The document discusses the requirements and guidance provided by Plan S for journals and publishing platforms to become compliant. It outlines actions journals may need to take regarding business models, publishing best practices, licensing, identifiers, archiving, and metadata. It notes that DOAJ certification is separate from Plan S certification, though journals will need to be DOAJ indexed to meet Plan S criteria. The document encourages starting work now on communications, content strategy, and partner negotiations. It concludes by outlining next steps anticipated from Coalition S, including monitoring and a future review of Plan S.
OpenAIRE webinar: Horizon 2020 Open Science Policies and beyond, with Emilie ...OpenAIRE
The global shift towards making research findings available free of charge and sharing and opening up the research process, so-called 'Open Science’, has been a core strategy in the European Commission to improve knowledge circulation and innovation.
It is illustrated in particular by the Open Science policies for the ECs framework programme.
In this webinar, I will talk about the OS policies for open access to scientific publications and the pilot for research data in Horizon 2020, followed by a preview of what to expect for Open Science in the new Horizon Europe programme.
---
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Principles of Research Data Management, with S. Venkatarama...OpenAIRE
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020 (May 2017)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE webinar - May 29th, 2017.
The Open Access mandate in H2020, what is expected of projects with regards to the OA policies in H2020 and how OpenAIRE can help. Webinar led by Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Príncipe (UMinho)
After an introduction to open science policy in Horizon Europe, the main focus of the presentation is open access to publications requirements in Horizon Europe and Open Research Europe for the Estonian Research Council in June 2021
OpenAIRE webinar on Open Access in H2020 (OAW2016)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE Webinar for project coordinators and researchers on Open Access to publications in H2020 - By Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Principe (University of Minho, OpenAIRE Helpdesk & Training managers). Open Access Week 2016 initiatives.
Slides prepared for the "Horizon Europe Train-the-trainer workshop" held during the 2021 Open Science Fair.
Slide 5 is a revision of the slide that was presented during the event
OpenAIRE webinar: Horizon 2020 Open Science Policies and beyond, with Emilie ...OpenAIRE
The global shift towards making research findings available free of charge and sharing and opening up the research process, so-called 'Open Science’, has been a core strategy in the European Commission to improve knowledge circulation and innovation.
It is illustrated in particular by the Open Science policies for the ECs framework programme.
In this webinar, I will talk about the OS policies for open access to scientific publications and the pilot for research data in Horizon 2020, followed by a preview of what to expect for Open Science in the new Horizon Europe programme.
---
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Principles of Research Data Management, with S. Venkatarama...OpenAIRE
The 2019 International Open Access Week will be held October 21-27, 2019. This year’s theme, “Open for Whom? Equity in Open Knowledge,” builds on the groundwork laid during last year’s focus of “Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Knowledge.”
As has become a tradition of sorts, OpenAIRE organises a series of webinars during this week, highlighting OpenAIRE activities, services and tools, and reach out to the wider community with relevant talks on many aspects of Open Science.
OpenAIRE webinar: Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020 (May 2017)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE webinar - May 29th, 2017.
The Open Access mandate in H2020, what is expected of projects with regards to the OA policies in H2020 and how OpenAIRE can help. Webinar led by Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Príncipe (UMinho)
After an introduction to open science policy in Horizon Europe, the main focus of the presentation is open access to publications requirements in Horizon Europe and Open Research Europe for the Estonian Research Council in June 2021
OpenAIRE webinar on Open Access in H2020 (OAW2016)OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE Webinar for project coordinators and researchers on Open Access to publications in H2020 - By Eloy Rodrigues and Pedro Principe (University of Minho, OpenAIRE Helpdesk & Training managers). Open Access Week 2016 initiatives.
Slides prepared for the "Horizon Europe Train-the-trainer workshop" held during the 2021 Open Science Fair.
Slide 5 is a revision of the slide that was presented during the event
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”.
Presentation of open science requirements in Horizon Europe for the Research and Innovation Foundation in Cyprus. Analyzes requirements of model grant agreement (publications, research data, additional open science practices, open science and evaluation process, open research europe.
