Published
Author Roderic Page
For anyone doing research or involved in scientific infrastructure, demonstrating the "impact" of those activities is becoming increasingly important.
For anyone doing research or involved in scientific infrastructure, demonstrating the "impact" of those activities is becoming increasingly important.
As part of BHL's "Celebrating 10 years of inspiring discovery through free access to biodiversity knowledge" at the NHM and Kew Gardens in London, I was interviewed by Martin Kalfatovic (@UDCMRK). We chatted about BHL, the work I've been doing on BioStor, and the future of BHL.
Ideas on measuring the "impact" of a natural history collection have been bubbling along, as reflected in recent comments on iPhylo, and some offline discussions I've been having with David Blackburn and Alan Resetar.