OpenAIRE guidelines for CRIS managers : supporting interoperability of open research information through established standards, by Nikos Houssos (CRIS2014)
- VESTA is a video annotation platform developed by CRIM to help researchers study the impacts of technologies on learning by allowing them to analyze and annotate audio and video recordings.
- It offers integrated computer tools for annotating multimedia content on a timeline in a shared environment. This allows researchers to accelerate and automate analysis while improving consistency.
- The modular platform provides services like speech recognition, face detection and can be used independently or through its interface. CRIM is looking for users and collaborators to apply this technology to research.
The document discusses the OpenAIRE project, which aims to implement the European Commission's Open Access Pilot across Europe. OpenAIRE supports the pilot by providing infrastructure for researchers, including an EU-wide repository system and information pages for each member state. It harvests publications from FP7-funded projects and makes them openly accessible through its portal. OpenAIRE also investigates relationships between publications and datasets, and works with other organizations like COAR to advance open access on an international level.
SSHOC at EOSC-hub Week - Managing Training Materials Beyond Individual Projec...SSHOC
Presentation from Vasso Kalaitzi and Ellen Leenarts on Managing Training Materials Beyond Individual Projects at the EOSC-hub Week, 10 May 2019.
EOSC for Social Sciences and Humanities panel
OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories - Webinar on the OpenAIRE GuidelinesPedro Príncipe
Webinar on the OpenAIRE Guidelines - OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories, by Pedro Príncipe and José Carvalho. 18 March 2014 (11:00 – 12:00 CET (DSpace repository platform))
Webinar on OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories: EPrints repository platform OpenAIRE
The document discusses how to make an EPrints repository compatible with the OpenAIRE guidelines, including adding project details to existing records using autocomplete fields, defining a new OAI set for OpenAIRE output, filtering results for the set, mapping metadata elements, and validating the output. It also covers different levels of OpenAIRE compatibility and using the OpenAIRE API to populate autocomplete fields with project information.
Enabling better science - Results and vision of the OpenAIRE infrastructure a...Paolo Manghi
The document discusses enabling better science through open access to research outputs. It describes the OpenAIRE infrastructure and the Research Data Alliance (RDA) Data Publishing Working Group. OpenAIRE provides services to link publications, research data, projects and initiatives. The RDA group aims to create an open service for linking datasets to publications. OpenAIRE and PANGAEA are developing a beta data-literature linking service to increase discovery and reuse of research outputs.
How Jisc supports reporting, communicating and measuring research in the UKJisc RDM
Jisc supports reporting, communicating, and measuring research in the UK through several initiatives:
1) Promoting the adoption of research data standards and identifiers like ORCID, OrgID, and DOIs to improve interoperability between systems.
2) Leading projects to increase compatibility between funders' and universities' research information management systems through OSIP and organizational identifier pilots.
3) Developing tools that help institutions monitor and report on open access compliance and discover openly accessible research outputs.
- VESTA is a video annotation platform developed by CRIM to help researchers study the impacts of technologies on learning by allowing them to analyze and annotate audio and video recordings.
- It offers integrated computer tools for annotating multimedia content on a timeline in a shared environment. This allows researchers to accelerate and automate analysis while improving consistency.
- The modular platform provides services like speech recognition, face detection and can be used independently or through its interface. CRIM is looking for users and collaborators to apply this technology to research.
The document discusses the OpenAIRE project, which aims to implement the European Commission's Open Access Pilot across Europe. OpenAIRE supports the pilot by providing infrastructure for researchers, including an EU-wide repository system and information pages for each member state. It harvests publications from FP7-funded projects and makes them openly accessible through its portal. OpenAIRE also investigates relationships between publications and datasets, and works with other organizations like COAR to advance open access on an international level.
SSHOC at EOSC-hub Week - Managing Training Materials Beyond Individual Projec...SSHOC
Presentation from Vasso Kalaitzi and Ellen Leenarts on Managing Training Materials Beyond Individual Projects at the EOSC-hub Week, 10 May 2019.
EOSC for Social Sciences and Humanities panel
OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories - Webinar on the OpenAIRE GuidelinesPedro Príncipe
Webinar on the OpenAIRE Guidelines - OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories, by Pedro Príncipe and José Carvalho. 18 March 2014 (11:00 – 12:00 CET (DSpace repository platform))
Webinar on OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories: EPrints repository platform OpenAIRE
The document discusses how to make an EPrints repository compatible with the OpenAIRE guidelines, including adding project details to existing records using autocomplete fields, defining a new OAI set for OpenAIRE output, filtering results for the set, mapping metadata elements, and validating the output. It also covers different levels of OpenAIRE compatibility and using the OpenAIRE API to populate autocomplete fields with project information.
Enabling better science - Results and vision of the OpenAIRE infrastructure a...Paolo Manghi
The document discusses enabling better science through open access to research outputs. It describes the OpenAIRE infrastructure and the Research Data Alliance (RDA) Data Publishing Working Group. OpenAIRE provides services to link publications, research data, projects and initiatives. The RDA group aims to create an open service for linking datasets to publications. OpenAIRE and PANGAEA are developing a beta data-literature linking service to increase discovery and reuse of research outputs.
