you can do to improve your profile which will in turn feed into MU's Institutional Profile.

View the recording HERE

Wednesday 14 February 2 - 2:30pm (Online)

Data Gathering and LibInsight Usage by Maynooth University Library Staff
Marie G. Cullen

This presentation will discuss the findings of  a survey distributed to Maynooth University Library staff. The survey collected information on the platforms from which Library staff gather data. It gathered information on the tools used to manage, access, analyse and display data, in particular the use of a tool called LibInsight.  

View the recording HERE

Thursday 15 February 2:30 - 3:30pm (In person)

Live 3D Printing Demonstration
Dr. Heidi Campbell, Digital Engagement Curator, Maynooth University.

Join us in the foyer of the John Paul II library to experience some live 3D printing. See how a 3D printer works and get a free trinket (while stocks last). 

Location: Foyer, John Paul II Library
No booking required.