VIVO is an open source semantic web tool for research discovery for finding people and the research they do. Originally funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, VIVO supports editing, searching, browsing and visualizing research activity across disciplines. VIVO's search returns results faceted by type for rapid retrieval of desired information across disciplines at one institution or, through a prototype at vivosearch.org, across multiple distributed institutions.
Calendar
The VIVO community offers a variety of workgroup sessions, conferences, and hackathons.
Participate in the community
- Have a question?
- Contact members of the development, implementation or ontology teams via one of the three listservs.
- To ask questions of the project's leadership, visit vivoweb.org.
Sign up for a DuraSpace ID in order to:
Post a question to VIVO's JIRA issue tracker. To edit existing VIVO issues in JIRA, please send us a note with your DuraSpace ID to request permission.
Edit this wiki
What is VIVO?
- Introduction | A short tour of VIVO | FAQs
- VIVO is used at many institutions including international ones
- The latest version of VIVO is 1.7, released in June of 2014. See what's new .
- Follow us on social media – Twitter, blog
- The VIVO project is a part of Duraspace. Learn how to support VIVO through institutional membership in Duraspace.
Developers
- VIVO is a Java Enterprise application built around the Jena Semantic Web Framework. Download VIVO's source code on GitHub
- Installation and upgrade guides
- Want to quickly install and evaluate VIVO? Install a VIVO Vagrant profile
- Working and interest groups
Apps and Tools Working Group – VIVO works with a variety of apps and tools to aid in data import, export, and reuse.
VIVO-ISF Ontology
- VIVO uses the VIVO-ISF ontology, an extensible data standard for describing researchers, which is endorsed by the Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) Consortium Steering Committee
- SPARQL is the query language for semantic data. Learn more about SPARQL.