Presentation delivered by Natalia Manola during the EOSCSummit 2018 (June 11th, 2018) during the session Progress of implementation "Progress towards the EOSC (services, architecture, access, rules, data)"
4th RDA Europe Science Workshop - The e-ROSA projecte-ROSA
The document discusses eROSA, a project that received EU funding to develop a roadmap for an e-infrastructure for open science in agriculture. It aims to illustrate the value of a virtual research environment for the agricultural domain through the Aginfra+ project. The document outlines the different types of agricultural data that exist, challenges around data silos and access, and varying levels of data practices maturity. It proposes some initial resources and services that could be included in an e-infrastructure, focusing on semantics. It emphasizes sustainability and governance models. The overall goal is to facilitate open sharing of agricultural data and knowledge through standardized e-infrastructure tools and services.
Chris Atherton (GEANT) and Andres Steijaert (OCRE) presentation about the Open Clouds for Research Environments (OCRE) project and GÉANT's National Research and Education Networks and their Infrastructure support for global Cloud Computing at the 4th GEO Data Technology Workshop.
Vienna, Austria
25th of April 2019
The HNSciCloud Project is a pre-commercial procurement action funded by the EU Horizon 2020 Framework Programme to develop a hybrid cloud model. A group of research organizations and publicly funded e-infrastructures have committed procurement funds, staff resources, use cases, and in-house IT assets totaling over 5 million euros. The resulting cloud services will be made available to end-users across many research communities through a pre-commercial procurement process that brings together research organizations, data providers, cloud services, and commercial providers in a hybrid cloud model suitable for the dynamic cloud market.
02 Plan4all projects in negotiation (Polivisu, Euxdat)plan4all
Two EU projects starting in November 2017 are discussed - PoliVisu and EUXDAT. PoliVisu aims to enhance decision making through big data visualization and collective intelligence. It will pilot large transport changes in Paris and mobility policies/neighborhood development in a mid-sized city. EUXDAT proposes an e-infrastructure to support sustainable agriculture, land monitoring, and energy efficiency for planning through pilots on land management, energy analysis, and 3D farming. Partners for each project are listed.
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
Big Data Europe at eHealth Week 2017: Linking Big Data in HealthBigData_Europe
Of the four V's of big data – Volume, Velocity, Variety and Veracity – the most challenging for the health sector is Variety. Health data comes from many sources, formats and standards – how can we bring these together to reap the benefits of big data technologies?
Big Data Europe is tackling this challenge head-on, building a big data infrastructure flexible enough to tackle all seven Societal Challenges identified by Horizon 2020. Here we demonstrate our pilot implementation of Open PHACTS, which integrates life science data for drug discovery.
12 May 2017
4th RDA Europe Science Workshop - The e-ROSA projecte-ROSA
The document discusses eROSA, a project that received EU funding to develop a roadmap for an e-infrastructure for open science in agriculture. It aims to illustrate the value of a virtual research environment for the agricultural domain through the Aginfra+ project. The document outlines the different types of agricultural data that exist, challenges around data silos and access, and varying levels of data practices maturity. It proposes some initial resources and services that could be included in an e-infrastructure, focusing on semantics. It emphasizes sustainability and governance models. The overall goal is to facilitate open sharing of agricultural data and knowledge through standardized e-infrastructure tools and services.
Chris Atherton (GEANT) and Andres Steijaert (OCRE) presentation about the Open Clouds for Research Environments (OCRE) project and GÉANT's National Research and Education Networks and their Infrastructure support for global Cloud Computing at the 4th GEO Data Technology Workshop.
Vienna, Austria
25th of April 2019
The HNSciCloud Project is a pre-commercial procurement action funded by the EU Horizon 2020 Framework Programme to develop a hybrid cloud model. A group of research organizations and publicly funded e-infrastructures have committed procurement funds, staff resources, use cases, and in-house IT assets totaling over 5 million euros. The resulting cloud services will be made available to end-users across many research communities through a pre-commercial procurement process that brings together research organizations, data providers, cloud services, and commercial providers in a hybrid cloud model suitable for the dynamic cloud market.
