This presentation was given by Noah Levin, KBART Standing Committee Co-Chair, at the NISO Annual Meeting and Standards Update on June 25. The event was held as a part of ALA Annual 2021.
AgBioData and FAIRsharing: FAIRsharing: promoting the discovery of data stand...Allyson Lister
Video of this presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nNl1oUvWYJE&t=240s
FAIRsharing is an informative and educational resource on interlinked standards, repositories and policies, three key elements of the FAIR ecosystem. FAIRsharing promotes the existence and value of these standards, repositories and policies, fostering a culture change within the research community into one where the use of these resources for FAIRer data is pervasive and seamless. This is achieved by guiding consumers to discover, select and use these resources with confidence, and helping producers to make their resources more visible, more widely adopted and cited. This presentation will highlight key collaborative, successful activities as well as next steps within FAIRsharing. It will also provide information on how to become a recommended repository in FAIRsharing and how to use FAIRsharing to engage with your stakeholders as well as with journal publishers and their data policies.
Scaling Usage Statistics across Repositories as an OpenAIRE Analytics Service...OpenAIRE
Presentation at the Open Repositories conference - 14 June 2016. Abstract:
Dimitris Pierrakos1, Jochen Schirrwagen2, Pedro Príncipe3, Ricardo Saraiva3
1ATHENA Research & Innovation Center, Greece; 2Bielefeld University; 3University of Minho
Usage metrics about scholarly output, such as publications and research data, are one of the measures to assess Open Access impact. The OpenAire 2020 [1] project aims to offer a service that monitors and analyzes usage information, as well as exploits usage metrics like views and downloads, which could be used as complements of bibliometrics and webometrics. In this paper, we present the first step towards the implementation of this service, manifested as a pilot run in a set of repositories, together with some initial results which illustrate the use of the applied methodology.
This presentation was given by Noah Levin, KBART Standing Committee Co-Chair, at the NISO Annual Meeting and Standards Update on June 25. The event was held as a part of ALA Annual 2021.
AgBioData and FAIRsharing: FAIRsharing: promoting the discovery of data stand...Allyson Lister
Video of this presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nNl1oUvWYJE&t=240s
FAIRsharing is an informative and educational resource on interlinked standards, repositories and policies, three key elements of the FAIR ecosystem. FAIRsharing promotes the existence and value of these standards, repositories and policies, fostering a culture change within the research community into one where the use of these resources for FAIRer data is pervasive and seamless. This is achieved by guiding consumers to discover, select and use these resources with confidence, and helping producers to make their resources more visible, more widely adopted and cited. This presentation will highlight key collaborative, successful activities as well as next steps within FAIRsharing. It will also provide information on how to become a recommended repository in FAIRsharing and how to use FAIRsharing to engage with your stakeholders as well as with journal publishers and their data policies.
Scaling Usage Statistics across Repositories as an OpenAIRE Analytics Service...OpenAIRE
Presentation at the Open Repositories conference - 14 June 2016. Abstract:
Dimitris Pierrakos1, Jochen Schirrwagen2, Pedro Príncipe3, Ricardo Saraiva3
1ATHENA Research & Innovation Center, Greece; 2Bielefeld University; 3University of Minho
Usage metrics about scholarly output, such as publications and research data, are one of the measures to assess Open Access impact. The OpenAire 2020 [1] project aims to offer a service that monitors and analyzes usage information, as well as exploits usage metrics like views and downloads, which could be used as complements of bibliometrics and webometrics. In this paper, we present the first step towards the implementation of this service, manifested as a pilot run in a set of repositories, together with some initial results which illustrate the use of the applied methodology.
Presented by Helena Cousijn (FREYA)
during the OpenAIRE workshop "Research policy monitoring in the era of Open Science and Big Data" taking place in Ghent, Belgium on May 27th and 28th 2019
Day 1: Monitoring and Infrastructure for Open Science
https://www.openaire.eu/research-policy-monitoring-in-the-era-of-open-science-and-big-data-the-what-indicators-and-the-how-infrastructures
EOSC-hub and OpenAIRE-Advance collaboration (Presentation at RDA 11th plenary)OpenAIRE
Presentation by Paolo Manghi (CNR-ISTI and OpenAIRE) ath the RDA 11th plenary BoF meeting - EOSC-related European Projects getting Global: Engaging with the RDA.