How Jisc supports reporting, communicating and measuring research in the UKJisc RDM
Jisc supports reporting, communicating, and measuring research in the UK through several initiatives:
1) Promoting the adoption of research data standards and identifiers like ORCID, OrgID, and DOIs to improve interoperability between systems.
2) Leading projects to increase compatibility between funders' and universities' research information management systems through OSIP and organizational identifier pilots.
3) Developing tools that help institutions monitor and report on open access compliance and discover openly accessible research outputs.
OpenAIRE Presentation in the OpenAIRE Berlin Conference, Dec 2009, ParisOpenAIRE
OpenAIRE is a 36-month, FP7-funded project with 38 partners from 27 EU member states and Norway. It aims to establish an electronic infrastructure and support mechanisms to identify, deposit, access, and monitor FP7 and ERC funded articles. All deposited articles will be freely accessible worldwide through a new portal. OpenAIRE will establish a helpdesk system and liaison offices across Europe to support researchers in depositing publications. It will also operate an e-infrastructure populated with FP7-funded research using a repository to host publications with no natural repository association. OpenAIRE will provide monitoring, statistics, and a portal to access publications and services. It will also explore scientific data management with various subject communities.
Managing training materials beyond individual projectsEOSC-hub project
This document discusses managing training materials from EU-funded projects and organizations beyond individual projects. It notes that training materials are currently managed on project websites or solutions like MOOCs. Researchers want better discipline-specific and cross-discipline support, openly available reusable materials, and cataloguing with rich metadata. Projects want uptake of solutions, branding, and measurable impact. Issues include organizing materials across projects to avoid duplication, improving visibility, and long-term sustainability after projects end. Potential solutions discussed include the Elixir Training eSupport System and linking with communities of practice.
Apec workshop 2 presentation 7 2 apec workshop mexico 7 eu ccs demo networkGlobal CCS Institute
The European CCS Demonstration Project Network was established in 2009 by the European Commission to accelerate the deployment of large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects. The network shares technical and project management information between its current members, which are four of the most advanced CCS demonstration projects in Europe. It also aims to create a global information-sharing community for CCS projects. The network provides benefits such as access to project data, experts, and relationships to help members address challenges and promote CCS technologies.
CLARIN Supporting Horizon Europe proposalsMartin Wynne
Short presentation for UKRI event on making Horizon Europe proposals for the Arts, Heritage and Creative Industries sectors, focussing on how to include the CLARIN European Research Infrastructure Consortium in your proposal.
Estrategias basadas en la interoperabilidad para la incorporación de contenidos a repositorios: el Grupo SONEX y el Proyecto UK RepositoryNet+. (Part I) - Pablo de Castro, Peter Burnhill
This document describes the COMÈTE project, which developed an open educational resource (OER) manager called COMÈTE to facilitate reuse of OERs on the web of data. COMÈTE aggregates metadata from multiple sources using common vocabularies and allows semantic searches across languages and metadata formats. It was created as part of the BRER project to build a portal with over 25,000 OERs and provide interoperability between different metadata standards for finding and combining resources to create MOOCs. COMÈTE utilizes linked data approaches and can expose metadata via various formats to support discovery and reuse of OERs.
Webinar on OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories: proprietary platformsOpenAIRE
The webinar discusses how to make repositories compatible with the OpenAIRE guidelines, including an overview of the OpenAIRE project, guidelines for literature repositories, compatibility levels, and how proprietary platforms can implement changes to support OpenAIRE compliance through modifications to local data models and databases. Proprietary platforms need to export metadata via OAI-PMH, enrich publication workflows, and associate publications with licenses and funding projects to achieve different levels of OpenAIRE compatibility. The document provides examples of changes needed to local databases to integrate license and funding project information by adding new tables or attributes.
European Research at UGent: how to comply with open access mandateOpenAccessBelgium
How to comply with the open access mandate and the open research data pilot of European funded projects as a researcher of the University of Ghent, Belgium.
The document announces an EU Project Informatics Alignment Workshop on April 24-25 at Imperial College London. It will feature a presentation by Natalja Kurbatova from EMBL-EBI on eTOX, a 7-year project funded by IMI/EFPIA to develop expert systems for predicting toxicities through integrating bioinformatics and chemoinformatics. eTOX aims to build databases, develop ontologies and text mining, characterize compounds, validate QSAR models, and more. The workshop will discuss eTOX's collected data and specific needs for data integration projects.
OpenAIRE at the Open Access Tage 2010, GöttingenOpenAIRE
This document discusses the OpenAIRE project and its efforts to support open access policies of the European Commission. It describes the FP7 open access pilot program and ERC open access guidelines that require depositing publications in repositories. OpenAIRE provides infrastructure to harvest these publications and make them searchable and accessible. It establishes guidelines for repositories to be OpenAIRE compliant by extending existing DRIVER guidelines. National open access desks help researchers comply with open access policies and provide support through toolkits and outreach.