OpenAIRE webinar. Open Research Data in H2020OpenAIRE
Presentation on the EC mandate on Open Access to research data in H2020 (part of the webinar "H2020 policies on Open Access and Research Data" delivered on June 12, 2019)
OpenAIRE webinar. Open Access to publications in H2020OpenAIRE
Presentation on the EC mandate on Open Access to publications in H2020 (part of the webinar "H2020 policies on Open Access and Research Data" delivered on June 12, 2019)
OpenAIRE webinar. Services and tools to support compliance; Open Science Help...OpenAIRE
Presentation on the services and tools, including the Open Science helpdesk and training materials, OpenAIRE provides to support the compliance to H2020 mandates (part of the webinar "H2020 policies on Open Access and Research Data" delivered on June 12, 2019)
Webinar about the Open Access mandate of the EC for Horizon 2020 projects.
* Open revisited & Open Access
* OA policy development in H2020
* Open Access in Horizon 2020
* What does OpenAIRE offer?
* How can OpenAIRE help?
Presentació a càrrec de Lluís Anglada, director de Ciència Oberta al CSUC, duta a terme a la Training Session on Open Science and Open Access al Centre de Recerca Matemàtica de la UAB l'11 de novembre de 2018
Presented at the Open Science Fair, Athens 6-8 September 2017, at the FOSTER Plus "Fostering the practical implementation of Open Science in Horizon 2020 and beyond" workshop http://www.opensciencefair.eu/training/parallel-day-2-2/fostering-the-practical-implementation-of-open-science-in-horizon-2020-and-beyond
How to Transition to new Reg. FD Web DisclosureDarrell Heaps
A step-by-step presentation of how to use your corporate website/blog to disclose material information under Reg. FD. This approach helps public companies reduce or eliminate the cost to distribute press releases through newswires.
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”.
Presentation of open science requirements in Horizon Europe for the Research and Innovation Foundation in Cyprus. Analyzes requirements of model grant agreement (publications, research data, additional open science practices, open science and evaluation process, open research europe.
OpenAIRE webinar. Open Research Data in H2020OpenAIRE
Presentation on the EC mandate on Open Access to research data in H2020 (part of the webinar "H2020 policies on Open Access and Research Data" delivered on June 12, 2019)
OpenAIRE webinar. Open Access to publications in H2020OpenAIRE
Presentation on the EC mandate on Open Access to publications in H2020 (part of the webinar "H2020 policies on Open Access and Research Data" delivered on June 12, 2019)
OpenAIRE webinar. Services and tools to support compliance; Open Science Help...OpenAIRE
Presentation on the services and tools, including the Open Science helpdesk and training materials, OpenAIRE provides to support the compliance to H2020 mandates (part of the webinar "H2020 policies on Open Access and Research Data" delivered on June 12, 2019)
Webinar about the Open Access mandate of the EC for Horizon 2020 projects.
* Open revisited & Open Access
* OA policy development in H2020
* Open Access in Horizon 2020
* What does OpenAIRE offer?
* How can OpenAIRE help?
Presentació a càrrec de Lluís Anglada, director de Ciència Oberta al CSUC, duta a terme a la Training Session on Open Science and Open Access al Centre de Recerca Matemàtica de la UAB l'11 de novembre de 2018
Presented at the Open Science Fair, Athens 6-8 September 2017, at the FOSTER Plus "Fostering the practical implementation of Open Science in Horizon 2020 and beyond" workshop http://www.opensciencefair.eu/training/parallel-day-2-2/fostering-the-practical-implementation-of-open-science-in-horizon-2020-and-beyond
Similar to OpenAIRE webinar: Plan S compliance for Open Access Journals - what we know so far and where we think we're heading, with Dominic Mitchell (DOAJ)
How to Transition to new Reg. FD Web DisclosureDarrell Heaps
A step-by-step presentation of how to use your corporate website/blog to disclose material information under Reg. FD. This approach helps public companies reduce or eliminate the cost to distribute press releases through newswires.
How to Develop an Enterprise Content Syndication StrategyScott Abel
Presented by Ruth Kaufman at the CM Pros Fall 2007 Summit on Web Content Management, November 26, 2007.
There’s more to enterprise content syndication than providing RSS feeds on your corporate web site. The traditional content syndication paradigm is now being applied to article marketing, product placement, and customer alerts –- that is, syndication is a means to provide compelling but unintrusive anytime/anyplace communication with customers and partners throughout the relationship lifecycle. Focus on an enterprise syndication strategy today will keep your company afloat in the fluid world of digital experiences and information resources. It will also keep you out of the internal log jam where content publishers cross purposes and mix messages as they extend their content assets beyond the enterprise web site boundaries.
