The document discusses international open access policies and the Horizon 2020 program. Some key points:
- Horizon 2020 requires open access deposit of publications and research data in a repository within 6-12 months of publication.
- Projects must deposit a peer-reviewed manuscript or published version in an institutional or subject repository.
- The Open Research Data Pilot aims to improve access to research data generated by projects. Projects in certain areas must deposit data needed to validate results.
- Open access is reaching a tipping point with around 50% of scientific papers available openly in 2011. Many countries now have open access policies or laws.
Open science as roadmap to better data science researchBeth Plale
Open science is a principle -- of openness -- applied to scientific research and its products which include data and software. Its objective is to accelerate the dissemination of fundamental research results that will “advance the frontiers of knowledge and help ensure the nation’s future prosperity.” Open science has both socio- and technical- components to it. It urges from scientists more attention to research processes, more thought to subsequent uses of data, and more thought to the reproducibility and replicability of one’s work. It urges computational infrastructure to be more responsive to reproducibility. It urges science communities to value their data gems. As it is rare for data science research to not involve actual data nor software, and at times it requires large amounts of both, the principles of open science are particularly relevant to data science. In this talk I discuss open science in data science and show that open science equates to good science that in the end benefits us all.
Slides prepared for the "Horizon Europe Train-the-trainer workshop" held during the 2021 Open Science Fair.
Slide 5 is a revision of the slide that was presented during the event
Open Research Data: Present and planned EC Policy, Jean-Claude Burgelman impl...Platforma Otwartej Nauki
“Open Research Data: Implications for Science and Society”, Warsaw, Poland, May 28–29, 2015. The conference was organized by the Open Science Platform — an initiative of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modelling at the University of Warsaw. pon.edu.pl @OpenSciPlatform #ORD2015
Open science as roadmap to better data science researchBeth Plale
Open science is a principle -- of openness -- applied to scientific research and its products which include data and software. Its objective is to accelerate the dissemination of fundamental research results that will “advance the frontiers of knowledge and help ensure the nation’s future prosperity.” Open science has both socio- and technical- components to it. It urges from scientists more attention to research processes, more thought to subsequent uses of data, and more thought to the reproducibility and replicability of one’s work. It urges computational infrastructure to be more responsive to reproducibility. It urges science communities to value their data gems. As it is rare for data science research to not involve actual data nor software, and at times it requires large amounts of both, the principles of open science are particularly relevant to data science. In this talk I discuss open science in data science and show that open science equates to good science that in the end benefits us all.
Slides prepared for the "Horizon Europe Train-the-trainer workshop" held during the 2021 Open Science Fair.
Slide 5 is a revision of the slide that was presented during the event
Open Research Data: Present and planned EC Policy, Jean-Claude Burgelman impl...Platforma Otwartej Nauki
“Open Research Data: Implications for Science and Society”, Warsaw, Poland, May 28–29, 2015. The conference was organized by the Open Science Platform — an initiative of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modelling at the University of Warsaw. pon.edu.pl @OpenSciPlatform #ORD2015
Presentació a càrrec de Lluís Anglada, director de Ciència Oberta al CSUC, duta a terme a la Training Session on Open Science and Open Access al Centre de Recerca Matemàtica de la UAB l'11 de novembre de 2018
OpenAIRE webinar: Principles of Research Data Management, with S. Venkatarama...OpenAIRE
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Horizon 2020 Open Science Policies and beyond, with Emilie ...OpenAIRE
The global shift towards making research findings available free of charge and sharing and opening up the research process, so-called 'Open Science’, has been a core strategy in the European Commission to improve knowledge circulation and innovation.
It is illustrated in particular by the Open Science policies for the ECs framework programme.
In this webinar, I will talk about the OS policies for open access to scientific publications and the pilot for research data in Horizon 2020, followed by a preview of what to expect for Open Science in the new Horizon Europe programme.
---
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020 (May 2017)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE webinar - May 29th, 2017.
