Open Science as-a-Service for research communities: OpenAIRE-Connect project ...OpenAIRE
"Open Science as-a-Service for research communities: OpenAIRE-Connect project"
Presentation by Pedro Príncipe from University of Minho at the OYSTER2019, Cádiz, Spain. OpenAIRE-Connect Workshop - EuroMarine Young Scientist Working Group (Jan. 28, 2019)
Sshoc kick off meeting - 1.4.2 EOSC-Life: an open collaborative space for dig...SSHOC
SSHOC Kick-Off Meeting. Utrecht, The Netherlands, 11-12 March 2019
EOSC-Life: an open collaborative space for digital biology in Europe - Niklas Blomberg
EGI and EUDAT support to the PaNOSC projectEGI Federation
Data transfer & archivingm, and Jupyter on the EGI Federated Cloud at the core of EGI and EUDAT support to Photon and Neutron science in the PaNOSC project
The Planets Digital Preservation Project was a 4-year EU-funded research project aimed at increasing Europe's ability to ensure long-term access to cultural and scientific digital content. The project sought to improve decision-making around long-term digital preservation, ensure access to valued digital content over time, control preservation costs through automation and scalable infrastructure, and promote adoption of preservation services and tools across user communities and commercial markets. Bringing together archives, libraries, researchers and technology companies, the project built practical preservation solutions by integrating existing expertise, designs, and tools.
How the Research Data Service supports Open Research (aka Open Science) at the University of Edinburgh. Abridged slides used for presentation to Open Access Scotland meeting in Edinburgh on Wednesday 27th of March 2019.
Data management experiences in the European projects context: which lessons f...Research Data Alliance
This document discusses lessons learned from European data management projects that could be applied more broadly. It summarizes Cineca's role as a supercomputing center in Italy supporting research through HPC and large-scale data analysis. European projects like EuHIT and EUDAT aim to integrate cross-border research infrastructure and offer common data services. While standards differ across disciplines, cloud infrastructure can help lower barriers to FAIR data practices. Communities need flexibility in applying principles progressively rather than all at once. Accessibility remains a priority, but interoperability and reusability of data need more focus.
agINFRA vision after the end of the projectAndreas Drakos
The agINFRA project (http://www.aginfra.eu) lasted from the October 2011 to February 2015. This presentation shows the vision for after the end of the project
Open Science as-a-Service for research communities: OpenAIRE-Connect project ...OpenAIRE
"Open Science as-a-Service for research communities: OpenAIRE-Connect project"
Presentation by Pedro Príncipe from University of Minho at the OYSTER2019, Cádiz, Spain. OpenAIRE-Connect Workshop - EuroMarine Young Scientist Working Group (Jan. 28, 2019)
Sshoc kick off meeting - 1.4.2 EOSC-Life: an open collaborative space for dig...SSHOC
SSHOC Kick-Off Meeting. Utrecht, The Netherlands, 11-12 March 2019
EOSC-Life: an open collaborative space for digital biology in Europe - Niklas Blomberg
EGI and EUDAT support to the PaNOSC projectEGI Federation
Data transfer & archivingm, and Jupyter on the EGI Federated Cloud at the core of EGI and EUDAT support to Photon and Neutron science in the PaNOSC project
The Planets Digital Preservation Project was a 4-year EU-funded research project aimed at increasing Europe's ability to ensure long-term access to cultural and scientific digital content. The project sought to improve decision-making around long-term digital preservation, ensure access to valued digital content over time, control preservation costs through automation and scalable infrastructure, and promote adoption of preservation services and tools across user communities and commercial markets. Bringing together archives, libraries, researchers and technology companies, the project built practical preservation solutions by integrating existing expertise, designs, and tools.
How the Research Data Service supports Open Research (aka Open Science) at the University of Edinburgh. Abridged slides used for presentation to Open Access Scotland meeting in Edinburgh on Wednesday 27th of March 2019.
Data management experiences in the European projects context: which lessons f...Research Data Alliance
This document discusses lessons learned from European data management projects that could be applied more broadly. It summarizes Cineca's role as a supercomputing center in Italy supporting research through HPC and large-scale data analysis. European projects like EuHIT and EUDAT aim to integrate cross-border research infrastructure and offer common data services. While standards differ across disciplines, cloud infrastructure can help lower barriers to FAIR data practices. Communities need flexibility in applying principles progressively rather than all at once. Accessibility remains a priority, but interoperability and reusability of data need more focus.
agINFRA vision after the end of the projectAndreas Drakos
The agINFRA project (http://www.aginfra.eu) lasted from the October 2011 to February 2015. This presentation shows the vision for after the end of the project
This document discusses the role of open data and open science in the European Union. It outlines the EU's support for open access through various council conclusions and recommendations promoting more open and data-driven research. The EU plans to require immediate open access to publications without embargoes and open licensing of copyrighted works. The document also mentions the EU's actions in response to COVID-19, including an open data portal and coordinated research efforts, and questions if this crisis will further promote open science policies long term.
The document summarizes key elements of the European Commission's 2018 Data Package, which outlines measures to create a common European data space by making different types of data more accessible and reusable across borders and sectors. It discusses proposals to recast the Public Sector Information Directive to require member states to make high-value public and research data available through APIs for free reuse. It also covers principles for business-to-business data sharing and facilitating data delivery from companies to the public sector while respecting commercial interests. Finally, it outlines revisions to the Commission Recommendation on access to scientific information to update open science policies and practices.
The AGINFRA+ Vision: Serving the European Scientists Across Food SystemsAGINFRA
Panagiotis Zervas from Agroknow on the AGINFRA PLUS vision.
