The fully onsite poster session is scheduled in Plaza de La Autonomía, Aula Magna, Universidad de Costa Rica on Tuesday, 12th November 2024 at 22:30 – 23:30 UTC *| 16:30 – 17:30 Central Standard Time (CST)/local Costa Rican time. (*By clicking on UTC time, you can convert time based on your location).

  • The session won’t be live streamed to online attendees.
  • The onsite session will be held as a minute-madness where posters will be displayed on a venue screen. 
  • Presenters will have 60 seconds to talk about their poster.
  • There will be no printed posters to adhere to Costa Rica’s sustainability policy.
  • The posters will be numbered from 1 to 50 and grouped by topics. Assignment numbers will be listed here soon.
  • Presenters will showcase their posters on the day based on the allocated number.
  • Poster presenters are required to register for the RDA P23

Additional Visibility for Poster Presenters

  • Posters will be published as an exhibition on this page soon.
  • A drinks reception is scheduled after the poster session
  • Poster presenters will be allocated to tables under each topic for attendee interaction.

Poster Specifications

Although no virtual poster session is scheduled, your digital poster will be uploaded as an exhibition below. This will give your poster extra visibility and a future record. 

We ask you to provide us with your final poster in the following format:

  • One-page landscape file (horizontal)
  • JPG/PNG format
  • 10 MB file size limit
  • 2000 pixels on the long side by 1200 pixels on the short side
  • Upload your final poster to the Google Drive folder making sure it is titled as per your original submission by Wednesday, 30 October

Support on the day

A dedicated onsite team will be available on the day to assist you with all necessary arrangements.

Contact us

For any further questions please contact irina.hope@rda-foundation.org and naomi.viquezmora@rda-foundation.org

Poster Exhibition

View all the P23 Posters in a single slidedeck, here.

Presenter
number
Main AuthorAffiliationCountryPoster title
(Each poster can be viewed by clicking on it)
1Adam Vials MooreJiscUnited KingdomBridging the Gap: A Standardized Schema for Practice Research Outputs
2Ana CardosoORCIDMexicoEnsuring trust in the ORCID record
3Anabelly Tinoco Altamirano and Ivannia Conejo ChinchillaUniversidad NacionalCosta Rica¿Qué más sostenible que un repositorio? | What could be more sustainable than a repository?
4Andrea CamposUniversidad NacionalCosta RicaPortal of Latin American Open Science Initiatives
5Christian PagéCECI, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, CerfacsFranceFAIR software & data: icclim climate research tool
6Christina DrummondOA Book Usage Data Trust / University of North TexasUSAA Data Space Commons MVP for Public/Private Impact Metrics
7Daniela Santos OliveiraWorld Data SystemUnited StatesEmpowering Early Career Pathways in Data Stewardship: A Global Initiative
8Liise LehtsaluSTFC-UKRI / RDAUK / ItalyWhat does a career track for data stewards look like?
9Fabiola CamposUniversidad Nacional, Costa RicaCosta RicaAnálisis de las prácticas, percepciones y conocimientos en Gestión de datos de investigación de la comunidad investigadora en Ciencias Sociales de la Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica | Analysis of the practices, perceptions and knowledge in research data management of the research community in Social Sciences of the National University, Costa Rica.
10Florencia Grattarola(1) Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Czech Republic, (2) Biodiversidata, UruguayUruguayRecommendations on Open Science Rewards and Incentives
11Genevieve HalbertRDA EuropeIrelandRDA Europe: A trusted partner in uniting and promoting European Data Communities
12Hassan OUKHOUYALaboratory LMSA, Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Mohammed V University in RabatMoroccoAdvanced Forecasting Methods for the Moroccan Stock Market: A Comparative Analysis of ARIMA, SVR, and LSTM Models
13John GraybealUC San DiegoUnited StatesNavigating Ontology Selection to Enhance Data Sharing, Standardization, and AI Integration
14Joshua FinnellColgate UniversityUnited StatesColgate University Data Science Collaboratory
15Lisa MayerOffice of Data Science and Emerging Technologies, National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of HealthUnited States of AmericaInfectious and Immune-Mediated Disease Data Resources: An Overview and Subset Assessment
16Sveinung GundersenELIXIR Norway, University of OsloNorwayUnleash your Models! Flow your Data! “Parse, Don’t Validate!” – turning the tables with Omnipy
17Marek SuchánekCTU in PragueCzech RepublicPlan-Driven Data Management as a Service
18María Fernanda Vega Solano and Ma. Milagro Castro SolanoEscuela de Economía, Universidad NacionalCosta RicaEconomía y Sociedad: pluralismo, multidisciplinariedad y desarrollo | Economy and Society: pluralism, multidisciplinarity and development
19Maria ShatzNational Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS/NIH)United StatesThe Environmental Health Language Collaborative (EHLC): Harmonizing Toxicology Data Use and Sharing
20Michaela JohnsonU.S. Geological SurveyUnited StatesUSGS Developments in Advancing FAIRness of Scientific Collections
21CANCELLED Nada ChayaProgram Lead, ACSSLebanonPromoting Social Science Research Data Management in the Arab region
22Robert PingIndiana University Pervasive Technology InstituteUnited StatesConnect, Advance, and Collaborate with RDA-US /TIGRUS
23Romain DavidERINHA (European Research Infrastructure on Highly Pathogenic Agents AISBL)BelgiumChallenges in Standardizing Terminologies for Data Management in Scientific Research
24Ryan O’ConnorRDA Association (Europe)Republic of IrelandEmpowering RDA WGs with RDA TIGER Support Services
25Shannon SheridanPacific Northwest National LaboratoryUnited StatesMaking Data Contracts FAIR
26Susanna-Assunta SansoneUniversity of OxfordUnited KingdomFAIRsharing Educational: Supporting RDM best practices and enabling FAIR
27Sveinung GundersenELIXIR Oslo / Bioinformatics Core Facility, University of OsloNorwayMulti-omics Adapter for Repository Submissions (MARS)
28Sveinung GundersenELIXIR Norway / Centre for Bioinformatics, University of OsloNorwayMetadata Harmonization at Scale: FAIRification of Genomic Annotations WG
29Sverker HolmgrenChalmers University of TechnologySwedenMachine actionable DMPs in practice: Making a FAIR difference at Chalmers
30Trish RadoticAustralian Research Data Commons (ARDC)AustraliaInternational Data Week 2025 – Brisbane, Australia!
31Wanda MarsolekUniversity of MinnesotaUnited StatesRelationship development to build sustainable research data management and sharing on campus
32Xuefu Zhang, Kou YuantaoAgriculture Information Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesPeople’s Republic of ChinaCo-construction and Sharing Practice of Research Data of Chinese National Agricultural Big Data and Information Service Alliance
33Yunpeng Cui, Juan LiuAgriculture Information Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural SciencesPeople’s Republic of ChinaData Quality Management and Mining Applications for Fine-Tuning Large Models in Regional Vegetable Production and Sales Time Series Forecasting