This document summarizes a presentation about CHORUS, a non-profit organization that works to ensure public access compliance with open access policies. The presentation discusses how CHORUS uses alerting systems and dashboards to monitor compliance by tracking articles, ensuring they are publicly accessible after the embargo period expires, and providing metrics to funders. Publishers can join CHORUS to help researchers easily comply with funder requirements by tagging articles with funding data and embargo dates.
Open: Much more than a different business model
Lars Bjørnshauge, Managing Director, DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals) and SPARC Europe Director of European Library Relations
So Now What? Some Concluding Thoughts on Takeaways and Themes
Charles Watkinson, Associate University Librarian, Publishing; Director, University of Michigan Press, University of Michigan Library
Modern research metrics and new models of evaluation have risen high on the academic agenda in the last few years. In this session two UK institutions who have adopted such metrics across their faculty will share their motivations and experiences of doing so, and explain further how they are integrating these data into existing models of review and analysis.
This session will examine new data environment concepts like ‘big data’ and ‘stream analytics’, and the impact of the new data environment on privacy (and related constructs) and how this will feed into the way we carry out research from data collection through to publication. This of course is not a fixed thing; the environment is in a constant state of change. Working out what is happening right now is a challenge and as for what will happen next …
This presentation was provided by Eric Swenson of Elsevier during a NISO webinar entitled "Understanding the Marketplace: Creating the New Information Product" held on Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Open: Much more than a different business model
Lars Bjørnshauge, Managing Director, DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals) and SPARC Europe Director of European Library Relations
So Now What? Some Concluding Thoughts on Takeaways and Themes
Charles Watkinson, Associate University Librarian, Publishing; Director, University of Michigan Press, University of Michigan Library
Modern research metrics and new models of evaluation have risen high on the academic agenda in the last few years. In this session two UK institutions who have adopted such metrics across their faculty will share their motivations and experiences of doing so, and explain further how they are integrating these data into existing models of review and analysis.
This session will examine new data environment concepts like ‘big data’ and ‘stream analytics’, and the impact of the new data environment on privacy (and related constructs) and how this will feed into the way we carry out research from data collection through to publication. This of course is not a fixed thing; the environment is in a constant state of change. Working out what is happening right now is a challenge and as for what will happen next …
This presentation was provided by Eric Swenson of Elsevier during a NISO webinar entitled "Understanding the Marketplace: Creating the New Information Product" held on Wednesday, March 15, 2017
This session offers the results of a study that tests the assertion that the online dissemination of theses has a positive impact on the research profile of the institution. Based on a combination of primary and secondary research, with some fascinating statistical comparative information, the study outlines the types of metrics an institution may use to measure the impact of its corpus of digitised dissertations and examines how these metrics may be generated. It is the result of a year-long study undertaken with the London School of Economics which focuses on the outcomes achieved through its programme of theses digitisation, disseminated simultaneously through its institutional repository and through the ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Database (PDTD). Results achieved by the LSE will be compared with metrics gathered globally by ProQuest via its PDTD. The session will be of interest to all librarians and academics involved in the use of digitised theses as a research resource, digitisation projects (retrospective or ongoing) and university rankings.
What does success look like when it comes to library discoverability? Index based discovery systems have seen a dramatic rate of adoption since introduction to the research ecosystem in 2009, with more than 9,000 libraries relying on a discovery system to provide users with a comprehensive index to their offerings. Some issues bar the way to providing this comprehensive view, but many challenges have been overcome through collaboration between libraries, content providers and discovery partners. The NISO ODI initiative began to examine these issues in 2011, and released a best practice in June 2014.
Speakers will highlight examples of successful collaboration, note continued areas of challenge, and provide insight on how the Open Discovery Initiative Conformance Checklists can be used as a mechanism to evaluate content provider or discovery provider conformance with the best practice.
So, what's it all about then? Why we share research dataDanny Kingsley
This is the Keynote talk at a Jisc Research Data Network meeting held at Cambridge University on 6 September 2016. The research data network is designed to be a people network offering participants a place to demonstrate practical research data management implementations and to discuss current issues relating to research data in institutions. This keynote discusses two of the most common excuses for not sharing data and then broadens the discussion out to the need for a move to Open Research of which open data is only a small but essential part.