The document discusses OpenAIRE, an open access infrastructure for research in Europe. It provides an overview of OpenAIRE, highlighting its participatory approach involving both a human network and technical infrastructure. OpenAIRE implements the open access policies of the European Commission for FP7 and Horizon 2020 projects. It is moving from a publication infrastructure to a more comprehensive infrastructure that covers all types of scientific outputs, including datasets and projects. Open access is growing in southern European countries, with OpenAIRE supporting the discovery, sharing, and reuse of open access research results across Europe.
Fasti Online at the International Association of Classical Archaeology (AIAC)ariadnenetwork
FASTI Online is a database that has been online for 10 years, providing open access to excavation data from 14 countries. It contains records of over 5,100 excavation seasons and 3,300 archaeological sites. The database is built on open source technologies and allows users to search via maps, time periods, site types, and bibliographic references. In the future, the group hopes to expand the geographic and language coverage of site data, improve search functions, and increase connectivity to other datasets and resources.
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.
Making your Repository or Open Access Journal OpenAIRE compatible with OA Hor...OpenAIRE
Webinar: "Making your OA repository or OA journal OpenAIRE compatible with OA Horizon 2020 requirements" - Thursday 26 November 2015, 11:00am - 12:00pm.
The webinar is a part of FOSTER e-learning course “Making your OA repository or OA journal OpenAIRE compatible with OA Horizon 2020 requirements”.
Biblio-transformation-engine slides in Open Repositories 2012Nikos Houssos
Presentation at the Open Repositories 2012 conference about the open source Biblio-transformation-engine developed by the National Documentation Centre of Greece (EKT).
LEARN: Helping Institutions to Build and Implement a Policy on research DataLEARN Project
LEARN: Helping Institutions to Build and Implement a Policy on research Data, presentation by Ignasi Labastida, CRAI Universitat de Barcelona, at the OpenAIRE National Workshop, Rome, 30-31 May 2016
CRIS 2014 - OpenAIRE Guidelines: supporting interoperability for Literature R...Pedro Príncipe
OpenAIRE has developed guidelines to support interoperability across literature repositories, data archives, and CRIS systems.
The guidelines are based on existing standards like Dublin Core, DataCite, and CERIF-XML. They provide additional requirements for repositories and data archives to support authors in fulfilling European Commission open access mandates. The guidelines help heterogeneous research information systems interoperate by specifying metadata, vocabularies, and processes like validation and registration of data sources and regular harvesting. OpenAIRE has released multiple versions of the guidelines for literature repositories, data archives and CRIS systems to ensure compatibility and support for aggregators as the infrastructure has expanded in scope.
OpenAIRE guidelines : supporting interoperability for literature repositories...OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE has developed guidelines to support interoperability across literature repositories, data archives, and CRIS systems.
The guidelines are based on existing standards like Dublin Core, DataCite, and CERIF-XML. They provide additional requirements for repositories and data archives to support authors in fulfilling European Commission open access mandates. The guidelines help heterogeneous research information systems interoperate by specifying metadata, vocabularies, and processes like validation and harvesting. OpenAIRE intends the guidelines to create a more comprehensive research information infrastructure covering all types of scientific output.
OpenAIRE Presentation in the OpenAIRE Berlin Conference, Dec 2009, ParisOpenAIRE
OpenAIRE is a 36-month, FP7-funded project with 38 partners from 27 EU member states and Norway. It aims to establish an electronic infrastructure and support mechanisms to identify, deposit, access, and monitor FP7 and ERC funded articles. All deposited articles will be freely accessible worldwide through a new portal. OpenAIRE will establish a helpdesk system and liaison offices across Europe to support researchers in depositing publications. It will also operate an e-infrastructure populated with FP7-funded research using a repository to host publications with no natural repository association. OpenAIRE will provide monitoring, statistics, and a portal to access publications and services. It will also explore scientific data management with various subject communities.
Managing training materials beyond individual projectsEOSC-hub project
This document discusses managing training materials from EU-funded projects and organizations beyond individual projects. It notes that training materials are currently managed on project websites or solutions like MOOCs. Researchers want better discipline-specific and cross-discipline support, openly available reusable materials, and cataloguing with rich metadata. Projects want uptake of solutions, branding, and measurable impact. Issues include organizing materials across projects to avoid duplication, improving visibility, and long-term sustainability after projects end. Potential solutions discussed include the Elixir Training eSupport System and linking with communities of practice.
Apec workshop 2 presentation 7 2 apec workshop mexico 7 eu ccs demo networkGlobal CCS Institute
The European CCS Demonstration Project Network was established in 2009 by the European Commission to accelerate the deployment of large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects. The network shares technical and project management information between its current members, which are four of the most advanced CCS demonstration projects in Europe. It also aims to create a global information-sharing community for CCS projects. The network provides benefits such as access to project data, experts, and relationships to help members address challenges and promote CCS technologies.