OA Network: Heading for Joint Standards and Enhancing Cooperation: Value‐Adde...Stefan Buddenbohm
OA‐Network collaborates with other associated German Open Access‐related projects and pursues the overarching aim to increase the visibility and the ease of use of the German research output. For this end a technical infrastructure is established to offer value‐added services based on a shared information space across all participating repositories. In addition to this OA‐Network promotes the DINI‐certificate for Open Access repositories (standardization) and a regularly communication exchange in the German repository landscape.
This session will comprise a talk with a panel of speakers
looking at KBART: seven years later (since the publication
of the first set of recommendations up to today). The panel
will discuss the changes on the e-resources metadata
landscape, the benefits of KBART and the challenges of
its implementation. Today poor metadata in the electronic
resources supply chain is still a problem. The panel will
use practical examples to explain how metadata creation,
consumption and usage are marked by the constant
requirement of finding the balance between available
resources (technical and human) and end user discoverability
needs. The KBART Standing Committee sees the
implementation of KBART recommendations as a community
effort from a range of stakeholders (content providers,
knowledge bases, link resolvers and librarians).
20190527_Brecht Wyns & Christophe Bahim _ FAIR data maturity modelOpenAIRE
Presented by Brecht Wyns & Christophe Bahim (RDA)
during the OpenAIRE workshop "Research policy monitoring in the era of Open Science and Big Data" taking place in Ghent, Belgium on May 27th and 28th 2019
Day 1: Monitoring and Infrastructure for Open Science
https://www.openaire.eu/research-policy-monitoring-in-the-era-of-open-science-and-big-data-the-what-indicators-and-the-how-infrastructures
20190527_Diego Chialva_ Research evaluation: the unseized opportunities ...OpenAIRE
Presented by Diego-Valerio Chialva (ERC)
during the OpenAIRE workshop "Research policy monitoring in the era of Open Science and Big Data" taking place in Ghent, Belgium on May 27th and 28th 2019
Day 1: Monitoring and Infrastructure for Open Science
https://www.openaire.eu/research-policy-monitoring-in-the-era-of-open-science-and-big-data-the-what-indicators-and-the-how-infrastructures
Marina Angelaki - PASTEUR4OA: Supporting Open Access PoliciesOpenAIRE
Presentation given as part of OpenAIRE Webinar "Policies for Open Science: webinar for research managers and policy makers", Open Access Week 2016 (27.10.2016)
Alma Swan - PASTEUR4OA: Policy alignment and effectivenessOpenAIRE
Presentation given as part of OpenAIRE Webinar "Policies for Open Science: webinar for research managers and policy makers", Open Access Week 2016 (27.10.2016)
FAIRsharing consists of three registries: data standards, databases and data policies. This short talk focuses on the FAIRsharing data policy registry, and how including your institutional, funder, publisher, journal, society, project in FAIRsharing can improve findability and machine readability of your policy
Has anyone seen my data? Incentivising #opendata sharing with altmetricsNick Sheppard
As an important component of the scholarly record, research data, software and code are increasingly managed as research outputs in their own right, though are not typically subject to peer review.
In line with the broader ‘open research’ movement there is a growing impetus for datasets, software and code to be curated in repositories, openly available wherever possible subject to relevant legal and ethical constraints.
Data repositories such as Figshare, Dryad and Zenodo routinely allocate DOIs for deposited data while many universities in the UK also allocate and mint DOIs in their nascent institutionally based data repositories through Datacite which means they will be automatically tracked by altmetric.com in the same way as journal articles.
While the repository infrastructure continues to develop and there are pockets of best practice, data sharing and reuse is not yet fully established across UK HE. Reward mechanisms are immature and data citation, for example, is limited and not easy to track. Clarivate Analytics’ Data Citation Index coverage of UK based repositories is still relatively low and, as a subscription based product, is not widely accessible. COUNTER compliant downloads can be derived from IRUSdata-UK (beta) which currently tracks 27 UK based institutional data repositories.
Altmetrics therefore offers a low barrier method to track engagement with datasets and, in lieu of a more formal process, might be regarded as a type of informal peer review. We have undertaken a preliminary analysis of repositories that participate in IRUSdata-UK (beta) using it as a source of DOIs to run against the altmetric.com API to discover to what extent research data, software and code is being shared.