Ideas that seem obvious today, at one point were obscure facts known only to a select few. The health benefits of washing hands, wearing a seatbelt while in a car - none of these ideas and practices were accepted immediately. In addition to needing time to incubate, new ideas also need to be accessible so that they can be tested, debated, and built upon. This presentation, which is based on my previous research and personal experiences, will highlight the importance and connection between open access publishing and the role of social media in promotion and dissemination of scholarly research.
Altmetrics attempts to provide timely measures of an impact through the use of metrics from HTML views and downloads of scholarly articles, blog posts, tweets, bookmarks, etc. Publishers of scientific research have enabled altmetrics on their articles, open source applications are available for platforms to display altmetrics on scientific research and subscription models have been created to measure the use that research articles receive online. This presentation reviews some of the current models for providing altmetrics along with information on a selection the providers that have made altmetrics available for general use.
NISO Two Day Virtual Conference:
Using the Web as an E-Content Distribution Platform:
Challenges and Opportunities
Oct 21-22, 2014
Frances Pinter, Founder and Executive Director, Knowledge Unlatched
Innovations in Analytics for Academic Publishing and Research NetworkingTobias Abarbanell
How we use the frontiers and loop platforms to build reputation for academics: providing a variety of article level metrics with breakdown by demography, geography of readers, and by connecting social interaction with the articles of Academic Publishers.
Conference presentation from #DataSocial conference in SF, Apr-2015
The purpose, practicalities, pitfalls and policies of managing and sharing da...Danny Kingsley
Talk to the Royal Society of Chemistry, Chemical Information and Computer Applications Group conference - Measurement, Information and Innovation: Digital Disruption in the Chemical Sciences. Tuesday 20th October 2015, RSC, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London
Predatory publishing: what it is and how to avoid itUQSCADS
There are currently approximately 28,000 journals publishing 1.5 million papers annually. Although the majority of new journals are legitimate, the credentials of some are questionable. Such journals and publishers are referred to as 'predatory'. They commonly send spam emails to potential authors, solicit submissions and request payment of article processing charges, but lack academic rigor or credibility.
This presentation provides researchers with
an insight into predatory behaviors and and how they can avoid them.
Open Access and PLOS: The Future of Scholarly Publishing - Dr. Virginia BarbourUQSCADS
In this presentation, Dr. Barbour discussed the emergence of open access from traditional publishing models, the current open access landscape where PLoS journals have foreshadowed the development of megajournals as well as predicting future developments.
In defining the Open Access Publishing model, Dr. Barbour emphasized the crucial role creative commons licences play in ensuring that research is not only available free to view online, but is able to be re-used.
Altmetric: Getting Started with Article-Level MetricsAltmetric
This is a quick-start guide to the insights that may be gained from article-level metrics of scholarly papers. This presentation was authored by Jean Liu (jean@altmetric.com), with data from Euan Adie. Examples from the Altmetric blog (http://www.altmetric.com/blog) are shown. For more information, visit Altmetric (http://www.altmetric.com).
Presentation given at the University of Sydney, 11 October 2013. An introduction to open access publishing for academics in the humanities and social sciences.
Stop Press: Libraries' Role in the Future of PublishingDanny Kingsley
This was presented to the SLA2016 conference in Philadelphia on 12 June.
ABSTRACT: Libraries are moving from curators of bought content to providing access to research or industry outputs. This activity can range from the relatively informal process of dissemination through a repository to acting as publishers - through the hosting of research journals, bibliographies and newsletters to the provision of editorial services and advice. This 90 minute Master Class will look at different models of publishing in the library environment with several examples of publishing activity in different libraries. The session will start with a strategic overview of the need for libraries to actively engage in the dissemination of information created by their organisations. The discussion will cover the staffing implications including how to recruit and train for the required skills sets. Attendees will work through some of the issues that need to be considered if a library is interested in publishing, including some of the legal implications and the different software and technical platforms available. Ideas will be workshopped about ways to engage the institutional community and encourage uptake of services on offer. The class aims to provide practical information to allow attendees to make decisions about what services are achievable to offer their clients, both from a technical and a staffing perspective. Attendees who are currently publishing are actively encouraged to participate in the discussion.
Presentation for NISO's Virtual Conference: 'Scholarly Communication Models: Evolution or Revolution?'
Speaking as himself, rather than as the Managing Director of DOAJ, Lars Bjørnshauge gives his own views on what is wrong with the current state of publishing, open access, and the culture of prestige, tenure and promotion within academic institutions.