Joint Workshop on Food Risk Assessment Research & Practice
24th November 2017, Wageningen University & Research, Netherlands
European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) From vision to actionSLA-Ready Network
Presentation held by Carmela Asero (European Commission) @ SLA-Ready workshop "Are you SLA-Ready? How to understand your cloud Service Level Agreement", on 15 December 2016 in Brussels, Belgium. http://bit.ly/2fVcCG7
Vortrag im Rahmen der EERA-Session: Open Science and Educational Research? Inclusion and Exclusion at the European Open Science Cloud; am 5. September 2018 in Bolzano (Italien).
European Commission
DG Research and Innovation
RTD.A2. Open Data Policy and Science Cloud
Katarzyna Szkuta
OpenAIRE Presentation in the OpenAIRE Berlin Conference, Dec 2009, ParisOpenAIRE
OpenAIRE is a 36-month, FP7-funded project with 38 partners from 27 EU member states and Norway. It aims to establish an electronic infrastructure and support mechanisms to identify, deposit, access, and monitor FP7 and ERC funded articles. All deposited articles will be freely accessible worldwide through a new portal. OpenAIRE will establish a helpdesk system and liaison offices across Europe to support researchers in depositing publications. It will also operate an e-infrastructure populated with FP7-funded research using a repository to host publications with no natural repository association. OpenAIRE will provide monitoring, statistics, and a portal to access publications and services. It will also explore scientific data management with various subject communities.
Sshoc kick off meeting - 1.2.3 EOSC board - Social Sciences and Humanities Op...SSHOC
This document discusses the Social Sciences & Humanities Open Cloud (SSHOC) and its role within the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). It notes that an integrated approach is needed to research data infrastructures that goes beyond individual layers and national/disciplinary silos. The goal of EOSC is to provide a virtual environment for storage, management, analysis and reuse of research data across borders and disciplines. EOSC aims to federate existing initiatives within a single, consolidated platform. The document outlines the EC policy and governance structure behind EOSC, as well as related projects that have received funding. It discusses how SSHOC could be seamlessly integrated within EOSC and the expected impacts, including increased availability of
Service provisioning for Excellent Science (Daan Broeder - EUDAT/CLARIN) | Op...EUDAT
EUDAT is a project that started in 2011 to address the increasing costs and complexities of isolated data management solutions. It provides common data services through a federation of compute and data centers to serve a variety of research communities. EUDAT receives funding through Horizon 2020 and involves 37 partners. It offers services for storage, workflows, processing and archiving. While EUDAT engages broadly with communities, gathering requirements is very time-consuming. There are questions around how to be more efficient in requirements gathering and involving specialized organizations to help define services and standards.
A Research Data Catalogue supporting Blue Growth: the BlueBRIDGE caseBlue BRIDGE
Presentation by Massimiliano Assante, CNR-ISTI, Pisa, Italy
How the FAIR principles should manifest in reality is largely open to interpretation. In this presentation it is described the approach exploited in the context of the BlueBRIDGE EU project. This approach culminates in an open, flexible and rich catalogue where an ample set of research resources are expected to be seamlessly discovered and accessed by overcoming interoperability and reusability issues. Behind the catalogue there is a rich and powerful infrastructure (D4Science.org) that enacts the catalogue FAIRness by deploying and operating a set of service and facilities enabling to actually have access the catalogue items payload (beyond metadata). The presentation describes some of the prototypical patterns implemented to enable the collaborative production and publication of scientific output compliant with the Open Science and FAIR principles. More on BlueBRIDGE here www.bluebridge-vres.eu
ICOS: Integrated Carbon Observation System Open data to open our eyes to clim...Blue BRIDGE
Presentation by Harry Lankreijer, ICOS-Carbon Portal, Lund University, Sweden.
ICOS is a pan-European research infrastructure (RI) for observing and understanding the greenhouse gas (GHG) balance of Europe and its adjacent regions. The major task of ICOS is to collect and make available in a transparent manner, the high-quality observational data from its state-of-the-art measurement stations. These ICOS data – from atmosphere, ecosystem and ocean stations – will contribute to research aiming to describe and understand the present state of the global carbon cycle. The Carbon Portal will be the virtual data center that present the data products and make it available. This presentation will briefly present the work of ICOS and the Carbon Portal towards open data with FAIR principles. ICOS has an open data policy with free use, requesting the user to give appropriate credit (Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 ). The Carbon Portal is developing a data catalogue using an ontology based on a semantic metadata description. This will make it possible to integrate ICOS observations with data from other RI’s as well with data of global networks. For integration, the Carbon Portal is actively following the developments of international standards for eg. metadata and data citation.
European Cloud Initiative: implementation statusEUDAT
The document discusses the implementation status of the European Cloud Initiative. It has three main pillars: the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC), the European Data Infrastructure, and widening access and building trust. For the EOSC, several implementing actions have been funded, including EOSCpilot, eInfraCentral, EOSC-Hub, OpenAIRE-Advance, and others to develop services and integrate infrastructures. Future plans include ensuring research infrastructures are connected to the EOSC and procuring commercial services for it. The goal is for the EOSC to provide access to data and computing resources for all EU researchers through a trusted virtual environment.
The Museum für Naturkunde Berlin will contribute to the ViBRANT project by mobilizing users from professional and non-professional biodiversity monitoring initiatives. They will support the development of software applications for conservation monitoring and provide field tools and technologies developed in previous projects. They will develop a scratchpad module to promote digital field recording, provide information on available tools and technologies, and establish standardized data capture protocols. This will help build a network and user community around biodiversity inventory and monitoring.
