The document discusses how the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) can facilitate open science. It outlines three key pillars for EOSC: (1) services for sharing and evaluating research, (2) support and training for open science practices, and (3) aligning policies, standards, and workflows. OpenAIRE is presented as providing important services like its open research graph and supporting the transition to open science through outreach programs. EOSC could leverage these services and help make small research data more accessible and linked as big data.
Presentation in Canberra: Preparing for your data future seminar
Fri 22 July 2016
Panel session: Charting the Future
Ms Heather Jenks, Associate Director, Library Services, ANU
Stronger together: community initiatives in journal managementJisc
There has been a recent growth of initiatives to address common problems regarding current and long-term access to e-journal content. Jisc is at the forefront of many of these with the close participation and active input of educational institutions.
This session aims to summarise the current state of key themes with pointers to future directions of areas such as sustainability, the move towards e-only environments, and shared consortia approaches. It will provide an overview and panel discussion on developing the supporting infrastructure to meet the needs of users. The discussion will focus on how institutions, community bodies and service providers can best work together to ensure sustainable, long-term initiatives by seeking to introduce uniformity, standardisation and collaboration to an even greater extent.
The session will introduce two new Jisc-supported projects in this area, the Keepers Registry Extra and SafeNet initiatives, and discuss how these fit alongside existing Jisc services such as Knowledge Base+, UK LOCKSS Alliance, Journal Archives and JUSP (Journal Usage Statistics Portal). The panel will address how this catalogue of services contributes towards a coherent strategy in the management of e-journal content.
Big Data is today: key issues for big data - Dr Ben EvansARDC
Presentation in Canberra: Preparing for your data future seminar
Fri 22 July 2016
Big Data is today: key issues for big data
Dr Ben Evans
NCI - Associate Director
Research Engagements and Initiatives
Addy Pope demonstrates how a suite of EDINA and Edinburgh University Data Library tools and apps can make curating your spatial data a breeze. Presented at the Open Repositories 2014, June 9-13, Helsinki, Finland http://or2014.helsinki.fi
Presentation in Canberra: Preparing for your data future seminar
Fri 22 July 2016
Panel session: Charting the Future
Ms Heather Jenks, Associate Director, Library Services, ANU
Stronger together: community initiatives in journal managementJisc
There has been a recent growth of initiatives to address common problems regarding current and long-term access to e-journal content. Jisc is at the forefront of many of these with the close participation and active input of educational institutions.
This session aims to summarise the current state of key themes with pointers to future directions of areas such as sustainability, the move towards e-only environments, and shared consortia approaches. It will provide an overview and panel discussion on developing the supporting infrastructure to meet the needs of users. The discussion will focus on how institutions, community bodies and service providers can best work together to ensure sustainable, long-term initiatives by seeking to introduce uniformity, standardisation and collaboration to an even greater extent.
The session will introduce two new Jisc-supported projects in this area, the Keepers Registry Extra and SafeNet initiatives, and discuss how these fit alongside existing Jisc services such as Knowledge Base+, UK LOCKSS Alliance, Journal Archives and JUSP (Journal Usage Statistics Portal). The panel will address how this catalogue of services contributes towards a coherent strategy in the management of e-journal content.
Big Data is today: key issues for big data - Dr Ben EvansARDC
Presentation in Canberra: Preparing for your data future seminar
Fri 22 July 2016
Big Data is today: key issues for big data
Dr Ben Evans
NCI - Associate Director
Research Engagements and Initiatives
Addy Pope demonstrates how a suite of EDINA and Edinburgh University Data Library tools and apps can make curating your spatial data a breeze. Presented at the Open Repositories 2014, June 9-13, Helsinki, Finland http://or2014.helsinki.fi
An overview of using the Jisc multimedia service at EDINA. Presented at two e-Resources breakout sessions being held at the West College Scotland Information Technology Symposium, at Erskine Bridge Hotel, on Wednesday 12th August 2015.
Stuart Macdonald talks about the Research Data Management programme at the University of Edinburgh Data Library, delivered at the ADP Workshop for Librarians: Open Research Data in Social Sciences and Humanities (ADP), Ljubljana, Slovenia, 18 June 2014
Presentation given by Anne Robertson as part of "Connect more with Jisc in Scotland" one-day interactive event held at Edinburgh Napier University on 4 June 2015
Making sure your content is licenced and discoverable
A presentation from the JISC Programme Meeting for its Content Programme for 2011 http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/digitisation/econtent11.aspx
Open Science Commons: a holistic and ecological view of science OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE presentation at IFLA 2019 annual conference.