The Open Access mandate in H2020, what is expected of projects with regards to the OA policies in H2020 and how OpenAIRE can help. Webinar led by Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Príncipe (UMinho)
OpenAIRE webinar on Open Access in H2020 (OAW2016)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE Webinar for project coordinators and researchers on Open Access to publications in H2020 - By Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Principe (University of Minho, OpenAIRE Helpdesk & Training managers). Open Access Week 2016 initiatives.
OpenAIRE webinar: Plan S compliance for Open Access Journals - what we know s...OpenAIRE
In September 2018 when cOAlition S put out their Plan S for making Open Access an immediate reality, there was concern about how journals would become compliant in the short time available and what exactly was required to do that. The guidance mentioned that being indexed in DOAJ is necessary but that is only one criteria of many. There are other, new criteria which are additional to the DOAJ ones. DOAJ, among others, is mentioned as a key player in the certification process so the DOAJ Team have looked very carefully at what is being asked. One of the problems is that the exact data to be captured for those requirements have not yet been set and work by cOAlition S to do that is only slated to start imminently. In this presentation, I will explain what those extra Plan S criteria might be and how we think that they might be measured and captured. I will explain how we think the certification process, at least at DOAJ, might go and what the difference is between DOAJ certification and Plan S certification.
Susanna Sansone's talk at the "Beyond Open" Knowledge Dialogues/Open Data Hong Kong event on research data, hosted at the Hong Kong Innocentre on Monday 20 November 2017.
OpenAIRE-COAR conference 2014: Open Access in H2020, by Anni Hellman - Europe...OpenAIRE
Presentation at the OpenAIRE-COAR Conference: "Open Access Movement to Reality: Putting the Pieces Together", Athens - May 21-22, 2014.
Open Access in H2020, by Anni Hellman - European Commission.
This seminar discuss the important of the scientific data and how to plan data management and data sharing for your research. Also, discuss the research ethics and privacy in data sharing and intellectual property rights.
Data strategies for collaborative research, how to publish and cite research , and data opportunities and limitations in using other people's research data, illustrated with real-life data reuse cases will be discussed. The ways to share your research data and discuss the advantages and disadvantages for each of these ways of sharing data. The Egyptian 2017 data protection act and its principles. Finally, discuss practicality real cases.
Digital transformation to enable a FAIR approach for health data scienceVarsha Khodiyar
Invited talk for ConTech Pharma on 1st March 2022
Abstract
Health Data Research UK is the UK’s national institute for health data science, with a mission to unite the UK’s health data to enable discoveries that improve people’s lives. In this talk, Dr Varsha Khodiyar will outline how HDR UK is bringing together disparate health data from all four countries of the United Kingdom, creating the infrastructure to enable discovery of and access to health data, and the convening standards making bodies to improve data linkage and data reuse. Varsha will also discuss how HDR UK is moving beyond the traditional confines of FAIR data to also ensure that data sharing and data use is transparent and ‘fair’ for the patients and lay public who are the subjects of these datasets.
Presentació a càrrec de Lluís Anglada, director de Ciència Oberta al CSUC, duta a terme a la Training Session on Open Science and Open Access al Centre de Recerca Matemàtica de la UAB l'11 de novembre de 2018
OpenAIRE webinar: Principles of Research Data Management, with S. Venkatarama...OpenAIRE
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Horizon 2020 Open Science Policies and beyond, with Emilie ...OpenAIRE
The global shift towards making research findings available free of charge and sharing and opening up the research process, so-called 'Open Science’, has been a core strategy in the European Commission to improve knowledge circulation and innovation.
It is illustrated in particular by the Open Science policies for the ECs framework programme.
In this webinar, I will talk about the OS policies for open access to scientific publications and the pilot for research data in Horizon 2020, followed by a preview of what to expect for Open Science in the new Horizon Europe programme.
---
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020 (May 2017)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE webinar - May 29th, 2017.