The aim of the webinar is to introduce the audience, in particular non-lawyers, to the legal framework of text and data mining, focusing on the main aspects of the law at the European level.
Research and Innovation in transformation: the transition to Open ScienceJean-François Dechamp
The document discusses the European Commission's efforts to promote open science. It summarizes the EC's role in funding research and setting policies. It outlines the EC's open access and open research data policies in Horizon 2020 and plans for FP9. It also discusses challenges like skills development, metrics, and legal issues regarding open science. The overall aim is to kickstart a cultural change towards greater sharing and collaboration in research.
The European Open Science Cloud: just what is it?Jisc
The European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) aims to provide a virtual environment for Europe's 1.7 million researchers to store, share, and reuse research outputs. It will reduce duplication of efforts and simplify access across borders and disciplines. The EOSC will be guided by FAIR principles to make data findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. Its implementation will focus on engaging stakeholders, developing open standards and interoperable services, and addressing skills gaps in data management. The EOSC seeks to build on existing research infrastructures and e-infrastructures through a distributed and community-driven approach.
The European Open Science Cloud: just what is it?Carole Goble
Presented at Jisc and CNI leaders conference 2018, 2 July 2018, Oxford, UK (https://www.jisc.ac.uk/events/jisc-and-cni-leaders-conference-02-jul-2018). The European Open Science Cloud. What exactly is it? In principle it is conceived as a virtual environment with open and seamless services for storage, management, analysis and re-use of research data, across borders and scientific disciplines. How? By federating existing scientific data infrastructures, currently dispersed across disciplines and Member States. In practice, what it is depends on the stakeholder. To European Research Infrastructures it’s a coordinated mission to organise and exchange their data, metadata, software and services to be FAIR – Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable – and to use e-Infrastructures, either EU or commercial. To EU e-Infrastructures offering data storage and cloud services, it’s a funding mission to integrate their services, policies and organisational structures, and to be used by the Research Infrastructures. To agencies it’s a means to promote Open Science, standardisation, cross-disciplinary research and coordinated investment with a dream of a “one stop shop” for researchers. And for Libraries?
The Spanish Open Research Data Network. Lessons learnedmaredata
This document summarizes a presentation about Maredata, a Spanish network focused on open research data management. The network brings together Spanish research teams working on topics like interoperability, access, preservation, and open data policies. It aims to coordinate these groups, avoid duplications in research, and promote transparency. The benefits of open research data discussed include increased collaboration, validation of results, and transparency. Future areas of focus for the network include identifying discipline-specific research data management needs, exploring open health data, and addressing issues like data protection, quality, and ethics.
This document discusses the role of open data and open science in the European Union. It outlines the EU's support for open access through various council conclusions and recommendations promoting more open and data-driven research. The EU plans to require immediate open access to publications without embargoes and open licensing of copyrighted works. The document also mentions the EU's actions in response to COVID-19, including an open data portal and coordinated research efforts, and questions if this crisis will further promote open science policies long term.
The document summarizes key elements of the European Commission's 2018 Data Package, which outlines measures to create a common European data space by making different types of data more accessible and reusable across borders and sectors. It discusses proposals to recast the Public Sector Information Directive to require member states to make high-value public and research data available through APIs for free reuse. It also covers principles for business-to-business data sharing and facilitating data delivery from companies to the public sector while respecting commercial interests. Finally, it outlines revisions to the Commission Recommendation on access to scientific information to update open science policies and practices.
The AGINFRA+ Vision: Serving the European Scientists Across Food SystemsAGINFRA
Panagiotis Zervas from Agroknow on the AGINFRA PLUS vision.
Joint Workshop on Food Risk Assessment Research & Practice
24th November 2017, Wageningen University & Research, Netherlands
European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) From vision to actionSLA-Ready Network
Presentation held by Carmela Asero (European Commission) @ SLA-Ready workshop "Are you SLA-Ready? How to understand your cloud Service Level Agreement", on 15 December 2016 in Brussels, Belgium. http://bit.ly/2fVcCG7
Vortrag im Rahmen der EERA-Session: Open Science and Educational Research? Inclusion and Exclusion at the European Open Science Cloud; am 5. September 2018 in Bolzano (Italien).
European Commission
DG Research and Innovation
RTD.A2. Open Data Policy and Science Cloud
Katarzyna Szkuta
OpenAIRE Presentation in the OpenAIRE Berlin Conference, Dec 2009, ParisOpenAIRE
OpenAIRE is a 36-month, FP7-funded project with 38 partners from 27 EU member states and Norway. It aims to establish an electronic infrastructure and support mechanisms to identify, deposit, access, and monitor FP7 and ERC funded articles. All deposited articles will be freely accessible worldwide through a new portal. OpenAIRE will establish a helpdesk system and liaison offices across Europe to support researchers in depositing publications. It will also operate an e-infrastructure populated with FP7-funded research using a repository to host publications with no natural repository association. OpenAIRE will provide monitoring, statistics, and a portal to access publications and services. It will also explore scientific data management with various subject communities.
Sshoc kick off meeting - 1.2.3 EOSC board - Social Sciences and Humanities Op...SSHOC
This document discusses the Social Sciences & Humanities Open Cloud (SSHOC) and its role within the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). It notes that an integrated approach is needed to research data infrastructures that goes beyond individual layers and national/disciplinary silos. The goal of EOSC is to provide a virtual environment for storage, management, analysis and reuse of research data across borders and disciplines. EOSC aims to federate existing initiatives within a single, consolidated platform. The document outlines the EC policy and governance structure behind EOSC, as well as related projects that have received funding. It discusses how SSHOC could be seamlessly integrated within EOSC and the expected impacts, including increased availability of
Service provisioning for Excellent Science (Daan Broeder - EUDAT/CLARIN) | Op...EUDAT
EUDAT is a project that started in 2011 to address the increasing costs and complexities of isolated data management solutions. It provides common data services through a federation of compute and data centers to serve a variety of research communities. EUDAT receives funding through Horizon 2020 and involves 37 partners. It offers services for storage, workflows, processing and archiving. While EUDAT engages broadly with communities, gathering requirements is very time-consuming. There are questions around how to be more efficient in requirements gathering and involving specialized organizations to help define services and standards.
