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131 Research products, page 1 of 14

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  • Publication . Other literature type . Article . 2018
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Atherton, Christopher John; Barton, Thomas; Basney, Jim; Broeder, Daan; Costa, Alessandro; Daalen, Mirjam Van; Dyke, Stephanie; Elbers, Willem; Enell, Carl-Fredrik; Fasanelli, Enrico Maria Vincenzo; +30 more
    Country: Germany
    Project: EC | GN4-2 (731122), EC | IS-ENES2 (312979), EC | IS-ENES (228203), EC | CALIPSOplus (730872), EC | CORBEL (654248), EC | AARC2 (730941), EC | EOSC-hub (777536), EC | ELIXIR-EXCELERATE (676559), NSF | Data Handling and Analysi... (1700765)

    The authors also acknowledge the support and collaboration of many other colleagues in their respective institutes, research communities and IT Infrastructures, together with the funding received by these from many different sources. These include but are not limited to the following: (i) The Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG) project is a global collaboration of more than 170 computing centres in 43 countries, linking up national and international grid infrastructures. Funding is acknowledged from many national funding bodies and we acknowledge the support of several operational infrastructures including EGI, OSG and NDGF/NeIC. (ii) EGI acknowledges the funding and support received from the European Commission and the many National Grid Initiatives and other members. EOSC-hub receives funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 777536. (iii) The work leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 730941 (AARC2). (iv) Work on the development of ESGF's identity management system has been supported by The UK Natural Environment Research Council and funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration through projects IS-ENES (grant agreement no 228203) and IS-ENES2 (grant agreement no 312979). (v) Ludek Matyska and Michal Prochazka acknowledge funding from the RI ELIXIR CZ project funded by MEYS Czech Republic No. LM2015047. (vi) Scott Koranda acknowledges support provided by the United States National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY-1700765. (vii) GÉANT Association on behalf of the GN4 Phase 2 project (GN4-2).The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 731122(GN4-2). (viii) ELIXIR acknowledges support from Research Infrastructure programme of Horizon 2020 grant No 676559 EXCELERATE. (ix) CORBEL life science cluster acknowledges support from Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654248. (x) Mirjam van Daalen acknowledges that the research leading to this result has been supported by the project CALIPSOplus under the Grant Agreement 730872 from the EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation HORIZON 2020. (xi) EISCAT is an international association supported by research organisations in China (CRIRP), Finland (SA), Japan (NIPR), Norway (NFR), Sweden (VR), and the United Kingdom (NERC). This white-paper expresses common requirements of Research Communities seeking to leverage Identity Federation for Authentication and Authorisation. Recommendations are made to Stakeholders to guide the future evolution of Federated Identity Management in a direction that better satisfies research use cases. The authors represent research communities, Research Services, Infrastructures, Identity Federations and Interfederations, with a joint motivation to ease collaboration for distributed researchers. The content has been edited collaboratively by the Federated Identity Management for Research (FIM4R) Community, with input sought at conferences and meetings in Europe, Asia and North America.

  • Publication . Conference object
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Laure Barbot; Klaus Illmayer;
    Publisher: Zenodo
    Project: EC | SSHOC (823782)

    The Social Sciences and Humanities Open Marketplace - https://marketplace.sshopencloud.eu/ - is a discovery portal which pools and contextualises resources for Social Sciences and Humanities research communities: tools, services, training materials, datasets, publications and workflows. The Marketplace highlights and showcases solutions and research practices for every step of the SSH research data life cycle. The two slide decks published here summarise what is the service and how the SSH research community can use it. The first slide deck “The SSH Open Marketplace: an introduction” presents the value proposition of the service, how it has been designed (user roles, data model and curation workflow), what is the data population (as of June 2022) and how to contribute. The second slide deck “Curating the SSH Open Marketplace. Curation tools and workflows dives into the Editorial Board of the service and the role of the moderators. It introduces the curation toolings and the main Application Programming Interface calls that can be used to interact with the Marketplace data. These two sets of slides have been designed to be reused by anyone wishing to introduce the SSH Open Marketplace to a new audience and introduce hands-on sessions.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Chambers, Sally;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The presentation was held during the Mutual Learning Workshop for Improving Cultural Heritage Bibliographical Data (October 12-14, 2022) organised by the Bibliographical Data Working Group of the DARIAH-ERIC.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Umerle, Tomasz;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The presentation was held during the DARIAH Bibliographical Data Working Group workshop – "Databases and information systems for research output: digital humanities outlook" (September, 30th 2022).