CLARIN Supporting Horizon Europe proposalsMartin Wynne
Short presentation for UKRI event on making Horizon Europe proposals for the Arts, Heritage and Creative Industries sectors, focussing on how to include the CLARIN European Research Infrastructure Consortium in your proposal.
Estrategias basadas en la interoperabilidad para la incorporación de contenidos a repositorios: el Grupo SONEX y el Proyecto UK RepositoryNet+. (Part I) - Pablo de Castro, Peter Burnhill
This document describes the COMÈTE project, which developed an open educational resource (OER) manager called COMÈTE to facilitate reuse of OERs on the web of data. COMÈTE aggregates metadata from multiple sources using common vocabularies and allows semantic searches across languages and metadata formats. It was created as part of the BRER project to build a portal with over 25,000 OERs and provide interoperability between different metadata standards for finding and combining resources to create MOOCs. COMÈTE utilizes linked data approaches and can expose metadata via various formats to support discovery and reuse of OERs.
Webinar on OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories: proprietary platformsOpenAIRE
The webinar discusses how to make repositories compatible with the OpenAIRE guidelines, including an overview of the OpenAIRE project, guidelines for literature repositories, compatibility levels, and how proprietary platforms can implement changes to support OpenAIRE compliance through modifications to local data models and databases. Proprietary platforms need to export metadata via OAI-PMH, enrich publication workflows, and associate publications with licenses and funding projects to achieve different levels of OpenAIRE compatibility. The document provides examples of changes needed to local databases to integrate license and funding project information by adding new tables or attributes.
European Research at UGent: how to comply with open access mandateOpenAccessBelgium
How to comply with the open access mandate and the open research data pilot of European funded projects as a researcher of the University of Ghent, Belgium.
The document announces an EU Project Informatics Alignment Workshop on April 24-25 at Imperial College London. It will feature a presentation by Natalja Kurbatova from EMBL-EBI on eTOX, a 7-year project funded by IMI/EFPIA to develop expert systems for predicting toxicities through integrating bioinformatics and chemoinformatics. eTOX aims to build databases, develop ontologies and text mining, characterize compounds, validate QSAR models, and more. The workshop will discuss eTOX's collected data and specific needs for data integration projects.
OpenAIRE at the Open Access Tage 2010, GöttingenOpenAIRE
This document discusses the OpenAIRE project and its efforts to support open access policies of the European Commission. It describes the FP7 open access pilot program and ERC open access guidelines that require depositing publications in repositories. OpenAIRE provides infrastructure to harvest these publications and make them searchable and accessible. It establishes guidelines for repositories to be OpenAIRE compliant by extending existing DRIVER guidelines. National open access desks help researchers comply with open access policies and provide support through toolkits and outreach.
The document discusses OpenAIRE, an open access infrastructure for research in Europe. It provides an overview of OpenAIRE, highlighting its participatory approach involving both a human network and technical infrastructure. OpenAIRE implements the open access policies of the European Commission for FP7 and Horizon 2020 projects. It is moving from a publication infrastructure to a more comprehensive infrastructure that covers all types of scientific outputs, including datasets and projects. Open access is growing in southern European countries, with OpenAIRE supporting the discovery, sharing, and reuse of open access research results across Europe.
Fasti Online at the International Association of Classical Archaeology (AIAC)ariadnenetwork
FASTI Online is a database that has been online for 10 years, providing open access to excavation data from 14 countries. It contains records of over 5,100 excavation seasons and 3,300 archaeological sites. The database is built on open source technologies and allows users to search via maps, time periods, site types, and bibliographic references. In the future, the group hopes to expand the geographic and language coverage of site data, improve search functions, and increase connectivity to other datasets and resources.
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.
Making your Repository or Open Access Journal OpenAIRE compatible with OA Hor...OpenAIRE
Webinar: "Making your OA repository or OA journal OpenAIRE compatible with OA Horizon 2020 requirements" - Thursday 26 November 2015, 11:00am - 12:00pm.
The webinar is a part of FOSTER e-learning course “Making your OA repository or OA journal OpenAIRE compatible with OA Horizon 2020 requirements”.
Biblio-transformation-engine slides in Open Repositories 2012Nikos Houssos
Presentation at the Open Repositories 2012 conference about the open source Biblio-transformation-engine developed by the National Documentation Centre of Greece (EKT).
LEARN: Helping Institutions to Build and Implement a Policy on research DataLEARN Project
LEARN: Helping Institutions to Build and Implement a Policy on research Data, presentation by Ignasi Labastida, CRAI Universitat de Barcelona, at the OpenAIRE National Workshop, Rome, 30-31 May 2016
OpenAIRE compatibility for DSpace repositories - OR 2014 workshop
Similar to OpenAIRE guidelines for CRIS managers : supporting interoperability of open research information through established standards, by Nikos Houssos (CRIS2014)
CRIS 2014 - OpenAIRE Guidelines: supporting interoperability for Literature R...Pedro Príncipe
OpenAIRE has developed guidelines to support interoperability across literature repositories, data archives, and CRIS systems.