This talk will present these preliminary results and explore how and why datasets are being shared across the various platforms tracked by altmetric.com and potential barriers. It will consider how data repository managers can encourage and facilitate data sharing through social media networks, blogs and “data journalism” and will draw on the Research Data Management (RDM) Engagement Award at the University of Leeds which is exploring linking RDM with the Open Science movement via the Wikimedia suite of tools. What does the altmetric data currently tell us about how research data is being linked to this global platform
All'Ecomuseo, l'identità perduta di Verrone di Simona PeroloSimona C. Perolo
Nelle ex stalle del castello, centinaia di oggetti raccontano la quotidianità contadina. E il castello inizia una nuova vita: per secoli dimora della famiglia longobarda dei Vialardi (segnando il passaggio del Biellese alla dominazione dei Savoia), nell'800 è stato la casa del medico e botanico Maurizio Zumaglini, che vi ha scritto la sua monumentale opera 'Flora Pedemontana', per poi diventare cascina e asilo infantile. Oggi ospita il Municipio di Verrone, l'ecomuseo, e il Falseum, museo del falso e dell'inganno.
Presented by Helena Cousijn (FREYA)
during the OpenAIRE workshop "Research policy monitoring in the era of Open Science and Big Data" taking place in Ghent, Belgium on May 27th and 28th 2019
Day 1: Monitoring and Infrastructure for Open Science
https://www.openaire.eu/research-policy-monitoring-in-the-era-of-open-science-and-big-data-the-what-indicators-and-the-how-infrastructures
EOSC-hub and OpenAIRE-Advance collaboration (Presentation at RDA 11th plenary)OpenAIRE
Presentation by Paolo Manghi (CNR-ISTI and OpenAIRE) ath the RDA 11th plenary BoF meeting - EOSC-related European Projects getting Global: Engaging with the RDA.
OA Network: Heading for Joint Standards and Enhancing Cooperation: Value‐Adde...Stefan Buddenbohm
OA‐Network collaborates with other associated German Open Access‐related projects and pursues the overarching aim to increase the visibility and the ease of use of the German research output. For this end a technical infrastructure is established to offer value‐added services based on a shared information space across all participating repositories. In addition to this OA‐Network promotes the DINI‐certificate for Open Access repositories (standardization) and a regularly communication exchange in the German repository landscape.
This session will comprise a talk with a panel of speakers
looking at KBART: seven years later (since the publication
of the first set of recommendations up to today). The panel
will discuss the changes on the e-resources metadata
landscape, the benefits of KBART and the challenges of
its implementation. Today poor metadata in the electronic
resources supply chain is still a problem. The panel will
use practical examples to explain how metadata creation,
consumption and usage are marked by the constant
requirement of finding the balance between available
resources (technical and human) and end user discoverability
needs. The KBART Standing Committee sees the
implementation of KBART recommendations as a community
effort from a range of stakeholders (content providers,
knowledge bases, link resolvers and librarians).
20190527_Brecht Wyns & Christophe Bahim _ FAIR data maturity modelOpenAIRE
Presented by Brecht Wyns & Christophe Bahim (RDA)
during the OpenAIRE workshop "Research policy monitoring in the era of Open Science and Big Data" taking place in Ghent, Belgium on May 27th and 28th 2019
Day 1: Monitoring and Infrastructure for Open Science
https://www.openaire.eu/research-policy-monitoring-in-the-era-of-open-science-and-big-data-the-what-indicators-and-the-how-infrastructures
20190527_Diego Chialva_ Research evaluation: the unseized opportunities ...OpenAIRE
Presented by Diego-Valerio Chialva (ERC)
during the OpenAIRE workshop "Research policy monitoring in the era of Open Science and Big Data" taking place in Ghent, Belgium on May 27th and 28th 2019
Day 1: Monitoring and Infrastructure for Open Science
https://www.openaire.eu/research-policy-monitoring-in-the-era-of-open-science-and-big-data-the-what-indicators-and-the-how-infrastructures
Marina Angelaki - PASTEUR4OA: Supporting Open Access PoliciesOpenAIRE
Presentation given as part of OpenAIRE Webinar "Policies for Open Science: webinar for research managers and policy makers", Open Access Week 2016 (27.10.2016)
Alma Swan - PASTEUR4OA: Policy alignment and effectivenessOpenAIRE
Presentation given as part of OpenAIRE Webinar "Policies for Open Science: webinar for research managers and policy makers", Open Access Week 2016 (27.10.2016)
FAIRsharing consists of three registries: data standards, databases and data policies. This short talk focuses on the FAIRsharing data policy registry, and how including your institutional, funder, publisher, journal, society, project in FAIRsharing can improve findability and machine readability of your policy
Has anyone seen my data? Incentivising #opendata sharing with altmetricsNick Sheppard
As an important component of the scholarly record, research data, software and code are increasingly managed as research outputs in their own right, though are not typically subject to peer review.