02 Plan4all projects in negotiation (Polivisu, Euxdat)plan4all
Two EU projects starting in November 2017 are discussed - PoliVisu and EUXDAT. PoliVisu aims to enhance decision making through big data visualization and collective intelligence. It will pilot large transport changes in Paris and mobility policies/neighborhood development in a mid-sized city. EUXDAT proposes an e-infrastructure to support sustainable agriculture, land monitoring, and energy efficiency for planning through pilots on land management, energy analysis, and 3D farming. Partners for each project are listed.
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
Big Data Europe at eHealth Week 2017: Linking Big Data in HealthBigData_Europe
Of the four V's of big data – Volume, Velocity, Variety and Veracity – the most challenging for the health sector is Variety. Health data comes from many sources, formats and standards – how can we bring these together to reap the benefits of big data technologies?
Big Data Europe is tackling this challenge head-on, building a big data infrastructure flexible enough to tackle all seven Societal Challenges identified by Horizon 2020. Here we demonstrate our pilot implementation of Open PHACTS, which integrates life science data for drug discovery.
12 May 2017
Linking data and publications with OpenAIRE - EUDAT Summer School (Sarah Jone...EUDAT
Now that you’ve heard about several kinds of data services, how could they fit in your workflow? In this hands-on hour Sarah and Marjan invite you to flesh out your Data Management Plan by linking to services. They will also introduce tools to link publications and data: you know how they are related, but is this transparent for others who may be interested in your work?
Visit: https://www.eudat.eu/eudat-summer-school
What the Marine Environmental Data and Information Network (MEDIN) has been up to in order to improve access to marine data and promote the message of 'measure once, use many times'.
Virtual Campfire – A Mobile Social Software for Cross Media CommunitiesRalf Klamma
Virtual Campfire – A Mobile Social Software for Cross Media Communities
Yiwei Cao, Marc Spaniol, Ralf Klamma, Dominik Renzel
Graz, Austria, 5-7 of September, 2007
The Helix Nebula Science Cloud (HNSciCloud) initiative aims to procure innovative cloud computing services from commercial providers to create a hybrid cloud platform for the European research community. Led by research organizations like CERN, the procurement process began in 2016 with a tender that received many responses. The project is funded through 2020 to establish contracts with cloud providers like IBM, RHEA, and INDRA to provide scalable computing and storage resources integrated with European e-infrastructures.
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.
The document discusses the history and scaling of a UK government petition website. It describes three iterations of the website launched in 2006, 2011, and 2015. The first petition signed 1.8 million people against a vehicle tracking policy. The second saw over 327,000 sign a petition about lowering smear test age. The third was developed on the existing codebase and redesigned to be hosted on AWS. The aftermath section describes traffic to the site growing rapidly on Fridays and Saturdays after a national referendum.
Virtual research environments for implementing long tail open scienceBlue BRIDGE
This document discusses virtual research environments (VREs) for supporting "long-tail open science". It defines VREs as operational environments that dynamically aggregate resources like data, services, and computing/storage for users. VREs aim to support collaborative research, reproducibility, and open sharing of data/findings while providing simplified access. The document outlines how VREs can be created on demand, integrated with applications/services, and used for collaborative experiments and workflows to enable repeatability and reuse of research. Real-world examples of VREs like D4Science are presented.
The document summarizes the proceedings of the eROSA 2nd Stakeholder workshop held in Wageningen, Netherlands in 2017. eROSA is funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 program to develop an open e-science infrastructure for agriculture. The workshop discussed developing FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable) agricultural data resources and services, and a vision for 2030 where food systems produce healthy food through sustainable methods while supporting environmental and social goals. The workshop also covered global collaboration opportunities and implementation status of agricultural infrastructures.