The guidelines are based on existing standards like Dublin Core, DataCite, and CERIF-XML. They provide additional requirements for repositories and data archives to support authors in fulfilling European Commission open access mandates. The guidelines help heterogeneous research information systems interoperate by specifying metadata, vocabularies, and processes like validation and registration of data sources and regular harvesting. OpenAIRE has released multiple versions of the guidelines for literature repositories, data archives and CRIS systems to ensure compatibility and support for aggregators as the infrastructure has expanded in scope.
OpenAIRE guidelines : supporting interoperability for literature repositories...OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE has developed guidelines to support interoperability across literature repositories, data archives, and CRIS systems.
The guidelines are based on existing standards like Dublin Core, DataCite, and CERIF-XML. They provide additional requirements for repositories and data archives to support authors in fulfilling European Commission open access mandates. The guidelines help heterogeneous research information systems interoperate by specifying metadata, vocabularies, and processes like validation and harvesting. OpenAIRE intends the guidelines to create a more comprehensive research information infrastructure covering all types of scientific output.
OpenAIRE provides guidelines for data sources to promote interoperability and support open access mandates. The guidelines have expanded over time to include additional types of data sources and non-textual content. Guidelines are provided for literature repositories, data repositories, and CRIS systems. The guidelines define metadata formats, elements, and encoding schemes to ensure semantic and syntactic interoperability across different types of data sources. Adoption of the guidelines by other networks like LA Referencia and RIOXX helps ensure future compatibility and support of open access policies.
Webinar on OpenAIRE compatibility for repositories: DSpace repository platformOpenAIRE
The document discusses a webinar about making repositories compatible with OpenAIRE guidelines. It provides an agenda that includes an overview of the OpenAIRE project and guidelines, presentations on the literature repository guidelines and compatibility levels, and how to make a DSpace repository compatible. It notes that OpenAIRE has expanded to cover all types of scientific output and developed integrated guidelines to support this goal and the EC's open access requirements.
Enhancing Interoperability: The Implementation of OpenAIRE Guidelines and COA...4Science
ABSTRACT: The continuous work of the OpenAIRE community on guidelines for CRIS managers, literature repositories, and data archives, together with the publication of the “Behaviours and Technical Recommendations of the COAR Next Generation Repositories Working Group”, are raising important challenges for the CRIS and the repository communities, working together to make research information more an more interoperable, and, hopefully, open. The recommendations of the Open Science Policy Platform, published by the European Commission, identify FAIR (Findable-Accessible-Interoperable-Reusable) data among its priorities. In an interoperable world, all these indications lead toward a common direction, where implementers are encouraged to use open protocols, such as the OAI-PMH and ResourceSync, open standards such as CERIF, persistent identifiers such as DOIs and ORCiDs, to make this happen. The presentation will go through these challenges, illustrating how CRIS and repository managers should work together toward a successful information exchange, and exemplifying how a single free open platform, DSpace-CRIS, can implement both a CRIS and a repository and fulfill requirements for a FAIR environment for research information and research objects.
Conference Opening Science to Meet Future Challenges, Warsaw, March 11, 2014, organized by Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modelling, University of Warsaw.
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?
Open Infrastructure for Cultural Heritage Digital ContentNikos Houssos
We present an Open Cultural Digital Content Infrastructure, a platform providing a coherent suite of loosely-coupled services that aim to promote quality in repositories and facilitate metadata and digital content reuse. The key functions of the infrastructure are the aggregation of metadata and digital files and the automatic validation of metadata records and digital material for compliance with quality specifications. The system that has recently moved to production, is currently being employed to ensure the quality standards of the output of more than 70 projects that support Greek cultural heritage organisations and are funded by the European Union structural funds. These projects are expected to produce more than 1.5 million digitized and born-digital items accompanied with detailed metadata. The validation is based on a set of quality and interoperability specifications that have been developed for the purpose. The infrastructure has been developed using an open source technology stack and tools and in particular reuses a number of components of the publicly available Europeana aggregator and portal software platform.
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.
OpenAIRE guidelines and broker service for repository managers - OpenAIRE #OA...OpenAIRE
Presentation by Pedro Principe and Paolo Manghi at the OpenAIRE Open Access week webinar. Friday October 28, 2016. Webinar on Openaire compatibility guidelines and the dashboard for Repository Managers, with Pedro Principe (University of Minho) and Paolo Manghi (CNR/ISTI).
Linking service capabilities to data stweardship competences for professional...EUDAT
This document discusses the development of a skills framework for the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) project. It outlines the goals of defining a data stewardship competency framework, analyzing current skills gaps, and making recommendations for training services in EOSC. The document discusses how stewardship ensures data and research objects are managed according to FAIR principles. It also summarizes the analysis of the current complex landscape of skills training providers and the skills gaps identified by EOSC demonstrators and other stakeholders. Next steps include additional workshops to gather feedback on missing competencies and how EOSC can enhance training.
