1. F1000 Research was awarded a 4-year, 5.8 million euro contract by the European Commission to develop Open Research Europe (ORE), a publishing platform for research funded by the EC.
2. ORE will provide high-quality, rapid peer review and publishing of EC-funded research with no author publication costs. It will operate using open science principles like open peer review, open data, and early sharing of preprints.
3. The platform aims to be transparent in its processes and costs, lead by example in open science, and explore sustainable open access business models to potentially broaden its scope over time. Submissions to ORE will open in December 2020.
The document discusses the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) and the role of research libraries. It notes that EOSC aims to open up research processes and change mindsets in favor of openly sharing knowledge. For research libraries, EOSC presents opportunities to support open science but also poses challenges as it may disrupt existing services. The document outlines EOSC developments in 2020 and highlights implementation challenges such as developing metadata standards and skills training. It recommends that research libraries link their strategies to EOSC, promote EOSC services, and contribute expertise in areas like metadata and skills development.
Tillitsbaserad styrning – hur skiljer den sig från dagens styrning och vad krävs för att kunna arbeta utifrån en tillitsbaserad styrmodell?
Christine Feuk, SKR
1. F1000 Research was awarded a 4-year, 5.8 million euro contract by the European Commission to develop Open Research Europe (ORE), a publishing platform for research funded by the EC.
2. ORE will provide high-quality, rapid peer review and publishing of EC-funded research with no author publication costs. It will operate using open science principles like open peer review, open data, and early sharing of preprints.
3. The platform aims to be transparent in its processes and costs, lead by example in open science, and explore sustainable open access business models to potentially broaden its scope over time. Submissions to ORE will open in December 2020.
The document discusses the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) and the role of research libraries. It notes that EOSC aims to open up research processes and change mindsets in favor of openly sharing knowledge. For research libraries, EOSC presents opportunities to support open science but also poses challenges as it may disrupt existing services. The document outlines EOSC developments in 2020 and highlights implementation challenges such as developing metadata standards and skills training. It recommends that research libraries link their strategies to EOSC, promote EOSC services, and contribute expertise in areas like metadata and skills development.
Tillitsbaserad styrning – hur skiljer den sig från dagens styrning och vad krävs för att kunna arbeta utifrån en tillitsbaserad styrmodell?
Christine Feuk, SKR
Några perspektiv på barns och ungas litteraturläsning
Djamila Fatheddine, FD Litteraturvetenskap, Universitetslektor i ämnesdidaktik inriktning svenska, IDPP, Göteborgs universitet
This document summarizes a presentation about scientific publishing and open access. It discusses some of the challenges researchers and publishers currently face, such as long publication times and high journal costs. It proposes that a new model is needed that reduces workload, equitably shares resources, and incentivizes open sharing over "publish or perish". The presenter advocates building a technological infrastructure to support researchers and democratize access to academic content, so that scientific dissemination looks very different if developed today. The goal is to empower researchers and universities through serving the public interest.
cOAlition S is a group of research funding organizations working to accelerate the transition to full and immediate open access to research publications. Plan S, developed by cOAlition S, outlines strong principles for open access, including requiring immediate open access to publications with no embargo periods and requiring the use of open licenses. The document discusses the implementation of Plan S, including guidance on compliance routes, transitional arrangements with publishers, and efforts to work with stakeholders like researchers, universities, and publishers.
This document outlines UNESCO's process for developing a Recommendation on Open Science through a global consensus-building effort. It notes that 193 UNESCO member states tasked UNESCO with creating an international standard-setting instrument on Open Science in the form of a Recommendation. UNESCO will rely on an inclusive consultation process involving countries and stakeholders to define principles for Open Science and measures on open access and data to bring citizens closer to science and promote equitable science production worldwide. The Recommendation is expected to be adopted by member states in 2021 after regional consultations are completed.
The document summarizes a workshop on open access monographs that took place on June 5th, 2020 at the National Library of Sweden. It discusses Kriterium, a Swedish open access publishing platform financed by universities, research funders, and the National Library of Sweden. Kriterium provides a publisher-neutral peer review platform for Swedish researchers and publishes both print and open access books with an optional Creative Commons license. The workshop addressed who Kriterium publishes for, including writers, the academic community, the general public, and publishers.