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Gray, Edward;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The preservation of cultural heritage is one of the fundamental missions of the Ecole nationale des chartes in Paris, which recently celebrated its bicentennial. For close to fifteen years, the Ecole has also proposed a Masters entitled Technologies numériques appliquées à l’histoire (TNAH), or Digital Technologies Applied to History. This program trains future archivists, librarians, and research engineers in a common program that focuses on the technical aspects of the preservation and valorization of cultural heritage. Despite this common program, or perhaps because of it, graduates find careers all across this spectrum. It is thus a challenge to find subject matters that are transversal to all these potential interests. For two years, as chargé de cours (lecturer) for the English-language portion of the curriculum, I have chosen to use the IIIF Online Training Workshop (https://training.iiif.io/iiif-online-workshop/index.html). This training workshop takes students through the process and logic of the IIIF standard, from understanding its uses, to manipulating the image API, and finally to creating and hosting one’s own annotations. It finishes with a project, chosen by students, where they upload, manipulate, and annotate their own images, which they then present to their peers as a “proof of concept” for a theoretical IIIF project at their imagined institution. As a whole, this IIIF assignment permits not only an assessment of reading and spoken comprehension, but also oral and written communication, alongside a technical standard that is increasingly more in demand. This workshop, originally developed by Glen Robson (IIIF Technical Coordinator) and adapted to the needs of the TNAH program, has multiple benefits for the students. Above all, it demonstrates a real use-case in using English language – attending a training seminar – in the course of one’s professional life, which corresponds to the vocation of the TNAH Masters to prepare its students for their future careers. It also applies broadly to all future career choices of the students, being just as relevant to an archivist as a research engineer in a humanities lab. As well, it gives real, practical experience with APIs – so that students understand intimately how this fundamental technology works. Finally, by allowing students to pick their own subject for the final project, it allows students to embrace their own interests and creativity. The course is pedagogically sound, as it confronts students not just with reading and spoken comprehension, but also written and oral composition with the final project and the presentation to the class. Student engagement is even further increased by leaving them the choice of the subject matter for their final project. The IIIF Online Training Workshop is thus a powerful tool for English-language pedagogy in digital humanities and the preservation of cultural heritage.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Umerle, Tomasz; Czerniak, Andreas; Kozłowski, Marek; Nikkanen, Joonas; Tóth-Czifra, Erzsébet; Vandewalle, Eline;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The video recording of the workshop "Databases and information systems for research output: digital humanities outlook" organized by DARIAH Bibliographical Data Working Group.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Kubelková, Hana;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    Presentation and the video recording of the presentation on archiving archaeological data introduced at the conference Digital Transformation of Archaeology. Prezetace a video naháravky prezentace na téma archivace archeologických dat přednesené na konferenci Digital Transformation of Archaeology.

  • Publication . Conference object
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Czerniak, Andreas;
    Publisher: Zenodo
    Project: EC | OpenAIRE Nexus (101017452)

    OpenAIRE Research Graph as an aggregator of CRIS systems is held during the "DARIAH Bibliographical Data WG’s Open Online Workshop" with the topic: Databases and information systems for research output: digital humanities outlook on September, 30th 2022. This invited talk presents the OpenAIRE Research Graph as an aggregator of Current Research Information Systems (CRIS) in a nutshell.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2019
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Gelati, Francesco;
    Publisher: HAL CCSD
    Project: EC | EHRI (654164)