A Research Data Catalogue supporting Blue Growth: the BlueBRIDGE caseBlue BRIDGE
Presentation by Massimiliano Assante, CNR-ISTI, Pisa, Italy
How the FAIR principles should manifest in reality is largely open to interpretation. In this presentation it is described the approach exploited in the context of the BlueBRIDGE EU project. This approach culminates in an open, flexible and rich catalogue where an ample set of research resources are expected to be seamlessly discovered and accessed by overcoming interoperability and reusability issues. Behind the catalogue there is a rich and powerful infrastructure (D4Science.org) that enacts the catalogue FAIRness by deploying and operating a set of service and facilities enabling to actually have access the catalogue items payload (beyond metadata). The presentation describes some of the prototypical patterns implemented to enable the collaborative production and publication of scientific output compliant with the Open Science and FAIR principles. More on BlueBRIDGE here www.bluebridge-vres.eu
ICOS: Integrated Carbon Observation System Open data to open our eyes to clim...Blue BRIDGE
Presentation by Harry Lankreijer, ICOS-Carbon Portal, Lund University, Sweden.
ICOS is a pan-European research infrastructure (RI) for observing and understanding the greenhouse gas (GHG) balance of Europe and its adjacent regions. The major task of ICOS is to collect and make available in a transparent manner, the high-quality observational data from its state-of-the-art measurement stations. These ICOS data – from atmosphere, ecosystem and ocean stations – will contribute to research aiming to describe and understand the present state of the global carbon cycle. The Carbon Portal will be the virtual data center that present the data products and make it available. This presentation will briefly present the work of ICOS and the Carbon Portal towards open data with FAIR principles. ICOS has an open data policy with free use, requesting the user to give appropriate credit (Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 ). The Carbon Portal is developing a data catalogue using an ontology based on a semantic metadata description. This will make it possible to integrate ICOS observations with data from other RI’s as well with data of global networks. For integration, the Carbon Portal is actively following the developments of international standards for eg. metadata and data citation.
European Cloud Initiative: implementation statusEUDAT
The document discusses the implementation status of the European Cloud Initiative. It has three main pillars: the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC), the European Data Infrastructure, and widening access and building trust. For the EOSC, several implementing actions have been funded, including EOSCpilot, eInfraCentral, EOSC-Hub, OpenAIRE-Advance, and others to develop services and integrate infrastructures. Future plans include ensuring research infrastructures are connected to the EOSC and procuring commercial services for it. The goal is for the EOSC to provide access to data and computing resources for all EU researchers through a trusted virtual environment.
The Museum für Naturkunde Berlin will contribute to the ViBRANT project by mobilizing users from professional and non-professional biodiversity monitoring initiatives. They will support the development of software applications for conservation monitoring and provide field tools and technologies developed in previous projects. They will develop a scratchpad module to promote digital field recording, provide information on available tools and technologies, and establish standardized data capture protocols. This will help build a network and user community around biodiversity inventory and monitoring.
The aim of the webinar is to introduce the audience, in particular non-lawyers, to the legal framework of text and data mining, focusing on the main aspects of the law at the European level.
Research and Innovation in transformation: the transition to Open ScienceJean-François Dechamp
The document discusses the European Commission's efforts to promote open science. It summarizes the EC's role in funding research and setting policies. It outlines the EC's open access and open research data policies in Horizon 2020 and plans for FP9. It also discusses challenges like skills development, metrics, and legal issues regarding open science. The overall aim is to kickstart a cultural change towards greater sharing and collaboration in research.
The European Open Science Cloud: just what is it?Jisc
The European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) aims to provide a virtual environment for Europe's 1.7 million researchers to store, share, and reuse research outputs. It will reduce duplication of efforts and simplify access across borders and disciplines. The EOSC will be guided by FAIR principles to make data findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. Its implementation will focus on engaging stakeholders, developing open standards and interoperable services, and addressing skills gaps in data management. The EOSC seeks to build on existing research infrastructures and e-infrastructures through a distributed and community-driven approach.
The European Open Science Cloud: just what is it?Carole Goble
Presented at Jisc and CNI leaders conference 2018, 2 July 2018, Oxford, UK (https://www.jisc.ac.uk/events/jisc-and-cni-leaders-conference-02-jul-2018). The European Open Science Cloud. What exactly is it? In principle it is conceived as a virtual environment with open and seamless services for storage, management, analysis and re-use of research data, across borders and scientific disciplines. How? By federating existing scientific data infrastructures, currently dispersed across disciplines and Member States. In practice, what it is depends on the stakeholder. To European Research Infrastructures it’s a coordinated mission to organise and exchange their data, metadata, software and services to be FAIR – Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable – and to use e-Infrastructures, either EU or commercial. To EU e-Infrastructures offering data storage and cloud services, it’s a funding mission to integrate their services, policies and organisational structures, and to be used by the Research Infrastructures. To agencies it’s a means to promote Open Science, standardisation, cross-disciplinary research and coordinated investment with a dream of a “one stop shop” for researchers. And for Libraries?