In line with the broader ‘open research’ movement there is a growing impetus for datasets, software and code to be curated in repositories, openly available wherever possible subject to relevant legal and ethical constraints.
Data repositories such as Figshare, Dryad and Zenodo routinely allocate DOIs for deposited data while many universities in the UK also allocate and mint DOIs in their nascent institutionally based data repositories through Datacite which means they will be automatically tracked by altmetric.com in the same way as journal articles.
While the repository infrastructure continues to develop and there are pockets of best practice, data sharing and reuse is not yet fully established across UK HE. Reward mechanisms are immature and data citation, for example, is limited and not easy to track. Clarivate Analytics’ Data Citation Index coverage of UK based repositories is still relatively low and, as a subscription based product, is not widely accessible. COUNTER compliant downloads can be derived from IRUSdata-UK (beta) which currently tracks 27 UK based institutional data repositories.
Altmetrics therefore offers a low barrier method to track engagement with datasets and, in lieu of a more formal process, might be regarded as a type of informal peer review. We have undertaken a preliminary analysis of repositories that participate in IRUSdata-UK (beta) using it as a source of DOIs to run against the altmetric.com API to discover to what extent research data, software and code is being shared.
This talk will present these preliminary results and explore how and why datasets are being shared across the various platforms tracked by altmetric.com and potential barriers. It will consider how data repository managers can encourage and facilitate data sharing through social media networks, blogs and “data journalism” and will draw on the Research Data Management (RDM) Engagement Award at the University of Leeds which is exploring linking RDM with the Open Science movement via the Wikimedia suite of tools. What does the altmetric data currently tell us about how research data is being linked to this global platform
All'Ecomuseo, l'identità perduta di Verrone di Simona PeroloSimona C. Perolo
Nelle ex stalle del castello, centinaia di oggetti raccontano la quotidianità contadina. E il castello inizia una nuova vita: per secoli dimora della famiglia longobarda dei Vialardi (segnando il passaggio del Biellese alla dominazione dei Savoia), nell'800 è stato la casa del medico e botanico Maurizio Zumaglini, che vi ha scritto la sua monumentale opera 'Flora Pedemontana', per poi diventare cascina e asilo infantile. Oggi ospita il Municipio di Verrone, l'ecomuseo, e il Falseum, museo del falso e dell'inganno.
If that you are like everyone and appreciate designer apparel at price cut prices then you'll discover this document useful. It is rich in tips on best places shop in Ny city and learn to get Designer product labels at great buy prices, together with on learn to get around metropolis. For more information on click here: http://www.shoppinginnewyorkcity.net
Slide dell'intervento di BRUNO BERTERO (PromoTurismoFVG), tenuto nell'ambito del convegno "Ecomusei. 10 anni dopo" (Villa Manin, Passariano, 9 aprile 2016).
Programma completo del convegno sul sito IPAC > http://bit.ly/22UP1uO
Harvesting Repositories: DPLA, Europeana, & Other Case Studieseohallor
Join this discussion on the benefits and process of harvesting to aggregators such as DPLA, Europeana and other aggregators. Through case studies we'll outline three stages of the process, including 1) mapping, migrating, and normalizing data in open source digital repositories, 2) making use of the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI - PMH), and 3) reaping the benefits of increased exposure. Presenters welcome lively discussion and questions from participants of all technical backgrounds and skill levels.