Open science comes on the heels of the fourth paradigm of science, which is based on data-intensive scientific discovery, and represents a new paradigm shift, affecting the entire research lifecycle and all aspects of science execution, collaboration, communication, innovation. From supporting and using (big) data infrastructures for data archiving and analysis, to continuously sharing with peers all types of research results at any stage of the research endeavor and to communicating them to the broad public or commercial audiences, openness moves science away from being a concern exclusively of researchers and research performing organisations and brings it to center stage of our connected society, requiring the engagement of a much wider range of stakeholders: digital and research infrastructures, policy decision makers, funders, industry, and the public itself.
This presentation focuses on two Europe’s flagship initiatives for Open Science, the European Open Science Cloud and Open AIRE (www.openaire.eu), and discusses the role of the libraries in the wider data ecosystem as that of (i) an enabler for openness, FAIRness, participation, transparency and social impact, active in the preservation, curation, publication and dissemination of digital scientific materials, and (ii) a multiplier for training and supporting scientists and non-scientists alike (citizen science, open innovation) for a harmonic co-existence in this emerging environment.
An overview of using the Jisc multimedia service at EDINA. Presented at two e-Resources breakout sessions being held at the West College Scotland Information Technology Symposium, at Erskine Bridge Hotel, on Wednesday 12th August 2015.
Stuart Macdonald talks about the Research Data Management programme at the University of Edinburgh Data Library, delivered at the ADP Workshop for Librarians: Open Research Data in Social Sciences and Humanities (ADP), Ljubljana, Slovenia, 18 June 2014
Presentation given by Anne Robertson as part of "Connect more with Jisc in Scotland" one-day interactive event held at Edinburgh Napier University on 4 June 2015
Making sure your content is licenced and discoverable
A presentation from the JISC Programme Meeting for its Content Programme for 2011 http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/digitisation/econtent11.aspx
Open Science Commons: a holistic and ecological view of science OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE presentation at IFLA 2019 annual conference.
Open science comes on the heels of the fourth paradigm of science, which is based on data-intensive scientific discovery, and represents a new paradigm shift, affecting the entire research lifecycle and all aspects of science execution, collaboration, communication, innovation. From supporting and using (big) data infrastructures for data archiving and analysis, to continuously sharing with peers all types of research results at any stage of the research endeavor and to communicating them to the broad public or commercial audiences, openness moves science away from being a concern exclusively of researchers and research performing organisations and brings it to center stage of our connected society, requiring the engagement of a much wider range of stakeholders: digital and research infrastructures, policy decision makers, funders, industry, and the public itself.
This presentation focuses on two Europe’s flagship initiatives for Open Science, the European Open Science Cloud and Open AIRE (www.openaire.eu), and discusses the role of the libraries in the wider data ecosystem as that of (i) an enabler for openness, FAIRness, participation, transparency and social impact, active in the preservation, curation, publication and dissemination of digital scientific materials, and (ii) a multiplier for training and supporting scientists and non-scientists alike (citizen science, open innovation) for a harmonic co-existence in this emerging environment.
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
Ross Wilkinson - Data Publication: Australian and Global Policy DevelopmentsWiley
Australia invests $AUD1-2B per annum in research data. Like most countries, it wants to get the best return possible on this data. Europe is spending E1.4B on their open data “pilot”. This means the data should be FAIR: findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. Part of this is that data should be routinely “published” and available in a “data repository”. But what does this mean?
Ross Wilkinson
CEO, Australian National Data Service
Presented at the 2015 Wiley Publishing Seminar, 5 November, Melbourne, Australia.
EGI and EUDAT support to the PaNOSC projectEGI Federation
Data transfer & archivingm, and Jupyter on the EGI Federated Cloud at the core of EGI and EUDAT support to Photon and Neutron science in the PaNOSC project
Slides presented at the Spanish Agency of Science and Technology (FECYT) and the network of Spanish repositories (RECOLECTA) Research Data Management Webinar Series - see url:
http://www.recolecta.net/buscador/webminars.jsp
DSpace-CRIS_An open source solution for Research_EDU15Michele Mennielli
The research area is a complex world to manage. It involves collecting data, supporting researchers and administrators, monitoring results, allocating resources efficiently, enhancing visibility, and strengthening national and international collaborations. RIMs manage these activities, but they might be too expensive. This is why Cineca developed DSpace-CRIS, and released it in open source.