The Spanish Open Research Data Network. Lessons learnedmaredata
This document summarizes a presentation about Maredata, a Spanish network focused on open research data management. The network brings together Spanish research teams working on topics like interoperability, access, preservation, and open data policies. It aims to coordinate these groups, avoid duplications in research, and promote transparency. The benefits of open research data discussed include increased collaboration, validation of results, and transparency. Future areas of focus for the network include identifying discipline-specific research data management needs, exploring open health data, and addressing issues like data protection, quality, and ethics.
Research Support in an Open Science Framework - Ron Dekker, seconded national...Mari Tinnemans
This document summarizes discussions and outcomes from the Dutch EU Presidency in 2016 regarding open science. It discusses the Amsterdam Call for Action on Open Science which set goals of full open access to publications by 2020 and optimal reuse of research data. The ERAC Taskforce on Open Data and a Competitiveness Council meeting resulted in conclusions supporting the open science agenda. The document also outlines the European Commission's ongoing work to develop the Open Science Policy Platform and further the European Open Science Agenda.
NordForsk Open Access Reykjavik 14-15/8-2014: H2020NordForsk
This document summarizes the European Commission's policies on open access to research data and publications in Horizon 2020. Key points include:
1) Horizon 2020 will require open access to publications and encourage open access to research data through a pilot program. Projects will need to submit a data management plan and may need to deposit data in a repository.
2) The goals are to optimize the impact of publicly-funded research, enable better science, and promote economic growth and broader access.
3) Support for open access includes funding for e-infrastructure projects, training, helpdesks and guidelines on open data management.
This document discusses open science and provides context around European open science policy. It defines open science as making scientific knowledge openly shared as early as possible in the discovery process. It outlines the European Commission's consultation and agenda to promote open access to publications and research data. It describes the recommendations of various expert groups to establish incentives, infrastructure, and policies to support open science. Finally, it discusses how open science is being advanced internationally through organizations like the G7 and initiatives within European Commission programs.
Cette conférence - e-santé : évolution ou révolution? - a pour but de présenter quelques projets développés par les hautes écoles et entreprises de pointe dans le domaine. A cette occasion, Prof. Dr. Henning Müller a fait un exposé intitulé: La e-santé en général et quelques projets de la HES-SO Valais.
The Ascent of Open Science and the European Open Science CloudTiziana Ferrari
EOSC-hub receives funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 programme to integrate and manage services for the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). The presentation discusses the need for open science, open data, and interoperable e-infrastructures. It provides examples like the LIGO and VIRGO collaborations sharing data and the WeNMR community using distributed computing resources. The EOSC-hub project aims to provide a single point of access to services across different providers through a marketplace. It has onboarded many services, engaged with users and service providers, and seen increasing usage of thematic, federation, and common services on the platform. The EOSC has the potential to boost support for open
This document discusses open science and the European Commission's efforts to promote it. It makes the following key points:
1. Open science involves making research more open, collaborative and digital. It affects all parts of the research process.
2. The Commission sees open science as having benefits like increasing research quality and impact, and making science more responsive to societal challenges.
3. The Commission has outlined five broad policy lines and eight specific priorities to advance open science in Europe through 2020. It is working with stakeholders to turn open science from a vision into reality.
Fit for Purpose! Shaping Open Access and Open Science Policies for Horizon Eu...Victoria Tsoukala
Victoria Tsoukala from the European Commission's DG RTD Open Science Unit presented on the European Commission's policies and plans for Open Access and Open Science under Horizon Europe. Key points include:
- Open Access to publications and research data will be mandatory under Horizon Europe with exceptions allowed for research data.
- The European Open Science Cloud will provide researchers access to storage, management, and analysis of research data.
- Responsible data management with Data Management Plans and FAIR data principles will be required.
- Open Science will be promoted through incentives and obligations beyond just open access, such as citizen science and evaluation of proposals.
- Other initiatives include the European Open Science Cloud to connect
The document summarizes the European Commission's policies and activities to support open science in Europe. It outlines the Commission's holistic policy agenda to promote open access to publications and research data, establish the European Open Science Cloud, and incentivize open science practices. It also presents the key findings of a new report on the state of open science across EU member states, which found most have adopted open access policies but progress on research data policies and incentives varies. Areas identified as needing more work include copyright, access for SMEs, skills and rewards, and indicators for open science.
Europa requisitos y servicios en torno a los datos de investigacionmaredata
Europa requires and provides services around research data:
- It requires openly sharing research publications and data from publicly funded research by 2020. Countries will implement their own open access policies.
- It offers guidelines for researchers, infrastructure support, and funding incentives for open science practices like publishing with open access and sharing research data.
- The European Open Science Cloud aims to provide a supporting environment for open science through federated infrastructure and initiatives across member states.
European Open Science Cloud: History and StatusMatthew Dovey
The document summarizes the history and status of the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). It began as an idea called "The Grid" in 2000 to provide networked resources across organizations. A timeline shows milestones like the 2008 Pan-European e-Infrastructures and the 2016 European Cloud Initiative. The EOSC aims to offer researchers open access to digital resources and expertise through principles of openness, collaboration, and long-term support. Its implementation includes turning recommendations into a guide, developing data expertise, and funding preparatory phases like the EOSC Pilot Project to help establish the EOSC.
20170530_Open Research Data in Horizon 2020OpenAIRE
This document discusses open research data in Horizon 2020 projects. It provides an overview of the OpenAIRE network, the European Commission's open access mandate, and requirements for open research data under Horizon 2020. Projects starting in 2017 are included in the open data policy by default and must make their data openly available. Reasons for opting out of open data requirements are also presented.