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
The document summarizes the proceedings of the eROSA 2nd Stakeholder workshop held in Wageningen, Netherlands in 2017. eROSA is funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 program to develop an open e-science infrastructure for agriculture. The workshop discussed developing FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable) agricultural data resources and services, and a vision for 2030 where food systems produce healthy food through sustainable methods while supporting environmental and social goals. Next steps include broadening perspectives beyond just agriculture to consider sustainable food systems, and making progress on implementing agricultural data infrastructures.
InfoWeek Digitization Day - The e-ROSA projecte-ROSA
- eROSA is an 18-month project funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 programme to develop a roadmap for an e-infrastructure to support open science in agriculture.
- The objectives are to build a community of researchers and ICT specialists around this issue, improve understanding of relevant existing infrastructures and projects, and develop a shared vision and roadmap.
- There is a need for such a roadmap as the agricultural research domain currently lacks a coherent research infrastructure, and faces increasing data volume, variety and flows that require improved data sharing, interoperability and analysis capabilities.
The e-ROSA project received EU funding to develop a roadmap for an e-infrastructure to support open science in agriculture. It held a stakeholder workshop where participants discussed challenges around increasing data volumes in agri-food sciences from various sources, issues with data sharing between public and private sectors, and how e-infrastructure could help address needs by improving data access, processing, and preservation while supporting open science practices and community engagement. Key topics for the roadmap included e-infrastructure governance models and identifying technical and scientific services to articulate user needs and facilitate research.
The document discusses Austria's national open government data portal called data.gv.at. It aims to have federal, state, and local governments cooperate on common standards for open data to create an effective framework. The goals are to represent interests across levels of government and connect to other open data initiatives. The portal launched in 2012 and plans to expand features like self-administration, dynamic elements, and integrating Austrian datasets into a European catalog while potentially offering paid dataset hosting.
BDE-SC1 Webinar: OpenPHACTS Re-engineered with Big Data EuropeBigData_Europe
Watch this webinar on YouTube: https://youtu.be/MwG0yhrctDs
Slides for the latest update on our Big Data Europe pilot in Societal Challenge 1: Health, Demographic Change and Wellbeing.
Last year we successfully completed the first phase of this pilot, replicating the functionality of the Open PHACTS Discovery Platform on the BDE infrastructure. The Open PHACTS Discovery Platform brings together pharmacological data resources in an integrated, interoperable infrastructure, and has been developed to reduce barriers to drug discovery for industry, academia, and small businesses.
Learn more about the progress we’ve made, and what’s coming next.
1. General overview of the Big Data Europe project and Societal Challenges it addresses (Ronald Siebes, VU Amsterdam)
2. The Big Data Europe infrastructure, generic components that are being developed, and their flexibility for different applications (Hajira Jabeen, University of Bonn)
3. Latest details of the current state of the Open PHACTS architecture in BDE, and ongoing work (Nick Lynch, CTO, Open PHACTS Foundation)
The BlueBRIDGE approach to collaborative researchBlue BRIDGE
Gianpaolo Coro, ISTI-CNR, at BlueBRIDGE workshop on "Data Management services to support stock assessement", held during the Annual ICES Science conference 2016
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.
1) OpenAIRE provides services and infrastructure to support open access, open data, and open science across Europe through national open access desks, technical services, and training programs.
2) It aims to implement and align open science policies, deploy services to integrate open science in research workflows, and monitor open science in Europe.
3) OpenAIRE's platform aggregates over 24 million publications, 600,000 research objects, and links this information to organizations, projects, grants, and people to create a European research information system.
Linking data and publications with OpenAIRE - EUDAT Summer School (Sarah Jone...EUDAT
Now that you’ve heard about several kinds of data services, how could they fit in your workflow? In this hands-on hour Sarah and Marjan invite you to flesh out your Data Management Plan by linking to services. They will also introduce tools to link publications and data: you know how they are related, but is this transparent for others who may be interested in your work?
Visit: https://www.eudat.eu/eudat-summer-school
What the Marine Environmental Data and Information Network (MEDIN) has been up to in order to improve access to marine data and promote the message of 'measure once, use many times'.