Presented on 23rd September 2015
Social signals are being increasingly used by science publishers to predict citation rate of papers using these alternative metrics (altmetrics).
This presentation explores the growing importance of an online presence to the professional scientist. It offers three key tips to enhance your visibility - and along with it an improved long term citation rate - and signposts to tools to monitor the online impact of your work output.
This session offers the results of a study that tests the assertion that the online dissemination of theses has a positive impact on the research profile of the institution. Based on a combination of primary and secondary research, with some fascinating statistical comparative information, the study outlines the types of metrics an institution may use to measure the impact of its corpus of digitised dissertations and examines how these metrics may be generated. It is the result of a year-long study undertaken with the London School of Economics which focuses on the outcomes achieved through its programme of theses digitisation, disseminated simultaneously through its institutional repository and through the ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Database (PDTD). Results achieved by the LSE will be compared with metrics gathered globally by ProQuest via its PDTD. The session will be of interest to all librarians and academics involved in the use of digitised theses as a research resource, digitisation projects (retrospective or ongoing) and university rankings.
What does success look like when it comes to library discoverability? Index based discovery systems have seen a dramatic rate of adoption since introduction to the research ecosystem in 2009, with more than 9,000 libraries relying on a discovery system to provide users with a comprehensive index to their offerings. Some issues bar the way to providing this comprehensive view, but many challenges have been overcome through collaboration between libraries, content providers and discovery partners. The NISO ODI initiative began to examine these issues in 2011, and released a best practice in June 2014.
Speakers will highlight examples of successful collaboration, note continued areas of challenge, and provide insight on how the Open Discovery Initiative Conformance Checklists can be used as a mechanism to evaluate content provider or discovery provider conformance with the best practice.
So, what's it all about then? Why we share research dataDanny Kingsley
This is the Keynote talk at a Jisc Research Data Network meeting held at Cambridge University on 6 September 2016. The research data network is designed to be a people network offering participants a place to demonstrate practical research data management implementations and to discuss current issues relating to research data in institutions. This keynote discusses two of the most common excuses for not sharing data and then broadens the discussion out to the need for a move to Open Research of which open data is only a small but essential part.
Ideas that seem obvious today, at one point were obscure facts known only to a select few. The health benefits of washing hands, wearing a seatbelt while in a car - none of these ideas and practices were accepted immediately. In addition to needing time to incubate, new ideas also need to be accessible so that they can be tested, debated, and built upon. This presentation, which is based on my previous research and personal experiences, will highlight the importance and connection between open access publishing and the role of social media in promotion and dissemination of scholarly research.
Altmetrics attempts to provide timely measures of an impact through the use of metrics from HTML views and downloads of scholarly articles, blog posts, tweets, bookmarks, etc. Publishers of scientific research have enabled altmetrics on their articles, open source applications are available for platforms to display altmetrics on scientific research and subscription models have been created to measure the use that research articles receive online. This presentation reviews some of the current models for providing altmetrics along with information on a selection the providers that have made altmetrics available for general use.
NISO Two Day Virtual Conference:
Using the Web as an E-Content Distribution Platform:
Challenges and Opportunities
Oct 21-22, 2014
Frances Pinter, Founder and Executive Director, Knowledge Unlatched
Innovations in Analytics for Academic Publishing and Research NetworkingTobias Abarbanell
How we use the frontiers and loop platforms to build reputation for academics: providing a variety of article level metrics with breakdown by demography, geography of readers, and by connecting social interaction with the articles of Academic Publishers.
Conference presentation from #DataSocial conference in SF, Apr-2015
The purpose, practicalities, pitfalls and policies of managing and sharing da...Danny Kingsley
Talk to the Royal Society of Chemistry, Chemical Information and Computer Applications Group conference - Measurement, Information and Innovation: Digital Disruption in the Chemical Sciences. Tuesday 20th October 2015, RSC, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London
Predatory publishing: what it is and how to avoid itUQSCADS
There are currently approximately 28,000 journals publishing 1.5 million papers annually. Although the majority of new journals are legitimate, the credentials of some are questionable. Such journals and publishers are referred to as 'predatory'. They commonly send spam emails to potential authors, solicit submissions and request payment of article processing charges, but lack academic rigor or credibility.