    The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI) portal website aims to aggregate digitally available archival descriptions concerning the Holocaust. This portal is actually a meta-catalogue, or an information aggregator, whose biggest goal is to have up-to-date information by means of building sustainable data pipelines between EHRI and its content providers. Just like in similar archival information aggregators (e.g. Archives Portal Europe or Monasterium), the XML-based metadata standard Encoded Archival Description (EAD) plays a key role. The article presents how EADs are imported into the portal, mainly thanks to the Open Archive Initiative protocols.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Narayan Kumar Bhadra;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    We study a series of new energy sources of the Gaussian energy group SU(6), SU(12), SU(24), ….etc. called intelligences which created consciousness and which are responsible for the creation of everything of this universe. The effective quantity and quality of the consciousness of the earth-like planet where living elements were found depends on environment and place of position within the galaxy or cluster or super cluster etc. & mechanical structure of the planet. The said energy sources created consciousness within the living cell and also controlled the whole universe with the symmetry breaking of the energy group SU(11) ( SU(6)  SU(5)  U(1)); SU(23); SU(47);…… etc.). In the living body, generally consciousness controlled by the self gravitational force of the energy group SU(6) and plays with biological revolution. But consciousness level of any living body including human group and also inanimate objects is particularly controlled by SU(12), SU(24), ….etc. We examine the quantum measurement, using the Wheeler DeWitt wave equation over the complex space-time R + iRI of (4+D) dimensions, where D is an extra dimensions. We know that the quantum super-positions will continually be reaching the Di�� si-Penrose (DP) threshold for Objective Reduction in non- biological settings as well as in biological ones, and usually take place in the purely random environment of a quantum system under measurement through the symmetry breaking of the Generalized Gaussian Energy Group from infinity i.e. from Big-Rip singularity when RI →∞. I. Introduction: Masao Ito wrote that it may be take another half century to bring psychology into the field of neuroscience. This statement reflects the difficulty of extending knowledge about the pivotal role of the cerebellum from the domain of motor control to the cognitive domain. The shift of information processing from divergence to convergence in cerebella micro-complexes (Ito) parallels the shift from coherence to de-coherence in quantum information processing (LIoyd). Consciousness defines our existence: It was proposed by Roger Penrose and Stuart Hameroff in the mid of 1990"s that consciousness depends on biologically "orchestrated" quantum computations in collections of microtubules within brain neurons, that these quantum computations correlate with and regulate neuronal activity, and that the continuous Schro dinger evolution of each quantum computation terminates in accordance with the specific Dio΄si − Penrose(DP) scheme of "Objective Reduction" of the quantum state (OR). This orchestrated OR activity (Orch OR) is taken to result in a moment of conscious awareness and / or choice. This particular (DP) from of OR is taken to be a quantum-gravity process related to the fundamentals of space-time geometry with complex scale factor R+ iRI in the large scale of the universe, where R is the 4-dimensional Einstein"s universe and iRI (= a), the internal space-time of the extra-dimension "D", which may be compared with the Kaluza-Klein cosmology. Hence solving the WDW equation of the wave function instead of Shro dingers wave equation, we get a remarkable solutions of the wave function of the variable RI (where RI = − R 2 ) in the tachyonic and pseudo-tachyonic universe, which assume as the source of intelligence or consciousness in the universe starting from Big-Rip singularity i.e. from the infinite space-time. Again Orch OR suggests a connection between brain bio-molecular processes and fine scale structure of the universe. There were three general assumption regarding the origin and place of consciousness in the universe have been commonly expressed as 1). Consciousness is not an independent quality but arose as a natural evolutionary consequence of the biological adaptation of brain and nervous system. 2). Consciousness is a quality that has always been in the universe. 3). Precursors of consciousness have always been in the universe; biology evolved a mechanism to convert conscious precursors to actual consciousness. The quantum cosmology explain an appropriate quantum mechanical description of the universe, which was introduced and developed by DeWitt. In quantum cosmology the universe, as a whole is treated quantum mechanically and is described by a single wave function, Ψ(hij , Φ) defined on a manifold (super spaces) of all possible three geometries and all mater field configurations. The wave function Ψ(hij , Φ) has no explicit time dependence due to the fact that there is no real time parameter external to the Einsteins universe. Therefore, there is no Shro dingers wave equation but the operator version of the Hamiltonian constraint of the Dirac canonical quantization procedure, namely vanishing of the variation of the Einstein-Hilbert action S with respect to the arbitrary lapse function N. Thus H = δS δN = 0, which is written as H Ψ(hij , Φ) = 0. This equation is known as the Wheeler-DeWitt (WDW) equation. The goal of quantum cosmology by solving the WDW equation over