Virtual Campfire – A Mobile Social Software for Cross Media CommunitiesRalf Klamma
Virtual Campfire – A Mobile Social Software for Cross Media Communities
Yiwei Cao, Marc Spaniol, Ralf Klamma, Dominik Renzel
Graz, Austria, 5-7 of September, 2007
The Helix Nebula Science Cloud (HNSciCloud) initiative aims to procure innovative cloud computing services from commercial providers to create a hybrid cloud platform for the European research community. Led by research organizations like CERN, the procurement process began in 2016 with a tender that received many responses. The project is funded through 2020 to establish contracts with cloud providers like IBM, RHEA, and INDRA to provide scalable computing and storage resources integrated with European e-infrastructures.
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.
The document discusses the history and scaling of a UK government petition website. It describes three iterations of the website launched in 2006, 2011, and 2015. The first petition signed 1.8 million people against a vehicle tracking policy. The second saw over 327,000 sign a petition about lowering smear test age. The third was developed on the existing codebase and redesigned to be hosted on AWS. The aftermath section describes traffic to the site growing rapidly on Fridays and Saturdays after a national referendum.
Virtual research environments for implementing long tail open scienceBlue BRIDGE
This document discusses virtual research environments (VREs) for supporting "long-tail open science". It defines VREs as operational environments that dynamically aggregate resources like data, services, and computing/storage for users. VREs aim to support collaborative research, reproducibility, and open sharing of data/findings while providing simplified access. The document outlines how VREs can be created on demand, integrated with applications/services, and used for collaborative experiments and workflows to enable repeatability and reuse of research. Real-world examples of VREs like D4Science are presented.
The document summarizes the proceedings of the eROSA 2nd Stakeholder workshop held in Wageningen, Netherlands in 2017. eROSA is funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 program to develop an open e-science infrastructure for agriculture. The workshop discussed developing FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable) agricultural data resources and services, and a vision for 2030 where food systems produce healthy food through sustainable methods while supporting environmental and social goals. The workshop also covered global collaboration opportunities and implementation status of agricultural infrastructures.
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
The document summarizes the proceedings of the eROSA 2nd Stakeholder workshop held in Wageningen, Netherlands in 2017. eROSA is funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 program to develop an open e-science infrastructure for agriculture. The workshop discussed developing FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable) agricultural data resources and services, and a vision for 2030 where food systems produce healthy food through sustainable methods while supporting environmental and social goals. Next steps include broadening perspectives beyond just agriculture to consider sustainable food systems, and making progress on implementing agricultural data infrastructures.
InfoWeek Digitization Day - The e-ROSA projecte-ROSA
- eROSA is an 18-month project funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 programme to develop a roadmap for an e-infrastructure to support open science in agriculture.
- The objectives are to build a community of researchers and ICT specialists around this issue, improve understanding of relevant existing infrastructures and projects, and develop a shared vision and roadmap.
- There is a need for such a roadmap as the agricultural research domain currently lacks a coherent research infrastructure, and faces increasing data volume, variety and flows that require improved data sharing, interoperability and analysis capabilities.
The e-ROSA project received EU funding to develop a roadmap for an e-infrastructure to support open science in agriculture. It held a stakeholder workshop where participants discussed challenges around increasing data volumes in agri-food sciences from various sources, issues with data sharing between public and private sectors, and how e-infrastructure could help address needs by improving data access, processing, and preservation while supporting open science practices and community engagement. Key topics for the roadmap included e-infrastructure governance models and identifying technical and scientific services to articulate user needs and facilitate research.
The document discusses Austria's national open government data portal called data.gv.at. It aims to have federal, state, and local governments cooperate on common standards for open data to create an effective framework. The goals are to represent interests across levels of government and connect to other open data initiatives. The portal launched in 2012 and plans to expand features like self-administration, dynamic elements, and integrating Austrian datasets into a European catalog while potentially offering paid dataset hosting.