Open Data Strategies and Research Data RealitiesMartin Donnelly
The document summarizes a presentation about facilitating open science training in Europe. It discusses the benefits of open data and research, including increased impact, accessibility, efficiency and transparency. However, it also notes challenges like privacy, recognition issues, and technical limitations. Emerging consensus supports the "FAIR" principles of findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable data. The presentation provides guidance on open data strategies, including having a data management plan, describing and archiving data appropriately, and using standards. It emphasizes communication and seeking help from research support organizations.
Prof. Henning Müller gave the presentation Information Access to Medical Image Data: from Big Data to Semantics - Academic and Commercial Challenges at the DBTA Workshop on Academic-Industrial Forms of Collaboration at the University of Lausanne.
The presentation introduced two EU funded projects called Khresmoi and Visceral and highlighted the collaborations of HES-SO with several companies in these projects and also with other Universities and institutions in Switzerland.
Preventive healthcare: exploring big data’s rising role in active and healthy ageing
As healthcare costs continue to soar, the cost saving benefits of big data will become more apparent, especially as there is an increased focus on preventive care, well-being and reducing re-admission rates in the hospital. With so many benefits, it’s easy to understand why the healthcare industry has been such an early adopter of big data technology.
However, it would be interesting to see the impact big data has on the active and healthy ageing market as we are moving forward.
Indeed, can we imagine using personal health data for encouraging persons to be proactive about their health and implement suggested lifestyle changes?
To which extent can this information be used by insurance companies for example?
Which challenges encountered when collecting this data?
Let’s discuss with our panelists the impact big data has on preventive care and which are its limits?
Moderator: Bowden Richie, CEO, SoMoMod/ Assess Patients, IE
O'Donoghue John, Senior Lecturer in eHealth & Deputy Director Global eHealth, IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON, UK
Dekezel Stefaan, Programme Director Innovation & Smart Synergies, Ageas, BE
Brichet Francis, Health Manager, Coreye, FR
The view of interoperability and standards:
(1) Standards as infrastructure for interoperability
(2) Placing the citizen at the center
(3) Using digital health technologies to reduce costs and flatten risk
(4) However we face a tsounami of data; the question do you navigate the data? Can standards help? And what kind standards can help? Establish trust, use the right data at the right time, for the benefit of the patient; and the system as a whole.
(a) Example of appointments: replace most routine f2f appointments with remote visits; and shift the focus to f2f visits that aim to diagnose a problem. Productivity low in health care.
(b) Standards place the individual at the center of the care serving as the data aggregator in a fragmented health system
(c) Think of the patient summary as a window to a persons’ health
"Building Capacities for Open Science" - The example of AGINFRA+ and e-ROSA. Presented during the AGRIRESEARCH Conference, organised by DG AGRI in Brussels.
Community and Governance Recommendations for the Future State of an e-infrast...e-ROSA
This document provides recommendations for developing an e-infrastructure to support open science in agri-food systems. It identifies key societal challenges around feeding the growing population, climate change, unhealthy diets, and environmental pressures. Three major trends are digital agriculture, new genetic techniques, and adopting a systems perspective. Recommendations focus on sharing data and models, connecting diverse data sources through standards, and facilitating collaboration across disciplines and sectors. Specific recommendations include establishing sustainable funding, aligning with the European Open Science Cloud, promoting open innovation, and developing large public-private partnerships for data-driven research. The overarching goal is to support evidence-based policymaking and address challenges through open, international cooperation.
Technical Recommendations for the Future State of an e-infrastructure in Agri...e-ROSA
This document outlines recommendations for the future technical state of an e-infrastructure for agri-food sciences. It describes the past state as isolated research silos, the present as basic shared services but disjoint complex services, and envisions the future as:
- Extending shared horizontal services to include mature technologies from different communities
- Optimizing shared infrastructure usage for each community/task
- Easily customizing horizontal services for specific community needs
- Seamlessly incorporating new services
It recommends:
- Developing large-scale common data/service semantics and standards
- Incorporating infrastructure under a federation layer for optimized usage/sharing
- Making cross-community services available via semantic descriptions to autom
Odile Hologne's presentation at the eROSA Workshop “Towards Open Science in Agriculture & Food”, a side event to High Level conference on FOOD 2030, Plovdiv, Bulgaria (13/6/2018)
FACCE JPI agenda on big data and digitization of agriculturee-ROSA
Paul Wiley's presentation at the eROSA Workshop “Towards Open Science in Agriculture & Food”, a side event to High Level conference on FOOD 2030, Plovdiv, Bulgaria (13/6/2018)
ICT-AGRI agenda on digitization of agriculturee-ROSA
This document discusses trends in precision farming and an overview of research and innovation activities related to digitizing agriculture. It outlines key trends such as the increasing use of sensors, drones, robotics, and network connectivity in agriculture. It also discusses trends in software including big data, open data standards, apps for farm management, and integrating data along the farm to fork supply chain. The document concludes by noting the growth of startups in this area and opportunities for the ICT-AGRI initiative to contribute to an open agrifood science cloud.
D4Science experience: VREs for increasing the sharing and collaboration in th...e-ROSA
Donatella Castelli's presentation at the eROSA Workshop “Towards Open Science in Agriculture & Food”, a side event to High Level conference on FOOD 2030, Plovdiv, Bulgaria (13/6/2018)
The state-of-play of the general EOSC policy worke-ROSA
Corina Pascu's presentation at the eROSA Workshop “Towards Open Science in Agriculture & Food”, a side event to High Level conference on FOOD 2030, Plovdiv, Bulgaria (13/6/2018)
The Vision and the Grand Challenges of the Agri-Food Communitye-ROSA
The document discusses the vision and grand challenges of the agri-food community. It identifies three main trends: adopting a systems perspective, new genetic techniques, and digital agriculture. It outlines the food system challenges of feeding 9 billion people while addressing climate change, unhealthy diets, and planetary boundaries. The food system is divided into three components: smart farming and food security, gene-based approaches, and food safety, nutrition and health. Each component lists societal and scientific expectations as well as obstacles to open science approaches. The overall challenges are interconnectedness and developing inclusive, sustainable solutions through increased sharing, connecting and collaborating across the agri-food community.