Digital Security by Design Software Ecosystem CompetitionKTN
Slides from the Digital Security by Design Software Ecosystem Competition Briefing from 5 October 2021. This new competition, from the Digital Security by Design challenge, in partnership with Innovate UK and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), both part of UK Research and Innovation, is investing up to £8 million in research and development projects.
Writing Technical Documentation is the most crucial phase.To overcome that we are announcing meetup on Technical documentation.
Topics to be covered are:
-- Technical Documentation
-- Documentation Skills
-- Document of Understanding
-- Sample of DOU
-- Functionality Flow Document
-- Statement Of Work
-- Sample of FDD (SOW)
-- Technical Analysis Document
About Speaker : Kavita Gaikwad
Kavita is fond of writing and passionate about technology. She has 5+ years of experience in creating, designing, and editing Technical writing, End-to-end Software Product Documentation, and ERP Documentation.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/kavita-gaikwad-375a6617/
Slides of the session about Governance features in SharePoint Premium that I delivered at the Modern Workplace Conference Paris 2024. In the session I demonstrated those governance features in key four areas: Security Controls | Content Lifecycle Management | Site Actions & Data Acces Governance
Driving Enterprise Architecture Redesign: Cloud-Native Platforms, APIs, and D...WSO2
Chris Haddad examines,
Why you should consider Cloud-Native architecture components in your Enterprise Architecture.
What is DevOps impact on App and API design guidelines.
How API-centric focus revises Enterprise Architecture.
Driving Enterprise Architecture Redesign: Cloud-Native Platforms, APIs, and D...Chris Haddad
High performance architecture is rapidly changing due to three fundamental drivers:
Cloud-Native Platforms - change the way we think about operational infrastructure
DevOps - changes application lifecycle practices
APIs - change how we integrate and evolve infrastructure and applications, especially Mobile apps
In this session, Chris will illustrate:
Why you should consider Cloud-Native architecture components in your Enterprise Architecture
What is DevOps impact on App and API design guidelines
How API-centric focus revises Enterprise Architecture
Open Source project failure often stems from not setting clear objectives or having a shared vision from the start. That said there are many success stories, including two well known Statistical examples: Demetra; and Eurostat SDMX tools (SDMX-RI). However, in all these examples there was at first a founding organisation/entity that created the right environment for its successful path into a new paradigm. In the context of my presentation this being the Statistical Information System Collaboration Community (SIS-CC / http://siscc.oecd.org).
Presented at the International Marketing and Output DataBase Conference, Gozd Martuljek, September 18 - 22, 2016.
Discussion Topics:
• Fintech innovation and regulation
• Opportunities and the future for companies
• Regulatory sandboxes: Try before adoption
• Regulation landscape and changes anticipated in banking
• What are companies doing to address regulatory risk?
• What is QuantUniversity doing in this space? QuSandbox Demo
As more resources are indexed online and as more researchers begin their quest in a digital environment, unique local collections and institutional repositories play an ever more important role. The development of standards for these materials and ensuring their long-term preservation is crucial. Please join the Standards Committee and the Holdings Committee to learn more about RDA for Non-MARC testers. Discover how the PIRUS2 project (Publisher and Institutional Repository Usage Statistics) is enabling the recording and reporting of articles hosted by aggregators or in repositories. Learn how preservation standards can ensure the long-term protection of digital collections.
Joomla Chicago Meeting July, 2009: CMS CageMatch IIJohn Coonen
JoomlaChicago July 2009 meeting presentation led by David Steele of the Acquity Group. Comparison of four top Open Source Web Content Management Systems currently on the market for enterprise use: Alfresco, Drupal, Joomla and Magnolia.
Amy Devenney (JISC), Beth Harris (JISC)
This session will detail the process implemented with 13 publishers to collect article-level metadata on open access publications for Jisc transitional agreements throughout 2020 and discuss the challenges encountered. It will also demonstrate how the data collected has allowed Jisc to effectively monitor and evaluate transitional agreements and conclude by outlining recommendations to improve the transparency of the transition to open access.