The Open Access mandate in H2020, what is expected of projects with regards to the OA policies in H2020 and how OpenAIRE can help. Webinar led by Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Príncipe (UMinho)
OpenAIRE webinar on Open Access in H2020 (OAW2016)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE Webinar for project coordinators and researchers on Open Access to publications in H2020 - By Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Principe (University of Minho, OpenAIRE Helpdesk & Training managers). Open Access Week 2016 initiatives.
OpenAIRE webinar: Plan S compliance for Open Access Journals - what we know s...OpenAIRE
In September 2018 when cOAlition S put out their Plan S for making Open Access an immediate reality, there was concern about how journals would become compliant in the short time available and what exactly was required to do that. The guidance mentioned that being indexed in DOAJ is necessary but that is only one criteria of many. There are other, new criteria which are additional to the DOAJ ones. DOAJ, among others, is mentioned as a key player in the certification process so the DOAJ Team have looked very carefully at what is being asked. One of the problems is that the exact data to be captured for those requirements have not yet been set and work by cOAlition S to do that is only slated to start imminently. In this presentation, I will explain what those extra Plan S criteria might be and how we think that they might be measured and captured. I will explain how we think the certification process, at least at DOAJ, might go and what the difference is between DOAJ certification and Plan S certification.
Susanna Sansone's talk at the "Beyond Open" Knowledge Dialogues/Open Data Hong Kong event on research data, hosted at the Hong Kong Innocentre on Monday 20 November 2017.
OpenAIRE-COAR conference 2014: Open Access in H2020, by Anni Hellman - Europe...OpenAIRE
Presentation at the OpenAIRE-COAR Conference: "Open Access Movement to Reality: Putting the Pieces Together", Athens - May 21-22, 2014.
Open Access in H2020, by Anni Hellman - European Commission.
This seminar discuss the important of the scientific data and how to plan data management and data sharing for your research. Also, discuss the research ethics and privacy in data sharing and intellectual property rights.
Data strategies for collaborative research, how to publish and cite research , and data opportunities and limitations in using other people's research data, illustrated with real-life data reuse cases will be discussed. The ways to share your research data and discuss the advantages and disadvantages for each of these ways of sharing data. The Egyptian 2017 data protection act and its principles. Finally, discuss practicality real cases.
Digital transformation to enable a FAIR approach for health data scienceVarsha Khodiyar
Invited talk for ConTech Pharma on 1st March 2022
Abstract
Health Data Research UK is the UK’s national institute for health data science, with a mission to unite the UK’s health data to enable discoveries that improve people’s lives. In this talk, Dr Varsha Khodiyar will outline how HDR UK is bringing together disparate health data from all four countries of the United Kingdom, creating the infrastructure to enable discovery of and access to health data, and the convening standards making bodies to improve data linkage and data reuse. Varsha will also discuss how HDR UK is moving beyond the traditional confines of FAIR data to also ensure that data sharing and data use is transparent and ‘fair’ for the patients and lay public who are the subjects of these datasets.
Legislative and planning framework on heritage - RomaniaVIVA_EAST
Legislative and planning normative framework on heritage and landscape - the Romanian case
Presented during the VIVA EAST Thematic Seminar on "Methodology for Urban Planning and Design of minor Historic Centres Territorial Cultural Systems, Bari, Italy, Oct. 2012
FOURTH CODESRIA CONFERENCE ON ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING AND DISSEMINATION: The Open Access Movement and the Future of Africa’s Knowledge Economy, March 31, 2016, Dakar, Senegal
Open Access policies and best practicesIryna Kuchma
The presentation covers good practice approaches to designing and implementing open access policies aligned with the European Commission's (EC) Recommendation to Member States on Access to and preservation of scientific information of July 2012, Guidelines on open access to scientific publications and research data in Horizon 2020 and the EC's Horizon 2020 Multi-beneficiary General Model Grant Agreement. Open access policy alignment check-list will be presented covering the following issues: Are beneficiaries required to deposit and ensure open access? What to deposit? Where to deposit? When to deposit? When should open access be provided? Policy monitoring and compliance as well as open access publishing (from the policy perspective) will also be covered as a part of this presentation. PASTEUR4OA report on the Open access policy effectiveness will provide important evidence that open access policies should include at least three elements for effectiveness, namely, a mandatory deposit that cannot be waived, and linking depositing with research evaluation.