NISO access related projects (presented at the Charleston conference 2016)Christine Stohn
Presentation by Pascal Calarco (University of Windsor), Christine Stohn (Ex Libris/ProQuest), John G. Dove (Paloma Associates), covering NISO D2D work, ResourceSync, KBART and KBART automation, ODI (Open Discovery Initiative), Link origin tracking, ALI (Access and License Indicators), and a discussion around improvements and challenges for open access discovery
2021 04 Introduction to FAIRsharing - cinecaAllyson Lister
Part of the The “How FAIR are you” webinar series and hackathon, which aim at increasing and facilitating the uptake of FAIR approaches into software, training materials and cohort data, to facilitate responsible and ethical data and resource sharing and implementation of federated applications for data analysis.
More information at
* the webinar page: https://www.cineca-project.eu/news-events-all/how-fair-are-you-hackathon
* the recording of the talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdGZOynyuGo
Information technology and resources are an integral and indispensable part of the contemporary academic enterprise. In particular, technological advances have nurtured a new paradigm of data-intensive research. However, far too much of this activity still takes place in silos, to the detriment of open scholarly inquiry, integrity, and advancement. To counteract this tendency, the University of California Curation Center (UC3) has been developing and deploying a comprehensive suite of curation services that facilitate widespread data management, preservation, publication, sharing, and reuse. Through these services UC3 is engaging with new communities of use: in addition to its traditional stakeholders in cultural heritage memory organizations, e.g., libraries, museums, and archives, the UC3 service suite is now attracting significant adoption by research projects, laboratories, and individual faculty researchers. This webinar will present an introduction to five specific services – DMPTool, DataUp, EZID, Merritt, Web Archiving Service (WAS) – applicable to data curation throughout the scholarly lifecycle, two recent initiatives in collaboration with UC campuses, UC Berkeley Research Hub and UC San Francisco DataShare, and the ways in which they encourage and promote new communities of practice and greater transparency in scholarly research.
Covers the development of the UC San Diego Library Digital Asset Management System -- from local dark archive to a repository with a public interface supporting material in multiple format types including traditional digital collections as well research data sets.
The academic research data lifecycle. Session 1.4 of the RDMRose v3 materials.
The JISC funded RDMRose project (June 2012-May 2013) was a collaboration between the libraries of the University of Leeds, Sheffield and York, with the Information School at Sheffield to provide an Open Educational Resource for information professionals on Research Data Management. The materials were revised between November 2014 and February 2015 for the consortium of North West Academic Libraries (NoWAL).
http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/is/research/projects/rdmrose
Project update: A collaborative approach to "filling the digital preservation...Jenny Mitcham
A presentation given by Julie Allinson at the UK Archivematica group meeting on 6th November 2015 in Leeds. It describes work underway in the "Filling the Digital Preservation Gap" project using Archivematica to preserve research data
Closing the scientific literature access gap with CORE - how to gain free acc...Nancy Pontika
Presented during the International Open Access Week 2020 for the Kerala Library Association, October 21, 2020.
The presentation is about CORE, a global harvester of open access scientific content and the CORE services on content discovery, managing content and access to raw data.
The future of scholarly communications professionalsNancy Pontika
The scholarly communications profession is constantly changing, and a wide range of skills are required in the advertised job descriptions. In an effort to investigate what kind of skills future information professionals need, during the period March 2015 to September 2017 job postings advertising positions relating to Open Access were collected. The total number of the collected job postings was 72.
The collection was done manually throughout this whole period from job advertising sites, such as Jobs.ac.uk, CILIP Lisjobnet and the Times of Higher Education. In addition, the author is subscribing to open listserves, such as the Jisc-Repositories, OAGoodPractice and a closed one, the UKCoRR-Discussion list, and managed to collect job descriptions from those list servers as well.
The aim of this work is to identify the most important skills required in the jobs advertised in our field, educate the new comers in the field and identify how our profession is evolving.
Presented at the Open Science Fair, Athens 6-8 September 2017, at the FOSTER Plus "Fostering the practical implementation of Open Science in Horizon 2020 and beyond" workshop http://www.opensciencefair.eu/training/parallel-day-2-2/fostering-the-practical-implementation-of-open-science-in-horizon-2020-and-beyond
Open Science, Why not?