OpenAIRE services and tools - presentation at #DI4R2016OpenAIRE
Presentation at Digital Infrastrctures for Research Conference 2016 (Sept. 30). Title: Open Access and Open Data in Horizon 2020: for Research managers and Project Coordinators, by Pedro Príncipe (University of Minho)
Interoperability is the key: repositories networks promoting the quality and ...Pedro Príncipe
Presentation from José Carvalho and Pedro Principe, University of Minho, at ETD 2019 Conference (22nd International Symposium on Electronic Theses and Dissertations), Porto, Nov 7, 2019.
OSFair2017 Workshop | The European Open Science Cloud Pilot Open Science Fair
Brian Matthews presents the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) and the EOSCpilot | OSFair2017 Workshop
Workshop title: How FAIR friendly is your data catalogue?
Workshop overview:
This workshop will build upon the work planned by the EOSCpilot data interoperability task and the BlueBridge workshop held on April 3 at the RDA meeting. We will investigate common mechanisms for interoperation of data catalogues that preserve established community standards, norms and resources, while simplifying the process of being/becoming FAIR. Can we have a simple interoperability architecture based on a common set of metadata types? What are the minimum metadata requirements to expose FAIR data to EOSC services and EOSC users?
DAY 3 - PARALLEL SESSION 6 & 7
OpenAIRE Open Innovation call: Next Generation RepositoriesOpenAIRE
1) Current institutional repositories have issues with usability, interoperability, and acting primarily as silos for individual institutions' data.
2) The vision for next generation repositories is to position them as part of a globally networked infrastructure for scholarly communication, with the resources themselves, rather than the repositories, becoming the focus of services.
3) Key areas discussed for next generation repositories include improved resource discovery and content transfer using ResourceSync and Signposting, generating open usage metrics through a usage hub, and enabling annotation of content through web annotation protocols.
A user journey in OpenAIRE services through the lens of repository managers -...OpenAIRE
A user journey in OpenAIRE services through the lens of repository managers (I – OpenAIRE interoperability guidelines, the content acquisition policy and the graph expansion)
Object Reuse and Exchange (ORE) : Experience in the Open Language Archives Co...Baden Hughes
This document discusses object reuse and exchange (ORE) in the context of the Open Language Archives Community (OLAC). It provides an overview of ORE and how it allows for aggregations of digital objects across repositories. It then discusses OLAC's use of extensions to the OAI-PMH protocol that allow for natural grouping of language resources. Several experiments are described with implementing compounds within OLAC before and after the introduction of ORE specifications. The document concludes by considering future directions for OLAC in adopting ORE standards.
OA Network: Heading for Joint Standards and Enhancing Cooperation: Value‐Adde...Stefan Buddenbohm
OA‐Network collaborates with other associated German Open Access‐related projects and pursues the overarching aim to increase the visibility and the ease of use of the German research output. For this end a technical infrastructure is established to offer value‐added services based on a shared information space across all participating repositories. In addition to this OA‐Network promotes the DINI‐certificate for Open Access repositories (standardization) and a regularly communication exchange in the German repository landscape.
Similar to OpenAIRE guidelines for CRIS managers : supporting interoperability of open research information through established standards, by Nikos Houssos (CRIS2014) (20)
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 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.
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.
When I was asked to give a companion lecture in support of ‘The Philosophy of Science’ (https://shorturl.at/4pUXz) I decided not to walk through the detail of the many methodologies in order of use. Instead, I chose to employ a long standing, and ongoing, scientific development as an exemplar. And so, I chose the ever evolving story of Thermodynamics as a scientific investigation at its best.
Conducted over a period of >200 years, Thermodynamics R&D, and application, benefitted from the highest levels of professionalism, collaboration, and technical thoroughness. New layers of application, methodology, and practice were made possible by the progressive advance of technology. In turn, this has seen measurement and modelling accuracy continually improved at a micro and macro level.
Perhaps most importantly, Thermodynamics rapidly became a primary tool in the advance of applied science/engineering/technology, spanning micro-tech, to aerospace and cosmology. I can think of no better a story to illustrate the breadth of scientific methodologies and applications at their best.
Immersive Learning That Works: Research Grounding and Paths ForwardLeonel Morgado
We will metaverse into the essence of immersive learning, into its three dimensions and conceptual models. This approach encompasses elements from teaching methodologies to social involvement, through organizational concerns and technologies. Challenging the perception of learning as knowledge transfer, we introduce a 'Uses, Practices & Strategies' model operationalized by the 'Immersive Learning Brain' and ‘Immersion Cube’ frameworks. This approach offers a comprehensive guide through the intricacies of immersive educational experiences and spotlighting research frontiers, along the immersion dimensions of system, narrative, and agency. Our discourse extends to stakeholders beyond the academic sphere, addressing the interests of technologists, instructional designers, and policymakers. We span various contexts, from formal education to organizational transformation to the new horizon of an AI-pervasive society. This keynote aims to unite the iLRN community in a collaborative journey towards a future where immersive learning research and practice coalesce, paving the way for innovative educational research and practice landscapes.