This presentation provides researchers with
an insight into predatory behaviors and and how they can avoid them.
Open Access and PLOS: The Future of Scholarly Publishing - Dr. Virginia BarbourUQSCADS
In this presentation, Dr. Barbour discussed the emergence of open access from traditional publishing models, the current open access landscape where PLoS journals have foreshadowed the development of megajournals as well as predicting future developments.
In defining the Open Access Publishing model, Dr. Barbour emphasized the crucial role creative commons licences play in ensuring that research is not only available free to view online, but is able to be re-used.
Altmetric: Getting Started with Article-Level MetricsAltmetric
This is a quick-start guide to the insights that may be gained from article-level metrics of scholarly papers. This presentation was authored by Jean Liu (jean@altmetric.com), with data from Euan Adie. Examples from the Altmetric blog (http://www.altmetric.com/blog) are shown. For more information, visit Altmetric (http://www.altmetric.com).
Presentation given at the University of Sydney, 11 October 2013. An introduction to open access publishing for academics in the humanities and social sciences.
Stop Press: Libraries' Role in the Future of PublishingDanny Kingsley
This was presented to the SLA2016 conference in Philadelphia on 12 June.
ABSTRACT: Libraries are moving from curators of bought content to providing access to research or industry outputs. This activity can range from the relatively informal process of dissemination through a repository to acting as publishers - through the hosting of research journals, bibliographies and newsletters to the provision of editorial services and advice. This 90 minute Master Class will look at different models of publishing in the library environment with several examples of publishing activity in different libraries. The session will start with a strategic overview of the need for libraries to actively engage in the dissemination of information created by their organisations. The discussion will cover the staffing implications including how to recruit and train for the required skills sets. Attendees will work through some of the issues that need to be considered if a library is interested in publishing, including some of the legal implications and the different software and technical platforms available. Ideas will be workshopped about ways to engage the institutional community and encourage uptake of services on offer. The class aims to provide practical information to allow attendees to make decisions about what services are achievable to offer their clients, both from a technical and a staffing perspective. Attendees who are currently publishing are actively encouraged to participate in the discussion.
Presentation for NISO's Virtual Conference: 'Scholarly Communication Models: Evolution or Revolution?'
Speaking as himself, rather than as the Managing Director of DOAJ, Lars Bjørnshauge gives his own views on what is wrong with the current state of publishing, open access, and the culture of prestige, tenure and promotion within academic institutions.
Presented on 23rd September 2015
Social signals are being increasingly used by science publishers to predict citation rate of papers using these alternative metrics (altmetrics).
This presentation explores the growing importance of an online presence to the professional scientist. It offers three key tips to enhance your visibility - and along with it an improved long term citation rate - and signposts to tools to monitor the online impact of your work output.
With the Support of Atlas Network, Bikalpa –an Alternative translated the English version “Peace, Love and Liberty” into Nepali Language.
Peace, Love and Liberty is a book that offers evidence and argument for peace. The essays on this book illustrate that war is not in favor of the common people; however it may benefits the few who have vested interest. The book also gives throw insight on how war curtails the individual freedom and gives the rights to selected few to impose their authority. It teaches us the value of trade and demonstrates how it serves to achieve peace and prosperity to the society. Altogether there are 15 chapters written by the scholars who value peace and persuade readers that peace, freedom, prosperity, and progress go hand-in-hand.
The book is highly relevant to Nepalese context. Nearly a decade ago, Nepal overcomes the Maoist insurgency; still there are groups and sentiments that keeps on fueling the ideas conflict and violence rather than peace. It always creates a possibility and threat of emerging same kinds of militia groups that can escalate violence in coming future. Also after the promulgation of new constitution, some of the agitating parties are continuing their protest activities in a violent way, which have threaten peace and individual freedom of the citizens. This book teaches us immense value of peace and growth. Bikalpa translated the book to make it available to all the Nepalese readers who can be benefited from lessons of the book.
Translation of the book is completed on July 2015. Basanta Adhikari, Founding Chairperson translated the book. It is translated in simple way that helps Nepalese readers to understand without any difficulty. The books are also available at Bikalpa office and in the market.
Visitar Toulouse, su estadio de fútbol y Francia en trenAna Tren
Descargue nuestra guía turística destinada a los amantes del fútbol para visitar la ciudad de Toulouse. Sabrá todo acerca de este destino de fútbol fácilmente accesible en tren, desde el tiempo hasta las curiosidades que visitar, pasando por la fan-zone.
