4 trainers found

Interest: data licensing  or crowd-sourced data  or citizen science  or Data Management Systems 


Kathryn Unsworth

I work at the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) leading the Skilled Workforce Development team concentrating on projects and activities that work towards a national skills agenda that is cohesive and coordinated.

Location: Melbourne, Australia

Unsworth Kathryn kathryn.unsworth@ardc.edu.au Melbourne, Australia I work at the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) leading the Skilled Workforce Development team concentrating on projects and activities that work towards a national skills agenda that is cohesive and coordinated. ["English"] https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5407-9987
Pauline Lawrey

I have worked in IT as a developer, software engineer, analyst and project manager for 20+ years. I'm currently working for James Cook University and QCIF as an eResearch Analyst. I primarily instruct the Python and Git training courses but plan on branching out. I'm very interested in ways to...

Location: Townsville, North Queensland

Lawrey Pauline pauline.lawrey@jcu.edu.au Townsville, North Queensland I have worked in IT as a developer, software engineer, analyst and project manager for 20+ years. I'm currently working for James Cook University and QCIF as an eResearch Analyst. I primarily instruct the Python and Git training courses but plan on branching out. I'm very interested in ways to help researchers after that introductory training session and training development. ["English"]
Stéphane Guillou

Technology trainer, Open Research advocate.

Location: Meanjin / Brisbane, Australia.

Guillou Stéphane s.guillou@uq.edu.au Meanjin / Brisbane, Australia. Technology trainer, Open Research advocate. ["English", "French", "Spanish; Castilian"] https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8992-0951
Tim Langlois

Stereo imagery is widely used by research institutions and management bodies around the world as a cost-effective and non-destructive method to research and monitor fish and habitats (Whitmarsh, Fairweather and Huveneers, 2017). Stereo-video can provide accurate and precise size and range...

Location: GitHub

Langlois Tim tim.langlois@uwa.edu.au GitHub Stereo imagery is widely used by research institutions and management bodies around the world as a cost-effective and non-destructive method to research and monitor fish and habitats (Whitmarsh, Fairweather and Huveneers, 2017). Stereo-video can provide accurate and precise size and range measurements and can be used to study spatial and temporal patterns in fish assemblages (McLean et al., 2016), habitat composition and complexity (Collins et al., 2017), behaviour (Goetze et al., 2017), responses to anthropogenic pressures (Bosch et al., 2022) and the recovery and growth of benthic fauna (Langlois et al. 2020). It is important that users of stereo-video collect, annotate, quality control and store their data in a consistent manner, to ensure data produced is of the highest quality possible and to enable large scale collaborations. Here we collate existing best practices and propose new tools to equip ecologists to ensure that all aspects of the stereo-video workflow are performed in a consistent way. ["English", "French"] https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6404-4000