ESR spectroscopy in liquid food and beverages.pptxPRIYANKA PATEL
With increasing population, people need to rely on packaged food stuffs. Packaging of food materials requires the preservation of food. There are various methods for the treatment of food to preserve them and irradiation treatment of food is one of them. It is the most common and the most harmless method for the food preservation as it does not alter the necessary micronutrients of food materials. Although irradiated food doesn’t cause any harm to the human health but still the quality assessment of food is required to provide consumers with necessary information about the food. ESR spectroscopy is the most sophisticated way to investigate the quality of the food and the free radicals induced during the processing of the food. ESR spin trapping technique is useful for the detection of highly unstable radicals in the food. The antioxidant capability of liquid food and beverages in mainly performed by spin trapping technique.
(June 12, 2024) Webinar: Development of PET theranostics targeting the molecu...Scintica Instrumentation
Targeting Hsp90 and its pathogen Orthologs with Tethered Inhibitors as a Diagnostic and Therapeutic Strategy for cancer and infectious diseases with Dr. Timothy Haystead.
The binding of cosmological structures by massless topological defectsSérgio Sacani
Assuming spherical symmetry and weak field, it is shown that if one solves the Poisson equation or the Einstein field
equations sourced by a topological defect, i.e. a singularity of a very specific form, the result is a localized gravitational
field capable of driving flat rotation (i.e. Keplerian circular orbits at a constant speed for all radii) of test masses on a thin
spherical shell without any underlying mass. Moreover, a large-scale structure which exploits this solution by assembling
concentrically a number of such topological defects can establish a flat stellar or galactic rotation curve, and can also deflect
light in the same manner as an equipotential (isothermal) sphere. Thus, the need for dark matter or modified gravity theory is
mitigated, at least in part.
The cost of acquiring information by natural selectionCarl Bergstrom
This is a short talk that I gave at the Banff International Research Station workshop on Modeling and Theory in Population Biology. The idea is to try to understand how the burden of natural selection relates to the amount of information that selection puts into the genome.
It's based on the first part of this research paper:
The cost of information acquisition by natural selection
Ryan Seamus McGee, Olivia Kosterlitz, Artem Kaznatcheev, Benjamin Kerr, Carl T. Bergstrom
bioRxiv 2022.07.02.498577; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.07.02.498577
Sexuality - Issues, Attitude and Behaviour - Applied Social Psychology - Psyc...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
The technology uses reclaimed CO₂ as the dyeing medium in a closed loop process. When pressurized, CO₂ becomes supercritical (SC-CO₂). In this state CO₂ has a very high solvent power, allowing the dye to dissolve easily.
Authoring a personal GPT for your research and practice: How we created the Q...Leonel Morgado
Thematic analysis in qualitative research is a time-consuming and systematic task, typically done using teams. Team members must ground their activities on common understandings of the major concepts underlying the thematic analysis, and define criteria for its development. However, conceptual misunderstandings, equivocations, and lack of adherence to criteria are challenges to the quality and speed of this process. Given the distributed and uncertain nature of this process, we wondered if the tasks in thematic analysis could be supported by readily available artificial intelligence chatbots. Our early efforts point to potential benefits: not just saving time in the coding process but better adherence to criteria and grounding, by increasing triangulation between humans and artificial intelligence. This tutorial will provide a description and demonstration of the process we followed, as two academic researchers, to develop a custom ChatGPT to assist with qualitative coding in the thematic data analysis process of immersive learning accounts in a survey of the academic literature: QUAL-E Immersive Learning Thematic Analysis Helper. In the hands-on time, participants will try out QUAL-E and develop their ideas for their own qualitative coding ChatGPT. Participants that have the paid ChatGPT Plus subscription can create a draft of their assistants. The organizers will provide course materials and slide deck that participants will be able to utilize to continue development of their custom GPT. The paid subscription to ChatGPT Plus is not required to participate in this workshop, just for trying out personal GPTs during it.
Describing and Interpreting an Immersive Learning Case with the Immersion Cub...Leonel Morgado
Current descriptions of immersive learning cases are often difficult or impossible to compare. This is due to a myriad of different options on what details to include, which aspects are relevant, and on the descriptive approaches employed. Also, these aspects often combine very specific details with more general guidelines or indicate intents and rationales without clarifying their implementation. In this paper we provide a method to describe immersive learning cases that is structured to enable comparisons, yet flexible enough to allow researchers and practitioners to decide which aspects to include. This method leverages a taxonomy that classifies educational aspects at three levels (uses, practices, and strategies) and then utilizes two frameworks, the Immersive Learning Brain and the Immersion Cube, to enable a structured description and interpretation of immersive learning cases. The method is then demonstrated on a published immersive learning case on training for wind turbine maintenance using virtual reality. Applying the method results in a structured artifact, the Immersive Learning Case Sheet, that tags the case with its proximal uses, practices, and strategies, and refines the free text case description to ensure that matching details are included. This contribution is thus a case description method in support of future comparative research of immersive learning cases. We then discuss how the resulting description and interpretation can be leveraged to change immersion learning cases, by enriching them (considering low-effort changes or additions) or innovating (exploring more challenging avenues of transformation). The method holds significant promise to support better-grounded research in immersive learning.