Operationalizing landscape approach in Indonesia: The socio-economic perspect...CIFOR-ICRAF
By Ani Adiwinata Nawir, PhD
SLF –Sustainable Landscape & Food System Team, CIFOR
JFCC Panel Discussion on Indonesia and its environmental record, 28 November 2016, Inter-Continental Hotel Midplaza, Jakarta
Impact of REDD+ initiatives on local stakeholders’ income, wellbeing, and lan...CIFOR-ICRAF
By Claudio de Sassi and Christy Desta Pratama. Presentation for the “Understanding Transformational Change for REDD+ Implementation in Indonesia – Workshop and Policy Dialogue”. Jakarta, August 24 2015
Agrarian change in tropical forests: A change for the better?CIFOR-ICRAF
A presentation by Terry Sunderland and team on 3 December 2016 at the second annual meeting of the FLARE (Forests and Livelihoods: Assessment, Research, and Engagement) network, Edinburgh.
Success from the Ground Up? Participatory Monitoring in Forest RestorationCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Manuel R. Guariguata and Kristen Evans at Forest Landscape and Ecosystem Restoration Day on 13 December 2016, as part of the thirteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD COP13) held in Cancun, Mexico.
The European Commission's proposal for embedding open science in horizon europe. Particular emphasis on open access and research data management aspects. Also presenting the new publishing platform of the Commission, Open Research Europe
A presentation given on the Horizon 2020 open data pilot as part of a series of OpenAIRE webinars for Open Access week 2014 - http://www.fosteropenscience.eu/event/openaire-webinars-during-oa-week-2014
The Horizon 2020 Open Data Pilot - OpenAIRE webinar (Oct. 21 2014) by Sarah J...OpenAIRE
Sarah Jones (HATII, Digital Curation Center) will provide more information on the Open Research Data Pilot in H2020: who should participate and how to comply (in collaboration with FOSTER)
Date: Tuesday, October 21 2014
Presentation of open science requirements in Horizon Europe for the Research and Innovation Foundation in Cyprus. Analyzes requirements of model grant agreement (publications, research data, additional open science practices, open science and evaluation process, open research europe.
Presentation given to EC project officers as part of workshops run by the FOSTER (foster open science) project. The presentation covers the Horizon 2020 open data pilot.
Presented at the Regional Workshop “Benefits of Open Access for Research Dissemination, Usage, Visibility and Impact” – 22 to 23 November 2010,
Pretoria (South Africa).
Presentation at the Joint Executive Board Meeting of the European Federation of Psychology Students’ Associations (EFPSA), October 28, 2014,Dobra Voda, Serbia
Open access: train the trainers programmesIryna Kuchma
Presentation for the training office at the Joint Executive Board Meeting of the European Federation of Psychology Students’ Associations (EFPSA), October 28, 2014,Dobra Voda, Serbia
Open access: What's in there for me? And some ideas for advocacy programmesIryna Kuchma
Presentation at the Member Representatives’ Meeting of the European Federation of Psychology Students’ Associations (EFPSA), October 28, 2014,Dobra Voda, Serbia
Open Access, open research data and open scienceIryna Kuchma
This presentation covers open access (OA) and OA theses & dissertations: why you should take action now; impact & metrics; copyright; open research data; open science; and new skills & competencies for librarians. Target audience: PhD students and librarians
Changing role of faculty librarians in open accessIryna Kuchma
How faculty librarians could contribute to open access awareness raising and advocacy, provide support and training for researchers and students on changing scholarly communication landscape
Open Access Initiatives on a Regional and Global Scale: EIFL, OASPA, COAR and...Iryna Kuchma
The presentation covers EIFL's open access programme, Confederation of Open Access Repositories (COAR), Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations (NDLTD) and Open Access Publishers Association (OASPA).