Presented at the Agreenskills meeting
Paris, 15 February 2017
Abstract: Imagine YOUR research some time in the future! Abandon all preconceptions, and imagine an idealised way of how research might be done in the future. What does it look like? Is the knowledge you’ll create in the future constrained to your pencil scribbled notebook, to your lab, and to the pages of an elite journal? Or does it flow seamlessly across disciplines and collaborative teams. Is the knowledge you generate in the future categorised, labelled and published according to rigid disciplinary taxonomy, or is it being applied by people you never met and may never meet. Is the fruit of your labour so discoverable, accessible and re-usable that it advances knowledge, fixes real world problems in research directions that you never thought of possible anticipated? And imagine all that happens even while you are sleeping, but attributing full credit to you? That future may become the default setting sooner than you might guess.
The presentation will briefly introduce Open Science in the context of an open, transparent, re-usable and reproducible research lifecycle, and present strategic and career arguments, such as why research of relevance to societal challenges can not afford not to adopt Open Science as the default setting.
How can repositories support the text-mining of their content and why? Nancy Pontika
Co-presented with Petr Knoth http://www.slideshare.net/petrknoth/ at the "Mining Repositories: How to assist the research and academic community on their text and data mining needs" workshop, which took place at the 11th International Conference on Open Repositories, Monday 13 June 2016.
Reusing Open Access content & HEFCE policy on Open AccessNancy Pontika
Presented at the FOSTER - UNESCO Open Science for Doctoral Schools, 24 April 2015 (https://www.fosteropenscience.eu/event/foster-unesco-open-science-doctoral-schools)
REF2020 and Open Access : How to comply?Nancy Pontika
Presented during Open Access Week (22nd October, 2014) in the event "Open Access for REF2020 and Research Data Management: What do researchers need to know?"
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
Honest Reviews of Tim Han LMA Course Program.pptxtimhan337
Personal development courses are widely available today, with each one promising life-changing outcomes. Tim Han’s Life Mastery Achievers (LMA) Course has drawn a lot of interest. In addition to offering my frank assessment of Success Insider’s LMA Course, this piece examines the course’s effects via a variety of Tim Han LMA course reviews and Success Insider comments.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of Labour
CORE Repositories Dashboard
1. CORE Repositories Dashboard:
Closer Collaboration between CORE and repositories’ managers
Nancy Pontika
CORE
UKCoRR Members Day
Glasgow, 4 September 2015
2. CORE’s mission
Aggregate all open access content distributed
across different systems worldwide, enrich this
content and provide access to it through a set of
services …
[Source: http://core.ac.uk/about#mission]
3. Three levels of supportThree levels of support
Programmable
Data Access
- CORE API
- CORE Data Dumps
- Researchers
- Developers
- Companies
Transaction
Information
Access
- CORE Portal
- CORE Mobile
- CORE Plugin
- Researchers
- Students
- Life long learners
Analytical
Information
Access
- CORE Policy
-CORE Compliance
Analytics
- CORE Dashboard
- Funders
- Governments
- Data Providers
[Source: http://www.dlib.org/dlib/november12/knoth/11knoth.html]
4. CORE Dashboard : overview
• Harvested
Records
• Metadata
• Harvesting
Process
• Standards
• Repository
Managers
• Funders
• Repositories
• Journals
Data
Providers
Collaboration
QualityTransparency
13. Issues : 3 types
When harvesting your repository/document we encountered an error that we couldn't
resolve. These errors need to be fixed in order to to harvest your repository/document.
We encountered an error but we were still able to harvest the repository/document. We
strongly recommend that these issues are resolved as they may lead to incompatibility
problems in the future.
This may not be a problem but it may be a clue for misconfiguration or future
incompatibilities.
18. Interested to use it?
Email dashboard[at]core[dot]ac[dot]uk
We are still in BETA so please bear with us!
19. Special Thanks to:
CORE developers:
• Matteo Cancellieri
• Samuel Pearce
• Drahomira Herrmannova
• Lucas Anastasiou
Volunteer testers:
• Chris Biggs, Metadata & Repository Specialist, Open
University
• Nick Sheppard, Repository Developer, Leeds Beckett
University
20. Thank you
Questions
CORE Contacts:
Nancy Pontika nancy.pontika[at]open.ac.uk
Petr Knoth petr.knoth[at]open.ac.uk
Website: http://core.ac.uk
Twitter: @oacore
For an extended version of this presentation see here:
http://www.slideshare.net/NancyPontika/developing-infrastructure-to-
support-closer-collaboration-of-aggregators-with-open-repositories