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Cornell’s VIVO

Want to know who’s doing what, where and how in some particular field of scientific research at Cornell? You’ll probably find the answers in Cornell Library’s VIVO at http://vivo.cornell.edu/.

A VIVO search transcends college and departmental boundaries and returns not only the names of researchers but also grants and recent publications, facilities, undergraduate majors and graduate fields, and seminars and other events. When President David Skorton travels to Africa and wants to know about relevant Cornell faculty and research, VIVO has the answer.

Soon a similar capability may extend across the nation. A $12.2 million, two-year grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Research Resources will support the creation of VIVOweb, a multi-institutional version of VIVO that will connect biomedical researchers, initially at seven sites. The goal is to foster alliances, making biomedical research and discovery move faster.

The project is led by the University of Florida with Cornell and Indiana University-Bloomington as major partners. Scripps Research Institute, Ponce Medical School, Washington University and Weill Cornell Medical College will participate as implementation sites.  The rest of this article is at Cornell.

Coming Soon

The KnowledgeEconomy(TM) Network is working on developing relationships with the right “partners” and on securing funding to get things started.  In the meantime, please check out our blog posts at www.KnowledgeEconomy.com or send us your thoughts at Info @ this site’s domain name.  Sorry for not making our e-mail address a click-able link at the moment, but we are just trying to avoid being spammed by spiders.

We plan to soon be opening the site for sign-up and use by network members, such as companies, universities, other organizations and individuals.  This network will focus on innovative people interested in sharing thoughts about their research and/or their efforts to commercialize new technologies.  It will also work hard to promote productive interactions and even facilitated tech transfer negotiations between knowledge workers in academia and the business world.