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 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
OpenAIRE Content Providers Community Call. May 6th, 2020.
This Call focused the presentation of the new User Interface of Provide Dashboard and the presentation of 4 use cases using the Provide service.
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 available here: https://youtu.be/J4m_ryRxtnY
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
Presentation by Prodromos Tsiavos (Senior Legal Advisor - ARC/ Director - Onassis Group) 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_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.
Phenomics assisted breeding in crop improvementIshaGoswami9
As the population is increasing and will reach about 9 billion upto 2050. Also due to climate change, it is difficult to meet the food requirement of such a large population. Facing the challenges presented by resource shortages, climate
change, and increasing global population, crop yield and quality need to be improved in a sustainable way over the coming decades. Genetic improvement by breeding is the best way to increase crop productivity. With the rapid progression of functional
genomics, an increasing number of crop genomes have been sequenced and dozens of genes influencing key agronomic traits have been identified. However, current genome sequence information has not been adequately exploited for understanding
the complex characteristics of multiple gene, owing to a lack of crop phenotypic data. Efficient, automatic, and accurate technologies and platforms that can capture phenotypic data that can
be linked to genomics information for crop improvement at all growth stages have become as important as genotyping. Thus,
high-throughput phenotyping has become the major bottleneck restricting crop breeding. Plant phenomics has been defined as the high-throughput, accurate acquisition and analysis of multi-dimensional phenotypes
during crop growing stages at the organism level, including the cell, tissue, organ, individual plant, plot, and field levels. With the rapid development of novel sensors, imaging technology,
and analysis methods, numerous infrastructure platforms have been developed for phenotyping.
Comparing Evolved Extractive Text Summary Scores of Bidirectional Encoder Rep...University of Maribor
Slides from:
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Track: Artificial Intelligence
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
This presentation explores a brief idea about the structural and functional attributes of nucleotides, the structure and function of genetic materials along with the impact of UV rays and pH upon them.
DERIVATION OF MODIFIED BERNOULLI EQUATION WITH VISCOUS EFFECTS AND TERMINAL V...Wasswaderrick3
In this book, we use conservation of energy techniques on a fluid element to derive the Modified Bernoulli equation of flow with viscous or friction effects. We derive the general equation of flow/ velocity and then from this we derive the Pouiselle flow equation, the transition flow equation and the turbulent flow equation. In the situations where there are no viscous effects , the equation reduces to the Bernoulli equation. From experimental results, we are able to include other terms in the Bernoulli equation. We also look at cases where pressure gradients exist. We use the Modified Bernoulli equation to derive equations of flow rate for pipes of different cross sectional areas connected together. We also extend our techniques of energy conservation to a sphere falling in a viscous medium under the effect of gravity. We demonstrate Stokes equation of terminal velocity and turbulent flow equation. We look at a way of calculating the time taken for a body to fall in a viscous medium. We also look at the general equation of terminal velocity.
Toxic effects of heavy metals : Lead and Arsenicsanjana502982
Heavy metals are naturally occuring metallic chemical elements that have relatively high density, and are toxic at even low concentrations. All toxic metals are termed as heavy metals irrespective of their atomic mass and density, eg. arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, thallium, chromium, etc.
Professional air quality monitoring systems provide immediate, on-site data for analysis, compliance, and decision-making.
Monitor common gases, weather parameters, particulates.
The ability to recreate computational results with minimal effort and actionable metrics provides a solid foundation for scientific research and software development. When people can replicate an analysis at the touch of a button using open-source software, open data, and methods to assess and compare proposals, it significantly eases verification of results, engagement with a diverse range of contributors, and progress. However, we have yet to fully achieve this; there are still many sociotechnical frictions.
Inspired by David Donoho's vision, this talk aims to revisit the three crucial pillars of frictionless reproducibility (data sharing, code sharing, and competitive challenges) with the perspective of deep software variability.