The document summarizes the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). It discusses the first phase of EOSC from 2018-2020 which is addressing six roadmap action lines through various H2020 projects. The second phase beginning in 2020 is dependent on an evaluation of the first phase. Current EOSC governance is working to steer initial implementation and transition to the second stage. Several working groups have been established to work on key outputs around rules of participation, landscape and sustainability analysis, architecture, and FAIR data principles. The transition to the second phase will require addressing issues around governance, funding, and establishing a core infrastructure.
- The document discusses open science and various techniques used in the Data4Impact project such as text analysis, social media data collection from Twitter, and linked open data.
- It provides an overview of science norms and compares traditional CUDOS norms to more open PLACE norms.
- Data4Impact aims to build a knowledge graph linking different data sources to analyze the impact of research and innovation funding through new metrics and indicators. Machine learning and linked open data techniques are applied.
Några perspektiv på barns och ungas litteraturläsning
Djamila Fatheddine, FD Litteraturvetenskap, Universitetslektor i ämnesdidaktik inriktning svenska, IDPP, Göteborgs universitet
This document summarizes a presentation about scientific publishing and open access. It discusses some of the challenges researchers and publishers currently face, such as long publication times and high journal costs. It proposes that a new model is needed that reduces workload, equitably shares resources, and incentivizes open sharing over "publish or perish". The presenter advocates building a technological infrastructure to support researchers and democratize access to academic content, so that scientific dissemination looks very different if developed today. The goal is to empower researchers and universities through serving the public interest.
cOAlition S is a group of research funding organizations working to accelerate the transition to full and immediate open access to research publications. Plan S, developed by cOAlition S, outlines strong principles for open access, including requiring immediate open access to publications with no embargo periods and requiring the use of open licenses. The document discusses the implementation of Plan S, including guidance on compliance routes, transitional arrangements with publishers, and efforts to work with stakeholders like researchers, universities, and publishers.
This document outlines UNESCO's process for developing a Recommendation on Open Science through a global consensus-building effort. It notes that 193 UNESCO member states tasked UNESCO with creating an international standard-setting instrument on Open Science in the form of a Recommendation. UNESCO will rely on an inclusive consultation process involving countries and stakeholders to define principles for Open Science and measures on open access and data to bring citizens closer to science and promote equitable science production worldwide. The Recommendation is expected to be adopted by member states in 2021 after regional consultations are completed.
The document summarizes a workshop on open access monographs that took place on June 5th, 2020 at the National Library of Sweden. It discusses Kriterium, a Swedish open access publishing platform financed by universities, research funders, and the National Library of Sweden. Kriterium provides a publisher-neutral peer review platform for Swedish researchers and publishes both print and open access books with an optional Creative Commons license. The workshop addressed who Kriterium publishes for, including writers, the academic community, the general public, and publishers.
The document summarizes the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). It discusses the first phase of EOSC from 2018-2020 which is addressing six roadmap action lines through various H2020 projects. The second phase beginning in 2020 is dependent on an evaluation of the first phase. Current EOSC governance is working to steer initial implementation and transition to the second stage. Several working groups have been established to work on key outputs around rules of participation, landscape and sustainability analysis, architecture, and FAIR data principles. The transition to the second phase will require addressing issues around governance, funding, and establishing a core infrastructure.
- The document discusses open science and various techniques used in the Data4Impact project such as text analysis, social media data collection from Twitter, and linked open data.
- It provides an overview of science norms and compares traditional CUDOS norms to more open PLACE norms.
- Data4Impact aims to build a knowledge graph linking different data sources to analyze the impact of research and innovation funding through new metrics and indicators. Machine learning and linked open data techniques are applied.
3. Bygger vidare
•Tekniskt avbrott
– Åter 29 November
•Ytterligare förbättringar
– Omtag till hösten 2020
– Bättre sammanhållen bild
– Ytterligare detaljering
4. Fler berättelser
• IATI
– Gemensam standard
– Flera roller inom biståndet
– Jämförbara data
– Mer användningsområden
– Följa tråden till slutet
– Infovideo
https://youtu.be/PbwIUQwL_Jc