DSpace:Technical Basics - Identifiers; User management and authentication options; Item Submission Workflows; Import and Export; RSS Feeds, Alerts and News; DSpace Statistics and Google Analytics; SWORD Basics.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Students, digital devices and success - Andreas Schleicher - 27 May 2024..pptxEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents at the OECD webinar ‘Digital devices in schools: detrimental distraction or secret to success?’ on 27 May 2024. The presentation was based on findings from PISA 2022 results and the webinar helped launch the PISA in Focus ‘Managing screen time: How to protect and equip students against distraction’ https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/managing-screen-time_7c225af4-en and the OECD Education Policy Perspective ‘Students, digital devices and success’ can be found here - https://oe.cd/il/5yV
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
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.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
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.
International Open Access Policy Landscape and Why You Should Take Action Now
1. International Open
Access Policy Landscape
and Why You Should Take
Action Now
Iryna Kuchma
EIFL Open Access Programme Manager
Presentation at the Open Access Days at AUC, April 28,
2014, Cairo, Egypt
www.eifl.net Attribution 4.0 International
4. What to deposit
A machine-readable electronic copy of the
published version - publisher’s final version of the
paper, including all modifications from the peer
review process, copyediting & stylistic edits, &
formatting changes (usually a PDF document) OR
A final peer-reviewed manuscript accepted for
publication - final manuscript of a peer-reviewed
paper accepted for journal publication, including all
modifications from the peer review process, but not
yet formatted by the publisher (also referred to as
“post-print” version).
5. Where to deposit
Researchers should deposit in a repository for
scientific publications (online archives) of their
choice:
- Institutional repository of the research institution
with which they are affiliated OR
- Subject-based/thematic repository OR
- Centralised repository, e.g. Zenodo repository
set up by the OpenAIRE project are acceptable
choices.
6. When to deposit
Each beneficiary must deposit as soon as
possible and at the latest on publication.
Each beneficiary must ensure open access to
the deposited publication — via the repository —
at the latest:
(i) on publication, if an electronic version is
available for free via the publisher, or
(ii) within six months of publication (12 months for
publications in the social sciences and
humanities) in any other case.
7. OA publishing
Researchers can publish in OA journals, or in
journals that sell subscriptions and also offer the
possibility of making individual articles openly
accessible (hybrid journals). Where the case, the
Author Processing Charges (APCs) incurred by
beneficiaries are eligible for reimbursement
during the duration of the action. For APCs
incurred after the end of their grant agreement, a
mechanism for paying some of these costs will be
piloted. In the case of OA publishing OA must be
granted at the latest on publication.
8. Monitoring
compliance
If a beneficiary breaches any of its
obligations, the grant may be reduced (see
Article 43). Such a breach may also lead to
any of the other measures described in
Chapter 6 of the Multi-beneficiary General
Model Grant Agreement, Version 1.0,
December 11, 2013).
9. Copyright
In all cases, the Commission
encourages authors to retain their
copyright and grant adequate
licenses to publishers.
Creative Commons offers useful
licensing solutions in this regard (e.g.
CC-BY).
10. In the context of the digital era, the notion
of’ publication’ increasingly includes the
data underpinning the publication and
results presented, also referred to as
‘underlying’ data. Beneficiaries must
aim to deposit at the same time the
research data needed to validate the
results presented in the deposited
scientific publications, ideally into a
data repository, and aim to make open
access to this data. But there is no
obligation to do so.
11. Open Research Data
Pilot
A novelty in Horizon 2020 is the Open
Research Data Pilot which aims to
improve and maximise access to and re-
use of research data generated by
projects. It will be monitored with a view
to developing the European Commission
policy on open research data in future
Framework Programmes.