In this presentation the fundamental transformation of the academic (research/university) library is discussed. By evaluating current library functions and investigating possible new the necessary changes that need to be made for the library to remain an effective and relevant partner in research and teaching are explored. This presentation was presented as a keynote to both the 2012 ABES Conference at Montpellier and the 2012 LIBER Annual Conference at Tartu.
Imperial College London - journey to open scholarshipTorsten Reimer
Talk given at the 2016 Open Repositories conference in Dublin, Ireland. This paper follows the journey of a research intensive university towards making its outputs available openly, discusses approaches outlined above and identifies problems in the global scholarly communications landscape.
Online Communication Lesson 3 B / Y Generation, Social Media Fundamentals, ...Cem Cinlar
The third lesson of Online Communication. Y Generation, Social Media Fundamentals, Social Media Management, Social Media Guidelines, Social Media Components and Social Games. Flash materials, videos and some critical pages are not included. Educational use only!
CHORUS Presentation at PSP Annual Conference February 6, 2014hratner
Howard Ratner presents the Clearinghouse for the Open Research of the Unites States at the PSP Conference. Detailing its emphasis on Identification, Access, Preservation, Discovery, and Compliance of articles reporting on federally funded research
See http://www.chorusaccess.org/ for latest information on CHORUS.
Howard Ratner presents the Clearinghouse for the Open Research of the Unites States at the SSP Conference on May 29, 2014. Detailing its emphasis on Identification, Access, Preservation, Discovery, and Compliance of articles reporting on federally funded research.
What is Open Access? An Introduction to OAAbby Clobridge
An introduction to Open Access: What is Open Access? Why Open Access? Open Access Journals (Gold OA), Open Access Repositories (Green OA), Open Access Policies, Discoverability of OA content through Metadata, Interoperability, and the Open Knowledge Environment
Sitations are the way that researchers communicate how
their work builds on and relates to the work of others and
they can be used to trace how a discovery spreads and is
used by researchers in different disciplines and countries.
Creating a truly comprehensive map of scholarship,
however, relies on having a curated machine-readable
database of citation information, where the provenance of
every citation is clear and reusable. The Initiative for Open
Citations (I4OC), a campaign launched on 6 April 2017,
sought to make publisher members of Crossref aware that
they could open up the citation metadata they already give
to Crossref simply by asking them. With the support of
major publishers and the endorsement of funders and other
organisations, more than 50% of citation data in Crossref
is now freely available, up from less than 1% before the
campaign. This provides the foundation of a well-structured,
open database of literally millions of datapoints that anyone
can query, mine, consume and explore. The presenter will
discuss the aims of the campaign, the new innovative
services that are already using the data, what more still
needs to be done and how you can support the initiative.
Catriona J MacCallum, Hindawi
This presentation was provided by Howard Ratner of CHORUS during the two-day "NISO Tech Summit: Reflections Upon The Year of Open Science." Day two was held on October 26, 2023.
OpenAIRE content in support of Open Science monitoring (Presentation by Paolo...OpenAIRE
"OpenAIRE content in support of Open Science monitoring".
Presentation by Paolo Manghi from Institute of Information Science and Technologies - CNR, at the Digital Infrastructures Conference 2018, Lisbon - OpenAIRE session: The Who and the How of Open Science: A user journey in Open Science through the lens of OpenAIRE (Oct. 10, 2018)
We will provide a glimpse into the process of assembling data from publishers, funders, and repositories to create meaningful reports of emerging research release events.
Altmetrics as indicators of public impactPat Loria
Scholarly citations can be traced all the way back to the 15th century, but in the 21st century the internet, social media and the open access movement have made it easier than ever before for the public to engage with scholarly outputs. Altmetrics provide a measure of public engagement with web-native scholarship. They can be embedded into publishing platforms and institutional repositories as article-level metrics, and they provide evidence of impact for open access mandates.
Three leading altmetrics aggregators are discussed: Altmetric.com; ImpactStory.org; PlumAnalytics.com. An institutional systems approach is recommended to mitigate the "pond-mentality" of the growing number of sources that provide measures of impact for research output. Research profiling systems are able to harvest most of these ponds and so save time for the researcher and research manager. In addition, national profiling systems would leverage economies of scale to increase the visibility and impact of all players, making it easier for potential investors and collaborators to find research partners.