BDE-SC1 Webinar: OpenPHACTS Re-engineered with Big Data EuropeBigData_Europe
Watch this webinar on YouTube: https://youtu.be/MwG0yhrctDs
Slides for the latest update on our Big Data Europe pilot in Societal Challenge 1: Health, Demographic Change and Wellbeing.
Last year we successfully completed the first phase of this pilot, replicating the functionality of the Open PHACTS Discovery Platform on the BDE infrastructure. The Open PHACTS Discovery Platform brings together pharmacological data resources in an integrated, interoperable infrastructure, and has been developed to reduce barriers to drug discovery for industry, academia, and small businesses.
Learn more about the progress we’ve made, and what’s coming next.
1. General overview of the Big Data Europe project and Societal Challenges it addresses (Ronald Siebes, VU Amsterdam)
2. The Big Data Europe infrastructure, generic components that are being developed, and their flexibility for different applications (Hajira Jabeen, University of Bonn)
3. Latest details of the current state of the Open PHACTS architecture in BDE, and ongoing work (Nick Lynch, CTO, Open PHACTS Foundation)
The BlueBRIDGE approach to collaborative researchBlue BRIDGE
Gianpaolo Coro, ISTI-CNR, at BlueBRIDGE workshop on "Data Management services to support stock assessement", held during the Annual ICES Science conference 2016
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.
1) OpenAIRE provides services and infrastructure to support open access, open data, and open science across Europe through national open access desks, technical services, and training programs.
2) It aims to implement and align open science policies, deploy services to integrate open science in research workflows, and monitor open science in Europe.
3) OpenAIRE's platform aggregates over 24 million publications, 600,000 research objects, and links this information to organizations, projects, grants, and people to create a European research information system.
OpenAIRE presentation for ICT - Brussels 27-29 Sept, 2010OpenAIRE
This document provides an overview of the OpenAIRE project, which links open access repositories with European FP7 project information. It describes OpenAIRE's four-step deposition process for uploading and metadata, capabilities for searching and browsing publications as well as measuring the impact of FP7 projects. OpenAIRE is supported by 38 partners across Europe and provides access to research data and publications in various domains through its open source software.
The value of EOSC from a user perspective: Key themes and actions from Day 1EOSCpilot .eu
This presentation was held at the 1st EOSC Stakeholder Forum 28-29/11/2017 in Brussels.
For more information on the 1st EOSC Stakeholder Forum visit: https://eoscpilot.eu/eosc-stakeholder-forum-shaping-future-eosc
Follow EOSCpilot on Twitter: https://twitter.com/eoscpilot
and LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/eoscpiloteu
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
Introduction to EOSCpilot project and topical activities in the area of EOSCEOSCpilot .eu
This presentation was given by Juan Bicarregui, STFC and EOSCpilot project coordinator, during 2nd EOSCpilot Governance Development Forum workshop, 3 October 2017, Tallin.
https://eoscpilot.eu/events/2nd-egdf-eoscpilot-governance-development-forum
Follow EOSCpilot on Twitter: https://twitter.com/eoscpilot
and LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/eoscpiloteu
16,40 16,55 h. open aire eblida-naple conferenceFESABID
The document discusses the EU's open access policies and the OpenAIRE project.
The EU requires publications and data from publicly funded research to be made openly accessible. The OpenAIRE project aims to deliver an infrastructure to identify, deposit and provide access to publications from EU-funded projects. It links publications to research projects and provides a repository for "homeless" publications not housed elsewhere.
Open Research Gateway for the ELIXIR-GR Infrastructure (Part 2)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE is a European infrastructure that helps stakeholders comply with open access policies by providing tools and services. It operates repositories, dashboards, and tools to help share and reuse research outputs in accordance with FAIR principles. OpenAIRE also coordinates activities through national open access desks and outreach to promote open science practices. Researchers can use OpenAIRE to publish open access works, deposit data, write data management plans, and link research outputs.