12. Projects in core areas of H2020 that are part of the
Open Research Data Pilot:
Future and Emerging Technologies
Research infrastructures – part e-Infrastructures
Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies
– Information and Communication Technologies
Societal Challenge: Secure, Clean and Efficient
Energy – part Smart cities and communities
Societal Challenge: Climate Action, Environment,
Resource Efficiency and Raw materials – with the
exception of raw materials topics
Societal Challenge: Europe in a changing world –
inclusive, innovative and reflective Societies
Science with and for Society
13. What to deposit
Projects participating in the Pilot are
required to deposit the research data
described below:
- The data, including associated metadata,
needed to validate the results presented in
scientific publications as soon as possible;
- Other data, including associated
metadata, as specified & within the
deadlines laid down in a data management
plan (DMP).
14. Where to deposit
Projects should deposit preferably in a
research data repository and take
measures to enable third parties to access,
mine, exploit, reproduce and disseminate
— free of charge for any user.
OpenAIRE project provides a Zenodo
repository that could be used for depositing
data.
15. When to deposit
The data, including associated metadata,
needed to validate the results presented in
scientific publications should be deposited
as soon as possible.
Other data, including associated metadata,
should be deposited as specified and within
the deadlines laid down in a data
management plan (DMP).
16. DMP
A data management plan is a document
outlining how research data will be handled
during a research project, and after it is
completed, describing what data will be
collected / generated and following what
methodology and standards, whether and
how this data will be shared and/or made
open, and how it will be curated and
preserved.
17.
18. Open Research Data
Pilot
At the same time, projects should
provide information about tools and
instruments at the disposal of the
beneficiaries and necessary for
validating the results, for instance
specialised software or software code.
19. Open Research Data
Pilot
Areas, or sub-areas of, or individual
projects funded under Horizon 2020 and
not covered by the scope of the Pilot
may participate on a voluntary basis (‘opt
in’). The project consortia that decide to
participate on a voluntary basis will be
monitored along with and receive the
same support as in-scope projects in the
Pilot.
20. Open Research Data
Pilot
Projects may opt out of the Pilot in H2020 in a
series of cases that include conflict with obligation
to protect results, with confidentiality obligations,
with security obligations or with rules on
protection of personal data. They may also opt
out should the achievement of the action’s main
objective be jeopardised by making specific parts
of the research data openly accessible. In this
case, the data management plan must contain
the reasons for not giving access.
21. Open Research Data
Pilot
Costs relating to the implementation of the
pilot will be reimbursed.
Specific technical and professional support
services will also be provided.
22. Monitoring
compliance
If a beneficiary breaches any of its
obligations, the grant may be reduced (see
Article 43). Such a breach may also lead to
any of the other measures described in
Chapter 6 of the Multi-beneficiary General
Model Grant Agreement, Version 1.0,
December 11, 2013).
23.
24.
25.
26. Máire Geoghegan-Quinn, European
Commissioner for Research, Innovation &
Science: “Putting research results in
the public sphere makes science
better & strengthens our knowledge-
based economy. The European
taxpayer should not have to pay twice
for publicly funded research. That is
why we have made OA to publications
the default setting for Horizon 2020,
the EU research & innovation funding
programme."
27.
28. “Policies on OA to scientific research
results should apply to all research that
receives public funds. Such policies are
expected to improve conditions for
conducting research by reducing
duplication of efforts and by minimising
the time spent searching for information
and accessing it. This will speed up
scientific progress and make it easier to
cooperate across and beyond the EU.
Such policies will also respond to calls within
the scientific community for greater access
to scientific information.” http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9
29. “OA is a key feature of Member States’
policies for responsible research and
innovation by making the results of
research available to all and by facilitating
societal engagement...”
“Businesses will also benefit from wider
access to scientific research results.