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Include:
The following results are related to DARIAH EU. Are you interested to view more results? Visit OpenAIRE - Explore.
131 Research products, page 1 of 14
  • Publication . Other literature type . Article . 2018
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Atherton, Christopher John; Barton, Thomas; Basney, Jim; Broeder, Daan; Costa, Alessandro; Daalen, Mirjam Van; Dyke, Stephanie; Elbers, Willem; Enell, Carl-Fredrik; Fasanelli, Enrico Maria Vincenzo; +30 more
    Country: Germany
    Project: EC | GN4-2 (731122), EC | IS-ENES2 (312979), EC | IS-ENES (228203), EC | CALIPSOplus (730872), EC | CORBEL (654248), EC | AARC2 (730941), EC | EOSC-hub (777536), EC | ELIXIR-EXCELERATE (676559), NSF | Data Handling and Analysi... (1700765)

    The authors also acknowledge the support and collaboration of many other colleagues in their respective institutes, research communities and IT Infrastructures, together with the funding received by these from many different sources. These include but are not limited to the following: (i) The Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG) project is a global collaboration of more than 170 computing centres in 43 countries, linking up national and international grid infrastructures. Funding is acknowledged from many national funding bodies and we acknowledge the support of several operational infrastructures including EGI, OSG and NDGF/NeIC. (ii) EGI acknowledges the funding and support received from the European Commission and the many National Grid Initiatives and other members. EOSC-hub receives funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 777536. (iii) The work leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 730941 (AARC2). (iv) Work on the development of ESGF's identity management system has been supported by The UK Natural Environment Research Council and funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration through projects IS-ENES (grant agreement no 228203) and IS-ENES2 (grant agreement no 312979). (v) Ludek Matyska and Michal Prochazka acknowledge funding from the RI ELIXIR CZ project funded by MEYS Czech Republic No. LM2015047. (vi) Scott Koranda acknowledges support provided by the United States National Science Foundation under Grant No. PHY-1700765. (vii) GÉANT Association on behalf of the GN4 Phase 2 project (GN4-2).The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No. 731122(GN4-2). (viii) ELIXIR acknowledges support from Research Infrastructure programme of Horizon 2020 grant No 676559 EXCELERATE. (ix) CORBEL life science cluster acknowledges support from Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654248. (x) Mirjam van Daalen acknowledges that the research leading to this result has been supported by the project CALIPSOplus under the Grant Agreement 730872 from the EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation HORIZON 2020. (xi) EISCAT is an international association supported by research organisations in China (CRIRP), Finland (SA), Japan (NIPR), Norway (NFR), Sweden (VR), and the United Kingdom (NERC). This white-paper expresses common requirements of Research Communities seeking to leverage Identity Federation for Authentication and Authorisation. Recommendations are made to Stakeholders to guide the future evolution of Federated Identity Management in a direction that better satisfies research use cases. The authors represent research communities, Research Services, Infrastructures, Identity Federations and Interfederations, with a joint motivation to ease collaboration for distributed researchers. The content has been edited collaboratively by the Federated Identity Management for Research (FIM4R) Community, with input sought at conferences and meetings in Europe, Asia and North America.

  • Publication . Conference object
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Laure Barbot; Klaus Illmayer;
    Publisher: Zenodo
    Project: EC | SSHOC (823782)

    The Social Sciences and Humanities Open Marketplace - https://marketplace.sshopencloud.eu/ - is a discovery portal which pools and contextualises resources for Social Sciences and Humanities research communities: tools, services, training materials, datasets, publications and workflows. The Marketplace highlights and showcases solutions and research practices for every step of the SSH research data life cycle. The two slide decks published here summarise what is the service and how the SSH research community can use it. The first slide deck “The SSH Open Marketplace: an introduction” presents the value proposition of the service, how it has been designed (user roles, data model and curation workflow), what is the data population (as of June 2022) and how to contribute. The second slide deck “Curating the SSH Open Marketplace. Curation tools and workflows dives into the Editorial Board of the service and the role of the moderators. It introduces the curation toolings and the main Application Programming Interface calls that can be used to interact with the Marketplace data. These two sets of slides have been designed to be reused by anyone wishing to introduce the SSH Open Marketplace to a new audience and introduce hands-on sessions.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Chambers, Sally;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The presentation was held during the Mutual Learning Workshop for Improving Cultural Heritage Bibliographical Data (October 12-14, 2022) organised by the Bibliographical Data Working Group of the DARIAH-ERIC.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Umerle, Tomasz;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The presentation was held during the DARIAH Bibliographical Data Working Group workshop – "Databases and information systems for research output: digital humanities outlook" (September, 30th 2022).