The Open Science Agenda in Europe: Policy convergence & diversity of approachesLIBER Europe
The document discusses the development of open science policy in Europe. It outlines how there has been convergence around key issues like the Open Science Cloud and copyright reform to support open access and text and data mining. However, there remains some divergence in approaches to open access policies across different European countries. The document also highlights some of the advocacy positions of LIBER, a pan-European research library organization, regarding issues like ensuring the Open Science Cloud remains open and community-driven.
OpenAIRE Advance - Advancing Open Scholarship EUDAT
1. OpenAIRE Advance will focus on advancing open scholarship beyond just open access publications to include open research data, software, and educational resources.
2. Key networking activities will include empowering National Open Access Desks, training activities, and supporting specific communities through thematic domains like research infrastructures.
3. Technical activities will focus on consolidating and enhancing OpenAIRE's e-infrastructure services to support all stakeholders in the research ecosystem.
OpenAIRE Advance presentation at the #EUDATPORTO conference 2018OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE Advance is continuing the work of OpenAIRE to advance open scholarship through both networking and technical activities. The networking priorities are to place open science on funders' and organizations' agendas and provide standards and services for implementation. Key activities include empowering national open access desks and global synergies. Technically, OpenAIRE Advance will enhance existing services like the OpenAIRE portal and develop new products like the Research Community Dashboard to integrate services across infrastructures and support open science.
National ePosters (OpenAIRE South Region) - OpenAIRE Conference 2012Pedro Príncipe
The document provides information on open access activities, policies, and research data in several countries in the south region presented at the OpenAIRE Conference 2012. For each country, it summarizes successful open access activities such as institutional repositories, events organized, and participation in international projects. It also outlines any open access policies at the national or institutional level and discusses research data initiatives. The countries covered are Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Malta, Portugal, Spain, and Turkey.
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 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 document discusses open science and open innovation. It describes how open access to scientific data, publications, code, and workflows through online platforms is enabling new forms of collaborative scientific inquiry across traditional boundaries. Global collaboratories can now engage in research at unprecedented scales using open data. The benefits of open science include accelerating scientific discovery, empowering citizens and entrepreneurs to make new innovations based on open data and code, and transforming the nature of scientific research.
OpenAIRE support and training activities (flash talk at the #DI4R2017 - sessi...OpenAIRE
Presentation at the Digital Infrastructures for Research Conference #DI4R at the session on "Cross e-infrastructure of training/technical support". 30 Nov. 2017. By Iryna Kuchma and Pedro Principe.
The document summarizes the OpenAIRE project, which supports open access policies of the European Commission. It discusses the FP7 open access pilot program that requires depositing publications in online repositories. It describes OpenAIRE's goals of building an open access infrastructure across Europe and providing support to researchers, institutions, and repositories. OpenAIRE will harvest publications from repositories, provide search and visualization tools, and monitor access and usage statistics to help researchers comply with open access policies.
OpenAIRE at the Open Access day, Vienna, March 2011OpenAIRE
The document discusses OpenAIRE, an initiative to support open access for projects funded by the European Union's FP7 and ERC programs. OpenAIRE aims to build an electronic infrastructure for identifying, depositing, accessing, and monitoring open access publications from EU-funded research. It will provide support structures to help researchers comply with open access policies and will explore scientific data management services. OpenAIRE is a three-year project with 38 partners across Europe that began in December 2009 with a budget of 4.1 million Euros.
10th OpenAIRE Content Providers Community CallOpenAIRE
The document discusses OpenAIRE's Usage Counts service, which tracks usage and collects COUNTER reports to provide analytics on the usage of research outputs. It introduces the new architecture and workflows that power the service, and shows examples of usage counts data in action for content providers and individual research items. Finally, it outlines the future plans for the service, including counting more research products, moving to the latest COUNTER standards, offering additional analytics, and building a Usage Counts Hub.