Altmetricians are challenged to develop a metric that measures the openness of a research entity.
Funders and publishers have something in common: for better or worse, we have the ability to influence the behavior of researchers. This talk will focus on what both groups can do to improve research now and in the future.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the closing segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Eight: Limitations and Potential Solutions, was held on May 23, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the seventh segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session 7: Open Source Language Models, was held on May 16, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the sixth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Six: Text Classification with LLMs, was held on May 9, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fifth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Five: Named Entity Recognition with LLMs, was held on May 2, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fourth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Four: Structured Data and Assistants, was held on April 25, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the third segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Three: Beginning Conversations, was held on April 18, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Kaveh Bazargan of River Valley Technologies, during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Dana Compton of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the second segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Two: Large Language Models, was held on April 11, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Teresa Hazen of the University of Arizona, Geoff Morse of Northwestern University. and Ken Varnum of the University of Michigan, during the Spring ODI Conformance Statement Workshop for Libraries. This event was held on April 9, 2024
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the opening segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session One: Introduction to Machine Learning, was held on April 4, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the eight and final session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session eight, "Building Data Driven Applications" was held on Thursday, December 7, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the seventh session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session seven, "Vector Databases and Semantic Searching" was held on Thursday, November 30, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the sixth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session six, "Text Mining Techniques" was held on Thursday, November 16, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the fifth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session five, "Text Processing for Library Data" was held on Thursday, November 9, 2023.
This presentation was provided by Todd Carpenter, Executive Director, during the NISO webinar on "Strategic Planning." The event was held virtually on November 8, 2023.
This presentation was provided by Rhonda Ross of CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society, and Jonathan Clark of the International DOI Foundation, during the NISO webinar on "Strategic Planning." The event was held virtually on November 8, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the fourth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session four, "Data Mining Techniques" was held on Thursday, November 2, 2023.
This presentation was provided by Tiffany Straza of UNESCO, during the two-day "NISO Tech Summit: Reflections Upon The Year of Open Science." Day two was held on October 26, 2023.
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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.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
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Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
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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.
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A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
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Digital Tools and AI for Teaching Learning and Research
October 1 NISO Training Thursday: Using Alerting Systems to Ensure OA Policy Compliance
1. NISO Training Thursday:
Using Alerting Systems to Ensure OA Policy
Compliance
Wednesday, October 1, 2015
Presenters:
Howard Ratner, Executive Director, CHORUS
f
Judy Ruttenberg, Association of Research Libraries
Erin Braswell, Center for Open Science
Fabian von Feilitzsch, Center for Open Science
http://www.niso.org/news/events/2015/training_Thursdays/TT_alerting/
2. Using Alerting Systems to Ensure
Public Access Compliance
1 October 2015
Howard Ratner, Executive Director, CHORUS
hratner@chorusaccess.org
www.chorusaccess.org | @chorusaccess
Access Discovery Compliance Identification Preservation
3. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
courtesy of Oxford University PressOpen Access Funder Mandates
4. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
CHORUS advances sustainable, cost-effective public access to
articles reporting on funded research in ways that benefit all in
the scholarly communications community.
• 501(c)(3) not-for-profit membership organization
• Leverages existing infrastructure
• Promotes collaboration
• Sparks innovation
• Broadens the dialogue among publishers, societies, funders,
service providers, researchers, and other stakeholders
6. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
US Office of Science and Technology
Policy (OSTP) + CHORUS
OSTP Requirement
• Free public access to peer-
reviewed research articles
(guideline: 12 month embargo
adapted to agency/discipline
needs)
• Optimize search, archival, and
dissemination features to
encourage innovation
• Ensure interoperability and
long-term stewardship
• Plans on public data also called
for
• Develop plans in consultation
with stakeholders
CHORUS Services
• Publishers provide free public access to
best available version (accepted author
manuscript or Version of Record)
post embargo or sooner if paid by article
processing charge
• Open APIs enabling content syndication,
search and other innovations
• Perpetual public access through
CLOCKSS, Portico, and
other government sponsored archives
• Can link to data repositories when
available
• Up and running: already working with
agencies
7. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
US Agencies & CHORUS
Smithsonian Announced Partnership with
CHORUS on 18 August 2015
Signed Agreement on 24 June 2015
NIST Signed Pilot Agreement
on 9 July 2015
US Department of Energy
Announced Partnership
with CHORUS on 4 August 2014
Signed Agreement on 15 April 2015
Active discussions with 5-10 other US federal agencies
8. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Why CHORUS?