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Gray, Edward;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The preservation of cultural heritage is one of the fundamental missions of the Ecole nationale des chartes in Paris, which recently celebrated its bicentennial. For close to fifteen years, the Ecole has also proposed a Masters entitled Technologies numériques appliquées à l’histoire (TNAH), or Digital Technologies Applied to History. This program trains future archivists, librarians, and research engineers in a common program that focuses on the technical aspects of the preservation and valorization of cultural heritage. Despite this common program, or perhaps because of it, graduates find careers all across this spectrum. It is thus a challenge to find subject matters that are transversal to all these potential interests. For two years, as chargé de cours (lecturer) for the English-language portion of the curriculum, I have chosen to use the IIIF Online Training Workshop (https://training.iiif.io/iiif-online-workshop/index.html). This training workshop takes students through the process and logic of the IIIF standard, from understanding its uses, to manipulating the image API, and finally to creating and hosting one’s own annotations. It finishes with a project, chosen by students, where they upload, manipulate, and annotate their own images, which they then present to their peers as a “proof of concept” for a theoretical IIIF project at their imagined institution. As a whole, this IIIF assignment permits not only an assessment of reading and spoken comprehension, but also oral and written communication, alongside a technical standard that is increasingly more in demand. This workshop, originally developed by Glen Robson (IIIF Technical Coordinator) and adapted to the needs of the TNAH program, has multiple benefits for the students. Above all, it demonstrates a real use-case in using English language – attending a training seminar – in the course of one’s professional life, which corresponds to the vocation of the TNAH Masters to prepare its students for their future careers. It also applies broadly to all future career choices of the students, being just as relevant to an archivist as a research engineer in a humanities lab. As well, it gives real, practical experience with APIs – so that students understand intimately how this fundamental technology works. Finally, by allowing students to pick their own subject for the final project, it allows students to embrace their own interests and creativity. The course is pedagogically sound, as it confronts students not just with reading and spoken comprehension, but also written and oral composition with the final project and the presentation to the class. Student engagement is even further increased by leaving them the choice of the subject matter for their final project. The IIIF Online Training Workshop is thus a powerful tool for English-language pedagogy in digital humanities and the preservation of cultural heritage.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Umerle, Tomasz; Czerniak, Andreas; Kozłowski, Marek; Nikkanen, Joonas; Tóth-Czifra, Erzsébet; Vandewalle, Eline;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The video recording of the workshop "Databases and information systems for research output: digital humanities outlook" organized by DARIAH Bibliographical Data Working Group.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Kubelková, Hana;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    Presentation and the video recording of the presentation on archiving archaeological data introduced at the conference Digital Transformation of Archaeology. Prezetace a video naháravky prezentace na téma archivace archeologických dat přednesené na konferenci Digital Transformation of Archaeology.

  • Publication . Conference object
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Czerniak, Andreas;
    Publisher: Zenodo
    Project: EC | OpenAIRE Nexus (101017452)

    OpenAIRE Research Graph as an aggregator of CRIS systems is held during the "DARIAH Bibliographical Data WG’s Open Online Workshop" with the topic: Databases and information systems for research output: digital humanities outlook on September, 30th 2022. This invited talk presents the OpenAIRE Research Graph as an aggregator of Current Research Information Systems (CRIS) in a nutshell.