Our observation is that multiple layers — hardware, operating systems, third-party libraries, software versions, input data, compile-time options, and parameters — are subject to variability that exacerbates frictions but is also essential for achieving robust, generalizable results and fostering innovation. I will first review the literature, providing evidence of how the complex variability interactions across these layers affect qualitative and quantitative software properties, thereby complicating the reproduction and replication of scientific studies in various fields.
I will then present some software engineering and AI techniques that can support the strategic exploration of variability spaces. These include the use of abstractions and models (e.g., feature models), sampling strategies (e.g., uniform, random), cost-effective measurements (e.g., incremental build of software configurations), and dimensionality reduction methods (e.g., transfer learning, feature selection, software debloating).
I will finally argue that deep variability is both the problem and solution of frictionless reproducibility, calling the software science community to develop new methods and tools to manage variability and foster reproducibility in software systems.
Exposé invité Journées Nationales du GDR GPL 2024
Deep Software Variability and Frictionless Reproducibility
OpenAIRE - Bridging the worlds where science is performed and science is published
1. @openaire_eu
Implementing Open Science in EOSC
Putting the puzzle together
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
Natalia Manola
OpenAIRE Managing Director
Athena Research & Innovation Center
Paolo Manghi
OpenAIRE Technical Director
CNR-ISTI
2. Open Access to publications
Open / FAIR data
Open Software
Linked Open Science (Provenance)
Open methodology (Open peer review)
Access to resources for analytics
Access by non-academics
Open Science
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
… practice science in such a
way that others can collaborate
and contribute, where research
data, lab notes and other
research processes are freely
available, under terms that
enable reuse, redistribution and
reproduction of the research and
its underlying data and methods.
3. open and reproducible science
scientific/scholarly communication
data infrastructure
social + technical links
service + data interoperability
AkeypillarofEOSC
4. Bridging the worlds
where science is
performed and
science is
published
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
5. Scholarly communication
services
(sharing, evaluating,
monitoring science)
Research infrastructure
services, i.e. digital labs
(performing science)
E-infrastructure
(enabling digital services for science)
EOSC as a facilitator of Open Science
?
? ?
?
Services
Actors
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
6. Scholarly communication
services
(sharing, evaluating,
monitoring science)
Research infrastructure
services. i.e. digital labs
(performing science)
E-infrastructure
(enabling digital services for science)
EOSC as a facilitator of Open Science
Architecture
Functionality
Participation rules
Practices
Quality
Interoperability
Economy of scale Sustainability
Scholarly communication
services
(sharing, evaluating,
monitoring science)
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
7. EOSC, Open Science and data
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
8. Small data, Big data
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
Small Data Big Data
Data Source Accessible, informative,
actionable
No traditional data processing
Volume < 1 TB Terra and Exascale
Velocity Controlled and steady data
flow
Very fast Speed
Fast accumulation
Variety Structured data High Variety Data Sets
Veracity Less noise as controlled
collection
Rigorous data validation required
before processing
Value Business intelligence,
analysis, reporting
Data Mining for prediction, pattern
finding, etc.
Time Variance Historical data equal valued In some cases data gets old
Data Location Databases, local servers Distributed storages on Cloud
Infrastructure Predictable resource
allocation
Agile Infra, with horizontally
scalable architecture
Differences in: Collection,
Processing, Scalability,
Modeling, Storage &
Computation Coupling, Data
Science, Data Security
…small data will increasingly be made more big
data-like through the development of new data
infrastructures that pool, scale and link small
data in order to create larger datasets,
encourage sharing and reuse, and open them up
to combination with big data and analysis using
big data analytics
Small data combined needs
big data infrastructure
9. EOSC deconstructed
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
Network
Storage
Compute
Data Management
Analytics
ACCESS
LAYER FAIR data
Registries
Identifiers
Papers
Funding
Services
People
Facilities
Monitoring
KPIs
Citations
Usage Stats
Actors
Publishing- Sharing
Interoperability Layer
AAI
Service
Managem
ent
Data
Access
Research in Context
Research Assessment
in the heart of Open
Science
12. Research
data
Research
Software
e-infra Tools &
Services
Research
data
Research process
Research literature:
Articles, docs, white papers
01101010
01100001
11010010
01101010
01100001
11010010
Scholarly Communication
InfrastructureResearch Infrastructures
Publishing all
kinds of
products
Enabling
Reproducibility
(R*)
Fully-fledged
assessment of
science
Fully-fledged
scientific reward
Enabling
Monitoring
Bridging RIs and
OS publishing
practices
Scholarly Communication transition to Open Science
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
13. Open Science and Scholarly Communication
Research
data
Research
Software
e-infra Tools &
Services
Research
data
Research process
Research literature:
Articles, docs, white papers
01101010
01100001
11010010
01101010
01100001
11010010
Scholarly Communication
Infrastructure
Literature
Repository
01101010
01100001
11010010
Data
Repository
Software
Repository
01101010
01100001
11010010
01101010
01100001
11010010
“Experiment”
Repository
citation
partOf
partOf
Provenance: e.g. created by
Research Infrastructures
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
15. Materializing the Open Research Graph
Project community
FunderFunding
Product
Publication
Research
Data
Software
Organization
Source
Other res.