Why the food sector needs a research infrastructure on Food and Health Consum...e-ROSA
Bent Egberg Mikkelsen and Karin Zimmermann's presentation at the eROSA Workshop “Towards Open Science in Agriculture & Food”, a side event to High Level conference on FOOD 2030, Plovdiv, Bulgaria (13/6/2018)
The document summarizes a vision for food systems in 2030 presented at an eROSA stakeholder workshop. The vision is for food systems that produce healthy, nutritious foods through efficient and environmentally sustainable methods. These food systems would operate as collaborative networks constantly improving their economic, environmental, and social performance for all actors. The food systems would contribute to achieving sustainability development goals and mitigate/adapt to climate change impacts.
Technical Implementation Agenda for a pan-European Scientific e-infrastructur...e-ROSA
This document outlines a vision for a pan-European e-infrastructure for agri-food research. It describes the current fragmented state of individual research organizations and isolated data silos. The vision is to build common semantic specifications and standards to incorporate physical infrastructure and make cross-community services available via semantically enriched descriptions. This would automate the integration of existing and new services to optimize resource sharing and data integration across communities. The priorities are establishing standards and semantics, designing common horizontal services, and specifying community-specific services to work towards the goal of mission-driven research enabled by a unified e-infrastructure.
E-Infrastructure for open agri-food sciences - The landscapee-ROSA
eROSA has received funding from the European Union to map out the technical ecosystem for open agriculture and food science data. The mapping is based on analyzing various eROSA, RDA, and other project activities and identifies organizations, initiatives, data sources, and research infrastructures. The landscape analysis found that while there is massive data production, data is often siloed and difficult to find or access due to immature practices around data management, sharing, and analysis. Challenges include technical issues like long-term preservation and semantics standardization as well as cultural challenges engaging communities and developing sustainable governance models.
This document summarizes an OpenAIRE stakeholder workshop that took place in Athens on May 21-22, 2018. OpenAIRE supports open science by monitoring research outputs, accelerating interoperability and exchange, and supporting researchers and infrastructure providers through services like an open science helpdesk and research data management support. The workshop discussed OpenAIRE's network of National Open Access Desks, services to support open policies, infrastructure, open research data and open access publications, and efforts to build an open scholarly communication graph and research information system. OpenAIRE also presented services for content providers like the PROVIDE Dashboard for validation, enrichment and usage statistics of metadata.
The document describes the D4Science infrastructure, which provides services and environments to support cross-disciplinary research activities. It offers data discovery, access, processing and publishing services across multiple domains like marine science, social mining, and the humanities. The infrastructure leverages existing resources through federation and APIs, and provides virtual research environments and workspaces in a flexible, scalable manner to support over 5,100 users in 44 countries.
EOSC-Hub - Services for the European Open Science Cloude-ROSA
The document summarizes the objectives and services of EOSC-hub, which is implementing and operating access channels for the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). EOSC-hub aims to (1) aggregate services from local/national providers and demands from researchers through the EOSC, (2) define engagement rules with EOSCpilot and develop a service framework, and (3) operate and integrate an initial set of baseline, thematic, and federation services. The services support the full research data lifecycle from discovery to reuse. EOSC-hub involves 74 partners from 23 countries and receives €30 million in Horizon 2020 funding over 3 years to develop and advance EOSC.
Grand Challenges and Open Science for the Food Systeme-ROSA
The document discusses open science approaches for addressing challenges in the global food system. It identifies three key components of the food system - smart farming, food security and the environment; gene-based approaches from omics to landscape; and food safety, nutrition and health. For each component, it outlines societal and scientific challenges, as well as obstacles and expectations for developing open science solutions. An example case study on global agricultural monitoring is also provided. The document argues that developing open science for food systems requires efforts to share data and resources, connect through standards and best practices, and enable broader collaboration across disciplines and sectors.
This document summarizes a presentation about the eROSA project, which received Horizon 2020 funding. It discusses eROSA's vision for an open e-science infrastructure for agriculture. Some key points include:
- eROSA aims to provide shared semantics, data discovery services, and sustainable storage through resources like data portals and virtual research environments.
- It compares how organic agriculture aligns with the UN's Sustainable Development Goals around issues like increasing productivity and resilience while reducing environmental impacts.
- The document outlines eROSA's status in implementing facets of openness, interoperability, and reuse within the agricultural domain. It closes with eROSA's vision for collaborative, region-specific food systems by
Global Situational Awareness of A.I. and where its headedvikram sood
You can see the future first in San Francisco.
Over the past year, the talk of the town has shifted from $10 billion compute clusters to $100 billion clusters to trillion-dollar clusters. Every six months another zero is added to the boardroom plans. Behind the scenes, there’s a fierce scramble to secure every power contract still available for the rest of the decade, every voltage transformer that can possibly be procured. American big business is gearing up to pour trillions of dollars into a long-unseen mobilization of American industrial might. By the end of the decade, American electricity production will have grown tens of percent; from the shale fields of Pennsylvania to the solar farms of Nevada, hundreds of millions of GPUs will hum.