  • Publication . Part of book or chapter of book . 2019
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Gelati, Francesco;
    Publisher: HAL CCSD
    Project: EC | EHRI (654164)

    The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI) portal website aims to aggregate digitally available archival descriptions concerning the Holocaust. This portal is actually a meta-catalogue, or an information aggregator, whose biggest goal is to have up-to-date information by means of building sustainable data pipelines between EHRI and its content providers. Just like in similar archival information aggregators (e.g. Archives Portal Europe or Monasterium), the XML-based metadata standard Encoded Archival Description (EAD) plays a key role. The article presents how EADs are imported into the portal, mainly thanks to the Open Archive Initiative protocols.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Narayan Kumar Bhadra;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    We study a series of new energy sources of the Gaussian energy group SU(6), SU(12), SU(24), ….etc. called intelligences which created consciousness and which are responsible for the creation of everything of this universe. The effective quantity and quality of the consciousness of the earth-like planet where living elements were found depends on environment and place of position within the galaxy or cluster or super cluster etc. & mechanical structure of the planet. The said energy sources created consciousness within the living cell and also controlled the whole universe with the symmetry breaking of the energy group SU(11) ( SU(6)  SU(5)  U(1)); SU(23); SU(47);…… etc.). In the living body, generally consciousness controlled by the self gravitational force of the energy group SU(6) and plays with biological revolution. But consciousness level of any living body including human group and also inanimate objects is particularly controlled by SU(12), SU(24), ….etc. We examine the quantum measurement, using the Wheeler DeWitt wave equation over the complex space-time R + iRI of (4+D) dimensions, where D is an extra dimensions. We know that the quantum super-positions will continually be reaching the Di�� si-Penrose (DP) threshold for Objective Reduction in non- biological settings as well as in biological ones, and usually take place in the purely random environment of a quantum system under measurement through the symmetry breaking of the Generalized Gaussian Energy Group from infinity i.e. from Big-Rip singularity when RI →∞. I. Introduction: Masao Ito wrote that it may be take another half century to bring psychology into the field of neuroscience. This statement reflects the difficulty of extending knowledge about the pivotal role of the cerebellum from the domain of motor control to the cognitive domain. The shift of information processing from divergence to convergence in cerebella micro-complexes (Ito) parallels the shift from coherence to de-coherence in quantum information processing (LIoyd). Consciousness defines our existence: It was proposed by Roger Penrose and Stuart Hameroff in the mid of 1990"s that consciousness depends on biologically "orchestrated" quantum computations in collections of microtubules within brain neurons, that these quantum computations correlate with and regulate neuronal activity, and that the continuous Schro dinger evolution of each quantum computation terminates in accordance with the specific Dio΄si − Penrose(DP) scheme of "Objective Reduction" of the quantum state (OR). This orchestrated OR activity (Orch OR) is taken to result in a moment of conscious awareness and / or choice. This particular (DP) from of OR is taken to be a quantum-gravity process related to the fundamentals of space-time geometry with complex scale factor R+ iRI in the large scale of the universe, where R is the 4-dimensional Einstein"s universe and iRI (= a), the internal space-time of the extra-dimension "D", which may be compared with the Kaluza-Klein cosmology. Hence solving the WDW equation of the wave function instead of Shro dingers wave equation, we get a remarkable solutions of the wave function of the variable RI (where RI = − R 2 ) in the tachyonic and pseudo-tachyonic universe, which assume as the source of intelligence or consciousness in the universe starting from Big-Rip singularity i.e. from the infinite space-time. Again Orch OR suggests a connection between brain bio-molecular processes and fine scale structure of the universe. There were three general assumption regarding the origin and place of consciousness in the universe have been commonly expressed as 1). Consciousness is not an independent quality but arose as a natural evolutionary consequence of the biological adaptation of brain and nervous system. 2). Consciousness is a quality that has always been in the universe. 3). Precursors of consciousness have always been in the universe; biology evolved a mechanism to convert conscious precursors to actual consciousness. The quantum cosmology explain an appropriate quantum mechanical description of the universe, which was introduced and developed by DeWitt. In quantum cosmology the universe, as a whole is treated quantum mechanically and is described by a single wave function, Ψ(hij , Φ) defined on a manifold (super spaces) of all possible three geometries and all mater field configurations. The wave function Ψ(hij , Φ) has no explicit time dependence due to the fact that there is no real time parameter external to the Einsteins universe. Therefore, there is no Shro dingers wave equation but the operator version of the Hamiltonian constraint of the Dirac canonical quantization procedure, namely vanishing of the variation of the Einstein-Hilbert action S with respect to the arbitrary lapse function N. Thus H = δS δN = 0, which is written as H Ψ(hij , Φ) = 0. This equation is known as the Wheeler-DeWitt (WDW) equation. The goal of quantum cosmology by solving the WDW equation over