products
MiningHarvestingDeduplication
• Harvested data sources
10K +
• Harvested records
450Mi +
• Publication full-texts
10.5Mi+
• Harvested/mined links
340Mi +
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
People
Services
Facilities
…
Including
Citations
Usage Stats
16. Providing an open metadata
research graph of interlinked
scientific products, with Open
Access information, linked to
funding information and research
communities
The OpenAIRE research graph
Open
Complete
De-duplicated
Transparent
Participatory
Decentralized
Trusted
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
17. Added value services
Discovery,monitoring,assessmentofresearch
Links to non-academicinfras
Strategic for Open Science
Making the research graph
an EOSC resource
Open,Trusted,Complete,De-duplicated,Participatory,Transparent,Decentralized
Actors
Institutions, research organizations, funders, content
providers, researchers, SMEs, etc.
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
18. Complete aggregation
coverage
Academic Graph
Project community
FunderFunding
Product
Publication
Research
Data
Software
Organization
Source
Other res.
products
… and more
… and more
… and more
… and more
… and more
… and more
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
19. Transition from OA content acquisition policies to OS
content acquisition policies
numbers from: explore.openaire.eu and beta.explore.openaire.eu
literature-research
data links
Open Access PDFs for
mining
120Mi
10Mi+0
10000000
20000000
30000000
40000000
50000000
60000000
70000000
80000000
90000000
100000000
old CAP new CAP
literature
0
500000
1000000
1500000
2000000
2500000
3000000
3500000
4000000
4500000
5000000
old CAP new CAP
research data
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
160000
old CAP new CAP
software
0
500000
1000000
1500000
2000000
2500000
3000000
3500000
4000000
4500000
5000000
old CAP new CAP
other
26Mi
94Mi
1M
8Mi
95K
192K
3.6Mi
7.5Mi
225Mi inferred links:
Article-project
Article-article
Article-software
Article-community
Ecc.Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
20. Services for all stakeholders
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
Funders, institutions, RIs, initiatives, 3rd parties
Content providers,
Research Infras
Researchers, scientists
Support
Accelerate
Monitor
21. 2. Support and training
Providing the human aspects
Making the local global
23. Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
34 countries
à Key national organizations
4 regional area coordinators
3 coordinators for
o Policies
o RDM
o Legal
National Open Access Desks (NOADs)
A pan-European network to address diversity in culture & maturity of national/local infras
National Strategy
24. Outreach Support Training Policy
NOADs: A key vehicle in policies and training
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
Ground work for OS and EOSC10 national workshops 1048 participants
170 conferences attended, presented in 96
9 funder mandates
4109 repositories, 1720 OA journals contacted
2018
25. HELPDESK
• Ask a question
• FAQs
RESOURCES
• OA guides
• Copyright issues
• Factsheets
TRAINING
• Webinars
• Workshops
Support and Training
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
Distributed and hierarchical training: train-the-trainers
NOADs ⇢ National / research infras, organizations ⇢ Researchers
45 webinars 2790 participants
55 f2f training events 1637 participants
8 train-the-trainer events 155 OS trainers
2018
26. • Rules: Open Science policies
• Practices: Openness and FAIRness RDM
• Technical: APIs (ResourseSync, schema.org),
OpenAIRE Guidelines for Content
Providers (metadata)
Cross infrastructure OS training
It’s all about synergies
Creating Platform-Driven E-Infrastructure Innovation On EOSC | July 10, 2019
Community of practice for training
the trainers