OpenAIRE Content Providers Community Call, November 4th, 2020
This call was focused on the PROVIDE future developments, functionalities wishlist and PROVIDE service in EOSC.
Was also an opportunity to share the most recent updates and novelties in the OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard, and to get feedback from community.
Recordings: https://youtu.be/wY4fOS767Us
Follow the Community activities at https://www.openaire.eu/provide-community-calls
OpenAIRE in the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC)OpenAIRE
Openness is the success factor for EOSC. OpenAIRE has been working in delivering an open access scholarly communication in Europe for the past 10 years and we now present how our work fits into the EOSC core developments
OpenAIRE Content Providers Community Call, October 7th, 2020
This call was focused on the OpenAIRE Broker Service, specifying how the service works to deploy the enrichment events to the Content Providers managers.
Was also an opportunity to share the most recent updates and novelties in the OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard, and to get feedback from community.
Recording: https://youtu.be/3sF4B58EGcs
Follow the Community activities at https://www.openaire.eu/provide-community-calls
OpenAIRE Content Providers Community Call, July 1st, 2020
This call was focused on Data Repositories namely the OpenAIRE Research Graph and Data Repositories, the OpenAIRE Content Acquisition Policy, and the Guidelines for Data Archive Managers.
Was also an opportunity to share the most recent updates and novelties in the OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard, and to get feedback from community.
Follow the Community activities at https://www.openaire.eu/provide-community-calls
Open Research Gateway for the ELIXIR-GR Infrastructure (Part 3)OpenAIRE
This document provides an overview of the Open Research Gateway for the ELIXIR-GR infrastructure. It discusses how the gateway acts as a single entry point to all research products from ELIXIR-GR, including publications, datasets, software, and more. Researchers can deposit and link their work through the gateway to practice open science. Statistics, reporting, and APIs are also available to monitor impact and advance open research. The team behind the gateway is working to improve customization and user guidance to better support the ELIXIR-GR community.
Open Research Gateway for the ELIXIR-GR Infrastructure (Part 1)OpenAIRE
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization focused on data sharing across disciplines. It has over 8,600 members from 137 countries working to reduce barriers to data sharing through developing infrastructure and community activities. RDA has numerous active interest groups and working groups focused on issues like specific scientific domains, data reference and sharing, community needs, data stewardship, and basic infrastructure. One recent focus is guidelines for data sharing during the COVID-19 pandemic.
1) A new version of the OpenAIRE Provide dashboard demo is available.
2) Several speakers shared use cases of the OpenAIRE Provide service, including from OpenstarTs, Serbian repositories, the University of Minho, and the Universidade Católica Portuguesa.
3) The agenda concluded with an invitation for comments and questions.
20200504_OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar: GDPR and Sharing DataOpenAIRE
Presentation by Jacques Flores Dourojeanni (Research Data Management Consultant Utrecht University Library), as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on May 4th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200504_Research Data & the GDPR: How Open is Open?OpenAIRE
Presentation by Prodromos Tsiavos (Senior Legal Advisor - ARC/ Director - Onassis Group) as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on May 4th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200504_Data, Data Ownership and Open ScienceOpenAIRE
Presentation by Thomas Margoni (Senior Lecturer in Intellectual Property and Internet Law, Co-director, CREATe, University of Glasgow) as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on May 4th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200429_Research Data & the GDPR: How Open is Open? (updated version)OpenAIRE
This document discusses how the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) applies to scientific research. It defines key GDPR concepts, explains how scientific research is defined under the regulation, and discusses the legal bases and purposes that can justify data processing for research. It also addresses how data subject rights may be limited for research purposes, and analyzes several cases involving issues like data sharing, further processing of data, and handling of health and publicly available data in the context of research.