The AGI race has begun. We are building machines that can think and reason. By 2025/26, these machines will outpace college graduates. By the end of the decade, they will be smarter than you or I; we will have superintelligence, in the true sense of the word. Along the way, national security forces not seen in half a century will be un-leashed, and before long, The Project will be on. If we’re lucky, we’ll be in an all-out race with the CCP; if we’re unlucky, an all-out war.
Everyone is now talking about AI, but few have the faintest glimmer of what is about to hit them. Nvidia analysts still think 2024 might be close to the peak. Mainstream pundits are stuck on the wilful blindness of “it’s just predicting the next word”. They see only hype and business-as-usual; at most they entertain another internet-scale technological change.
Before long, the world will wake up. But right now, there are perhaps a few hundred people, most of them in San Francisco and the AI labs, that have situational awareness. Through whatever peculiar forces of fate, I have found myself amongst them. A few years ago, these people were derided as crazy—but they trusted the trendlines, which allowed them to correctly predict the AI advances of the past few years. Whether these people are also right about the next few years remains to be seen. But these are very smart people—the smartest people I have ever met—and they are the ones building this technology. Perhaps they will be an odd footnote in history, or perhaps they will go down in history like Szilard and Oppenheimer and Teller. If they are seeing the future even close to correctly, we are in for a wild ride.
Let me tell you what we see.
Beyond the Basics of A/B Tests: Highly Innovative Experimentation Tactics You...Aggregage
This webinar will explore cutting-edge, less familiar but powerful experimentation methodologies which address well-known limitations of standard A/B Testing. Designed for data and product leaders, this session aims to inspire the embrace of innovative approaches and provide insights into the frontiers of experimentation!
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The Ipsos - AI - Monitor 2024 Report.pdfSocial Samosa
According to Ipsos AI Monitor's 2024 report, 65% Indians said that products and services using AI have profoundly changed their daily life in the past 3-5 years.
Predictably Improve Your B2B Tech Company's Performance by Leveraging DataKiwi Creative
Harness the power of AI-backed reports, benchmarking and data analysis to predict trends and detect anomalies in your marketing efforts.
Peter Caputa, CEO at Databox, reveals how you can discover the strategies and tools to increase your growth rate (and margins!).
From metrics to track to data habits to pick up, enhance your reporting for powerful insights to improve your B2B tech company's marketing.
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This is the webinar recording from the June 2024 HubSpot User Group (HUG) for B2B Technology USA.
Watch the video recording at https://youtu.be/5vjwGfPN9lw
Sign up for future HUG events at https://events.hubspot.com/b2b-technology-usa/
"Financial Odyssey: Navigating Past Performance Through Diverse Analytical Lens"sameer shah
Embark on a captivating financial journey with 'Financial Odyssey,' our hackathon project. Delve deep into the past performance of two companies as we employ an array of financial statement analysis techniques. From ratio analysis to trend analysis, uncover insights crucial for informed decision-making in the dynamic world of finance."
Learn SQL from basic queries to Advance queriesmanishkhaire30
Dive into the world of data analysis with our comprehensive guide on mastering SQL! This presentation offers a practical approach to learning SQL, focusing on real-world applications and hands-on practice. Whether you're a beginner or looking to sharpen your skills, this guide provides the tools you need to extract, analyze, and interpret data effectively.
Key Highlights:
Foundations of SQL: Understand the basics of SQL, including data retrieval, filtering, and aggregation.
Advanced Queries: Learn to craft complex queries to uncover deep insights from your data.
Data Trends and Patterns: Discover how to identify and interpret trends and patterns in your datasets.
Practical Examples: Follow step-by-step examples to apply SQL techniques in real-world scenarios.
Actionable Insights: Gain the skills to derive actionable insights that drive informed decision-making.
Join us on this journey to enhance your data analysis capabilities and unlock the full potential of SQL. Perfect for data enthusiasts, analysts, and anyone eager to harness the power of data!
#DataAnalysis #SQL #LearningSQL #DataInsights #DataScience #Analytics
eROSA Stakeholder WS1: The European Open Science Cloud: Vision & state of play
1. Vision & state of play
Wim HAENTJENS
Directorate Bioeconomy
Unit 'Agri-food chain'
DG Research & Innovation
eROSA workshop
Montpellier, FRANCE
6 July 2017
2. European Open Science Cloud
Response to SDGs:
• Problem:
• The science system transforming fast from data-sparse to
data-saturated, and toward increased multidisciplinarity.
Scientific data is in need of openness, better handling,
careful management, machine actionability and re-use.
• The goal :
• A European Open Science Cloud: An open and trusted
environment where research data can be safely stored and
made openly available.
• Objectives:
• Improve & federate existing structures (standards,
interoperability, governance, financing) based on user needs
• Incentives for data sharing in science & training
• Policy actions:
• Taken: EC Communication 2016/178; Council & EP support,
H2020 open data policy & DMPs, 1st EOSC Summit
• Planned: Stakeholder declaration (actions), governance
board, 2nd EOSC Summit fall/2017, FAIR Action plan 2018
3. EOSC Summit – main messages
The EOSC will be developed as European Commons:
• Common culture of data sharing, supported by research funders
• Common practices, tools and standards regarding FAIR data
• Common data and service catalogues
• Common governance framework
All willing participants can both benefit from and contribute to
specific implementation actions (EOSC Declaration)
EC will table a course of action with Member States in the Summer
2017, aiming to arrive at a shared Roadmap for governance
and funding by the end of 2017.
4. Thematic clouds
• Build bottom-up solutions
for the thematic fields,
within a lean top-down
governance structure
• Engage with specific
scientific communities to
understand their needs,
specificities, and the state-
of-play in terms of open
science data, data sharing
and re-use