Small and medium-sized enterprises in
particular will improve their capacity to
innovate. Policies on access to scientific
information should therefore also facilitate
access to scientific information for private
companies...” http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9
30. “The Internet has fundamentally changed
the world of science and research. For
instance, research communities have
been experimenting with new ways to
register, certify, disseminate and preserve
scientific publications. Research and
funding policies need to adapt to this
new environment. It should be
recommended to Member States to
adapt and develop their policies on OA
to scientific publications.”
http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9
31.
32.
33.
34. “OA to scientific research data enhances
data quality, reduces the need for
duplication of research, speeds up
scientific progress and helps to combat
scientific fraud. In its final report ‘Riding the
wave: How Europe can gain from the rising
tide of scientific data’5 in October 2010, the
High Level Expert Group on Scientific Data
emphasised the critical importance of sharing
and preserving reliable data produced during
the scientific process. Policy action on
access to data is therefore urgent and
should be recommended to Member
States.” http://bit.ly/Q3sDJ9
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40. @bernardrentier:
- University that doesn't know what
papers its faculty publishes is like a
factory that doesn't know what it produces
- An empty repository is useless; a partly
filled repository is partly useless; there is
a need for an institutional OA policy
41. @bernardrentier:
- Don't impose, just inform researchers
that only publications in the repository will
be considered for evaluation
- Mandate, keep authors at the core,
communicate permanently, be coherent,
reduce constraints
- @ORBi_ULg – a personal workspace,
provides statistics and has a widget to
generate publications lists – content in
personal/faculties webpages
42. European
Commission
A study funded by the
European Commission
(EC) suggests that OA
is reaching the tipping
point, with around 50%
of scientific papers
published in 2011
now available for free.
http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-13-786_en.htm?locale=en
43. “The tipping point for OA (more than 50%
of the papers available for free) has been
reached in several countries, including
Brazil, Croatia, Estonia, Lithuania,
Macedonia, Switzerland, the Netherlands,
the US, as well as in biomedical research,
biology, and mathematics and statistics.”
Eric Archambault, Didier Amyot, Philippe Deschamps, Aurore Nicol,
Lise Rebout & Guillaume Roberge: Proportion of Open Access
Peer-Reviewed Papers at the European and World Levels—2004-
2011 (August 2013)
http://www.science-metrix.com/pdf/SM_EC_OA_Availability_2004-2011.pdf
44. OA policies: the majority of 48 major
science funders considered both OA
publications in journals & self-archiving
in OA repositories.
More than 75% accepted embargo
periods of between six to 12 months.
Eric Archambault, Didier Amyot, Philippe Deschamps, Aurore Nicol,
Lise Rebout & Guillaume Roberge: Proportion of Open Access
Peer-Reviewed Papers at the European and World Levels—2004-
2011 (August 2013)
http://www.science-metrix.com/pdf/SM_EC_OA_Availability_2004-2011.pdf
55. On policy
Every institution of higher education
should have a policy assuring that
peer-reviewed versions of all future
scholarly articles by faculty
members are deposited in the
institution’s designated repository
56. On policy (2)
University policies should respect faculty
freedom to submit new work to the journals of
their choice.
University policies should encourage but not
require publication in OA journals, and should
help faculty understand the difference between
depositing in an OA repository and publishing in
an OA journal.
57. On policy (3)
Every institution of higher education offering
advanced degrees should have a policy
assuring that future theses and dissertations
are deposited upon acceptance in the
institution's OA repository. At the request of
students who want to publish their work, or seek
a patent on a patentable discovery, policies
should grant reasonable delays rather than
permanent exemptions.
58. On policy (4)
Every research funding agency, public or
private, should have a policy assuring that
peer-reviewed versions of all future
scholarly articles reporting funded
research are deposited in a suitable
repository and made OA as soon as
practicable.
59. On policy (5)
Universities with institutional
repositories should require deposit
in the repository for all research
articles to be considered for
promotion, tenure, or other forms
of internal assessment and review.