Sustainable, scalable
path to public access
Addresses the priorities
of researchers, funders,
publishers, and
academic institutions &
libraries alike
Free to academic institutions &
libraries and the public
Cuts overhead for funders
Contains costs for publishers
9. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Agency
Librarian Public
Publisher
Researcher
Compliance
Identification Discovery
AccessPreservation
How Does CHORUS Help?
Office of
Research
10. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
capture funding
metadata via
CrossRef’s FundRef
transmit key article
dates via metadata
- manuscript acceptance
- publication
- embargo start/end
be transparent
about embargoes
I would like publishers to …
Adapted from JISC Desiderata Discussion Document, April 2015
Agency
identify articles by
grantees and staff
researchers
provide public access
to articles reporting
on funded research
11. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
attach the accepted
manuscript to my
acceptance email
I would like publishers to …
clearly tell me what
people can do with my
accepted manuscript
clearly tell me what
people can do with
the Version of Record
of my article
help me comply with
my funder’s policies
Adapted from JISC Desiderata Discussion Document, April 2015
Researcher
make my article easy
to find
12. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
register the DOI
upon manuscript
acceptance
I would like publishers to …
capture funding
metadata via
CrossRef’s FundRef
allow unrestricted
machine access to
OA content
transmit key article dates
via metadata
- manuscript acceptance
- publication
- embargo start/end
promote and use
ORCiD identifiers
capture institutional
affiliation metadata
be transparent
about embargoes
Adapted from JISC Desiderata Discussion Document, April 2015
Librarian Office of
Research
ensure public
access to articles
in perpetuity
13. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Access
Identification
Discovery
Compliance
Preservation
Persistent
Identifiers,
Trusted
Archives
CHORUS
Services,
Open APIs
Manuscript
Tracking
Systems,
Publishing
Platforms
Cost-effective Public Access Infrastructure
Builds on existing
scholarly
infrastructure
. . .
14. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
How CHORUS Works: Identification
…built into the author’s submission process
Publisher Host
. . .
Publisher MTS
. . .
15. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Government
maintained
or other
3rd-party dark
archive
How CHORUS Works: Preservation
…use of existing, multiparty preservation strategy
16. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Text and Data-Mining
Services
How CHORUS Works: Discovery
…by any existing search engine
20. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
API Integration with Agency Portals
21. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
API and dashboards for
monitoring and tracking
publisher contributions
to CHORUS
Government
Agency Reports
Institution Reports
Publisher Reports
How CHORUS Works: Compliance
Live dashboard: dashboard.chorusaccess.org/nsf
22. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Accepted Author Manuscript
becomes publicly accessible
Version of Record
becomes publicly accessible
Embargo Period Expires
or Author/Funder Pays for Public Access
How CHORUS Works:
Access
23. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
What Do Publishers Need To Do?
Compliance
Researchers can easily
comply with their agencies
Identification
Tag content with
CrossRef’s FundRef
agency identifiers and
your embargo
metadata
Discovery
Researchers can search and find
your content
Access
Provide public access to
articles on your site
posted with your reuse
license terms
Preservation
Send content
to archiving
service
1 2 3
JOIN
CHORUS
24. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Total CHORUS Articles Monitored
as of 9/25/15
164,059
23,366
DOIs / Articles Description
164,059 reported in CHORUS Dashboard
31,594 verified publicly accessible today
25. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
70000
NSF
USDHHS
USDOD
USDOE
NASA
USDA
USDOI
NIST
BMGF
USAID
Smithsonian
DHS
DOT
ED
EPA
NOAA
VA
Monitored Articles by US Agency
as of 9/16/15
26. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
http://dashboard.chorusaccess.org/nsf
# Deposits
made to
dark archives
Content tested
for public
accessibility
# Records
having
reuse terms
posted
# Deposits
identifying
funding
30. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Agency Dashboard Email Alerts
Customizable
Frequency:
Daily
Weekly
Monthly
12829 2243USDOD
August 25, 2015 5:01 AM
Mark Martin
31. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Funder Dashboard Open API
To retrieve NIST (100000161) information:
https://api.chorusaccess.org/agencies/100000161/histories/2015/2/23
Available for testing since August 2015
More testers needed!
32. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Agency Info
Publication
Metadata
CHORUS
Public Access
Metadata
33. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
# Deposits
made to
dark archives
Content tested
for public
accessibility
# Records
having
reuse terms
posted
# Deposits
identifying
funding
35. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
• CHORUS objective: interoperate with scholarly
repositories and other systems providing
access to scholarly articles
• Agreed to work jointly on persistent
identifiers, metrics, and SHARE Notify system
• Exploring more areas of collaboration
• Active member of SHARE joint working group
36. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
• Value cross-linking data and articles
• CHORUS infrastructure can link to data repositories
• Unclear if there is one unified mechanism for data
and publications
• Simplify procedures for researcher compliance and funding
agency monitoring
• Member RDA-WDS Publishing Data Services Working Group
• CHORUS to use standard identifier schemes
37. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Helps faculty maintain compliance with
funder requirements now
• Utilizes existing author workflow
o Minimizes researchers’ compliance efforts
o Streamlines technology
o Scalable solution
• Lowers overhead
o Free to academic institutions, libraries,
agencies and the public
o Provides transparency through dashboard
monitoring and reporting
CHORUS + Academia
Office of Research
& Librarian
Researcher
38. Advancing Public Access to Research | www.chorusaccess.org
Proven
Technology
Open API
Optimized
Search
Preservation
Archiving
Free Public
Access Distributed
Access
Dashboard
Metrics
Text & Data
Mining
Cost-
Effective
40. NISO Webinar • October , 2015
Questions?
All questions will be posted with presenter answers on
the NISO website following the webinar:
http://www.niso.org/news/events/2015/training_Thursdays/TT_alerting/
October 1 NISO Training Thursday
Using Alerting Systems to Ensure OA Policy
Compliance
41. Thank you for joining us today.
Please take a moment to fill out the brief online survey.
We look forward to hearing from you!
THANK YOU
Editor's Notes
As David said the OSTP memo issued in February of last year. Since October 2013 CHORUS publishers have been providing public access to the best available version – either accepted author manuscript or Version of Record – from their website post embargo or sooner if paid by article processing chargeCHORUS uses open APIs enabling content syndication and search services
CHORUS enables archiving via CLOCKSS, Portico, and other government sponsored archivesCHORUS infrastructure can link to data repositories when availableCHORUS is ready to work with agencies
Over the last year, the CHORUS board and I have had countless meeting with government agencies teaching them about CHORUS and what publishers have to offer them regarding delivering Public Access.
On August 4 2014 the US DOE 4 announced their intention to partner with us
We are confident that others will also make similar announcements in the coming months.
But Why CHORUS?
CHORUS addresses the priorities of all stakeholders alike. It is sustainable and cost-effective, containing publisher spending, cutting funder overhead, and Free to funders, academic institutions and libraries, and the public.
Widespread access to research is a good thing—it’s at the very core of our mission as publishers. But as we all know, coming up with a sustainable and scalable approach to delivering free public access to scholarly content reporting on funded research in the United States is easier said than done.
The challenge is to develop something that works for all everyone, ensuring the reliable reporting, review, dissemination
and long-term availability of research literature.
34,164 unique DOIs
So What Do Publishers Need to Do?
Tag content with CrossRef’s FundRef agency identifiers and your embargo metadata
Provide public access to articles on your site with your reuse license terms
Preserve your content with an archiving service
Join CHORUS and our services will enable researchers to discover and utilize your publicly accessible content and our compliance tools will show how researchers are in compliance with agency mandates
Here’s a look at the dashboard set-up….
Here’s a look at the dashboard set-up….
SHARE and CHORUS met in July 2013 to discuss initiatives and explore areas of possible collaboration.
Both agreed to work jointly on persistent identifiers (DOIs) and metrics (dashboard could potentially be used to expose metrics from SHARE). Metrics to be determined, but most important message here is the potential collaboration and spirit of working together to solve problems...
And both agreed to follow up in next few months
…
RDA-WDS Data-Pub Services Working Group
CHORUS is built with proven, open technology you are all familiar with and it advances public access while keeping the content in context on the publishers sites.