20200429_Data, Data Ownership and Open ScienceOpenAIRE
Presentation by Thomas Margoni (Senior Lecturer in Intellectual Property and Internet Law, Co-director, CREATe, University of Glasgow) as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on April 29th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200429_OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar: GDPR and Sharing DataOpenAIRE
Presentation by Jacques Flores Dourojeanni (Research Data Management Consultant Utrecht University Library), as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on April 29th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
COVID-19: Activities, tools, best practice and contact points in GreeceOpenAIRE
Presentation from the webinar organized by the Greek OpenAIRE and RDA Nodes (Athena RC) and Elixir-GR to inform participants of EU and national efforts, in collaboration with the following research organizations: Flemming, CERTH, HEAL-Link, Demokritos, Univ. of Athens (Medical School).
Presentation of the 2nd Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics: 1) OpenAIRE Content provider dashboard updates; Main topic: DSpace-CRIS for OpenAIRE: implementation of the CRIS guidelines and beyond; 3) Community questions & comments.
Presentation of the 2nd Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics: 1) OpenAIRE Content provider dashboard updates;
2) OpenAIRE aggregation and enrichment processes: specifications and good practices;
3) Community questions & comments.
Presentation of the 2nd Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics: 1) OpenAIRE infrastructure updates;
2) Main topic: OpenAIRE Broker Service;
3) Community questions & comments.
Understanding User Behavior with Google Analytics.pdfSEO Article Boost
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Meet up Milano 14 _ Axpo Italia_ Migration from Mule3 (On-prem) to.pdfFlorence Consulting
Quattordicesimo Meetup di Milano, tenutosi a Milano il 23 Maggio 2024 dalle ore 17:00 alle ore 18:30 in presenza e da remoto.
Abbiamo parlato di come Axpo Italia S.p.A. ha ridotto il technical debt migrando le proprie APIs da Mule 3.9 a Mule 4.4 passando anche da on-premises a CloudHub 1.0.
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1. @openaire_euOpenAIRE @ EOSC Summit | Brussels | 11 June 2018
Open Access Infrastructure for Research in Europe
Building a scholarly commons
2. Implement
and align
Open Science
policies
across
Europe and
the world
OpenAIRE in a nutshell
Deploy
services to
embed Open
Science into
researcher
workflows
Train for
Open
Science, for
FAIR Science
Develop
global open
standards for
linking all
research
Open
research to
foster
innovation
and engage
society
1 2 3 4 5
3. Univ. of Gottingen
Univ. of Minho
Univ. of Gent
Unit
eIFL
DANS
DCC
Univ. of Glasgow / Licenses
Athena RC / GDPR
CNR-ISTI
AthenaRC
ICM
CERN
Univ.ofBielefeld
Univ.ofBonn
34 National Open
Access Desks
Organizations experts in OA
e-Infrastructure / e-Science
Service Providers
Legal Experts
Our consortium
OpenAIRE @ EOSC Summit | Brussels | 11 June 2018
Athena RC
Open InnovationCitizen Science
Data Communities
EPOS-IT
Elixir-GR
DARIAH-DE
+ 5 more targeted research
communities
EllinoGermaniki
Regional NOAD Offices
4. OpenAIRE: A pillar in EOSC
OpenAIRE @ EOSC Summit | Brussels | 11 June 2018
Embed OSat national level
17NOADsleadand14participate in
nationalOStaskforces
National OS coordination
Support-Training-Consulting
2016–today
36workshopsin20countrieswith
3,400participants
81webinarsfor4,500trainees
OS Helpdesk
Make already running, funded
localized services the cornerstones
of EOSC architecture
1,150contentproviders
viatheOpenAIREguidelines
Interoperability
Zenodo - auniversalrepository
Amnesia -dataanonymization
DMP Service - integrallinkingtoEU&
nationalinfrastructures
RDM
ScholExplorer
31militerature-datalinks
500mirequests
Research Community Dashboard
Connectingservices&research
outcomesforcommunities
Connectivity
Citizen Science: OSJournalfor
Schools+seismologicaldatafrom
schoolstoinfras
Open Innovation: Innovativeservices
onopendata
Social engagement
Governance ArchitectureRulesData
Services Data Access & InterfacesServicesData Rules Access & InterfacesData