60. On policy (6)
Insofar as universities, funding agencies,
and research assessment programs need
to measure the impact of individual
articles, they should use article-level
metrics, not journal-level metrics
61. On policy (7)
Similarly, governments performing
research assessment should
require deposit in OA repositories
for all research articles to be
reviewed for national assessment
purposes.
62. Legal basis: Two
options
1. Seek permission from publishers, and only
distribute OA copies when succeed in obtaining
it.
2. Ask faculty to retain the right to provide OA
on the university's terms (and grant the
university non-exclusive permission to provide
that OA), even if faculty transfer all their other
rights to publishers.
63. Plagiarism
If articles are easily available, then plagiarism will
be made easier?
On the contrary. OA might make plagiarism easier to
commit, for people trolling for text to cut and paste.
But for the same reason, OA makes plagiarism more
hazardous to commit. Insofar as OA makes
plagiarism easier, it's only for plagiarism from OA
sources. But plagiarism from OA sources is the
easiest kind to detect. (From OA and quality by Peter Suber,
SPARC OA Newsletter, issue #102: http://bit.ly/qZUQo7)
64. Plagiarism (2)
In fact, plagiarism is diminished as a
problem.
It is far easier to detect if the original, date-
stamped material is freely accessible to all,
rather than being hidden in an obscure
journal.
(From the OA Frequently Asked Questions, DRIVER — Digital
Repository Infrastructure Vision for European Research
http://www.driver-support.eu/faq/oafaq.html)
65.
66.
67.
68.
69. It has become more important where
to publish than what to publish
70. The Journal Impact Factor (IF) is
frequently used as the primary parameter
with which to compare the scientific
output of individuals and institutions.
The IF, as calculated by Thomson
Reuters, was originally created as a tool
to help librarians identify journals to
purchase, not as a measure of the
scientific quality of research in an article.
The IF has a number of well-documented
deficiencies as a tool for research
assessment.
71.
72. 1. Do not use journal-based metrics,
such as Journal Impact Factors, as a
surrogate measure of the quality of
individual research articles, to assess
an individual scientist's contributions, or
in hiring, promotion, or funding
decisions.
The San Francisco Declaration on
Research Assessment (DORA)
http://am.ascb.org/dora/
73.
74. Funders and universities, too, have a
role to play. They must tell the
committees that decide on grants and
positions not to judge papers by where
they are published. It is the quality of
the science, not the journal's brand,
that matters.
(How journals like Nature, Cell and
Science are damaging science by
Randy Schekman:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/dec/09/how-journals-nature-science-cell-damage-science)
75. “My personal belief is that we should be
focusing on developing effective and
diverse measures of the re-use of
research outputs. By measuring use
rather than merely prestige we can go much
of the way of delivering on the so-called
impact agenda, optimizing our use of public
funds to generate outcomes but while
retaining some say over the types of
outcomes that are important and what time-
frames they are measured over.”
Cameron Neylon: Warning: Misusing the journal
impact factor can damage your science!
http://bit.ly/cbK2DK
76. re-use in industry
re-use in public health
re-use in education
re-use in policy development & enactment
re-use in research
Cameron Neylon: (S)low impact research
and the importance of open in maximising
re-use: http://bit.ly/ntbzQ6
77. How OA benefits your
work and career
Distribution and usage
Immediate access to your research output for
everyone upon official publication
More visibility & usage
Immediate impact of your work
Intensification of research through fast
dissemination and use of research;
Possibly a citation advantage as well
78. How OA benefits your
work and career (2)
Plus:
Monitoring of your research output
Preservation of your research output by
your library
Keep your rights instead of signing them
away
79. Some slides have been borrowed from
How to fix a broken system: Article-Level
Metrics at the Public Library of Science by
Martin Fenner:
https://speakerdeck.com/mfenner/how-to-fix-a-broken-system-article-level-metrics-at-the-public-library-of-science