Describing and Interpreting an Immersive Learning Case with the Immersion Cub...
OpenAIRE guidelines for CRIS managers : supporting interoperability of open research information through established standards, by Nikos Houssos (CRIS2014)
1. OpenAIRE Guidelines for CRIS Managers
Supporting Interoperability of Open Research
Information through established standards
Nikos Houssosa, Brigitte Jörgb, Jan Dvořákc, Pedro Prínciped,
Eloy Rodriguesd, Paolo Manghie, Mikael K. Elbækf
aNational Documentation Centre / National Hellenic Research Foundation, Greece
bJeiBee Ltd., United Kingdom
cInstitute of Information Studies and Librarianship, Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague, Czech
Republic jan.dvorak@ff.cuni.cz
dUniversity of Minho, Portugal
eConsiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell’Informazione “A. Faedo”
fTechnical Information Center of Denmark, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
2. Outline
• OpenAIRE CRIS Guidelines overview and scope
• Different aspects of interoperability support
• Data exchange based on CERIF-XML
• Semantics
• Harvesting protocol for the transmission of CERIF-XML
• Status and next steps
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
3. OpenAIRE CRIS Guidelines overview
• Guidelines for CRIS managers to expose information to OpenAIRE
• Great benefits for CRIS managers: reuse – dissemination of their
information by the OpenAIRE infrastructure
• OpenAIRE can be considered a CRIS system – internal OpenAIRE data
model is CERIF compliant
• OpenAIRE interoperability with CRIS systems: an example of point-to-
point data exchange between CRIS systems
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
4. Different aspects of interoperability
• Structure and semantics
• Structure: data model (CERIF subset)
• Semantics: vocabularies and terms used for classification and
definition of relationships
• System and syntax
• Access / harvesting protocol (OAI-PMH)
• Marshalling CERIF XML as OAI-PMH payload
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
5. Interoperabilty in structure
• Define the subset of CERIF relevant for OpenAIRE
• Major part of this work performed during definition of the
CERIF-compliant OpenAIRE internal data model
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
6. Semantic interoperability
• The meaning and scope of each CERIF entity within OpenAIRE
• Terms and vocabularies used for classifications and definition
of relationships – reuse standard CERIF Semantics vocabularies
with certain additions
• Ensured consistency with OpenAIRE Guidelines for literature
and data repositories (e.g. dataset types, open access types)
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
7. Syntactic interoperability
• Reuse CERIF XML
• OpenAIRE CERIF XML Schema with distinct namespace
• Strict subset of the canonical CERIF XML (data elements and
constraints)
• Distinct namespace (OpenAIRE domain)
• Nesting only of multi-lingual attributes, federated identifiers and
linked entities
• Referential integrity constraints apply
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
8. System interoperability
• Harvesting protocol: OAI-PMH
• Different OAI-PMH sets need to be made available by the data provider
• One for each entity type (e.g. get all records of cfProject)
• One for the entire CERIF XML graph
• Relaxed rules about selective harvesting through time stamps and
deleted records
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
9. Guidelines material
• Main guidelines document
• Includes definition of allowed vocabularies and terms for each
classification and relationship type
• OpenAIRE CERIF XML Schema
• Examples
• CRIS data expressed in OpenAIRE CERIF XML
• CERIF XML as OAI-PMH payload
• Material available at the OpenAIRE Guidelines Wiki
https://guidelines.openaire.eu/wiki/OpenAIRE_Guidelines:_For_CRIS
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
10. Process - methodology
• Ensured early involvement of stakeholders and communities
• OpenAIRE (e.g. technical infrastructure developers, guidelines
and community support teams)
• euroCRIS community – CERIF experts, developers / vendors of
CRIS systems
• Early internal review within OpenAIRE
• Review by the CERIF experts and CRIS developers (autumn
2013)
• Valuable feedback collected and incorporated into guidelines
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
11. Status and next steps
• Guidelines went through public review (review
period ended 28 March 2014)
• No major review comments
• Post-review version to be released within May 2014
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014
12. Thank you!
• Acknowledgements
• The presented work was partly supported by OpenAIREplus Project (Ref No: 283595) of
the European Union FP7-INFRASTRUCTURES Programme.
• Jan Dvořák’s work on this article was partly supported by the Ministry of Education,
Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic through grant no. LG14007.
• The authors wish to acknowledge the valuable feedback provided by the reviewers of
the OpenAIRE guidelines for CRIS managers (the reviewers’ list is available at the
OpenAIRE guidelines wiki).
12th International CRIS Conference, Rome, 13-15 May 2014