Introduction to CrossMark for Affiliates and HostsCrossref
Similar to OpenAIRE webinar: Plan S compliance for Open Access Journals - what we know so far and where we think we're heading, with Dominic Mitchell (DOAJ) (20)
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
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.
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.
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.
Salas, V. (2024) "John of St. Thomas (Poinsot) on the Science of Sacred Theol...Studia Poinsotiana
I Introduction
II Subalternation and Theology
III Theology and Dogmatic Declarations
IV The Mixed Principles of Theology
V Virtual Revelation: The Unity of Theology
VI Theology as a Natural Science
VII Theology’s Certitude
VIII Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
All the contents are fully attributable to the author, Doctor Victor Salas. Should you wish to get this text republished, get in touch with the author or the editorial committee of the Studia Poinsotiana. Insofar as possible, we will be happy to broker your contact.
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.
Deep Behavioral Phenotyping in Systems Neuroscience for Functional Atlasing a...Ana Luísa Pinho
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) provides means to characterize brain activations in response to behavior. However, cognitive neuroscience has been limited to group-level effects referring to the performance of specific tasks. To obtain the functional profile of elementary cognitive mechanisms, the combination of brain responses to many tasks is required. Yet, to date, both structural atlases and parcellation-based activations do not fully account for cognitive function and still present several limitations. Further, they do not adapt overall to individual characteristics. In this talk, I will give an account of deep-behavioral phenotyping strategies, namely data-driven methods in large task-fMRI datasets, to optimize functional brain-data collection and improve inference of effects-of-interest related to mental processes. Key to this approach is the employment of fast multi-functional paradigms rich on features that can be well parametrized and, consequently, facilitate the creation of psycho-physiological constructs to be modelled with imaging data. Particular emphasis will be given to music stimuli when studying high-order cognitive mechanisms, due to their ecological nature and quality to enable complex behavior compounded by discrete entities. I will also discuss how deep-behavioral phenotyping and individualized models applied to neuroimaging data can better account for the subject-specific organization of domain-general cognitive systems in the human brain. Finally, the accumulation of functional brain signatures brings the possibility to clarify relationships among tasks and create a univocal link between brain systems and mental functions through: (1) the development of ontologies proposing an organization of cognitive processes; and (2) brain-network taxonomies describing functional specialization. To this end, tools to improve commensurability in cognitive science are necessary, such as public repositories, ontology-based platforms and automated meta-analysis tools. I will thus discuss some brain-atlasing resources currently under development, and their applicability in cognitive as well as clinical neuroscience.
Richard's aventures in two entangled wonderlandsRichard Gill
Since the loophole-free Bell experiments of 2020 and the Nobel prizes in physics of 2022, critics of Bell's work have retreated to the fortress of super-determinism. Now, super-determinism is a derogatory word - it just means "determinism". Palmer, Hance and Hossenfelder argue that quantum mechanics and determinism are not incompatible, using a sophisticated mathematical construction based on a subtle thinning of allowed states and measurements in quantum mechanics, such that what is left appears to make Bell's argument fail, without altering the empirical predictions of quantum mechanics. I think however that it is a smoke screen, and the slogan "lost in math" comes to my mind. I will discuss some other recent disproofs of Bell's theorem using the language of causality based on causal graphs. Causal thinking is also central to law and justice. I will mention surprising connections to my work on serial killer nurse cases, in particular the Dutch case of Lucia de Berk and the current UK case of Lucy Letby.
Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intellige...University of Maribor
Slides from talk:
Aleš Zamuda: Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intelligent Systems.
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Inter-Society Networking Panel GRSS/MTT-S/CIS Panel Session: Promoting Connection and Cooperation
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
6. May 2019
cOAlition S put out revised details of their Plan S for making Open Access an
immediate reality for scholarly articles.
• How would journals would become compliant in the short time available
(originally 2020, now 2021) and what was required of them to achieve
that?
• Indexation in DOAJ is only one criteria of many. There are other, new
criteria which are additional to the DOAJ ones. What are those extra Plan
S criteria and how might they be measured?
• What is the difference is between DOAJ certification and Plan S
certification?
7. Part 1
What does the guidance say and what changes might journals and platforms
anticipate?
Part 2
What might the certification process look like at DOAJ and what is the
difference between DOAJ certification and Plan S certification?
Part 3
Why wait? Things to start now
Part 4
What’s next?
8. Part 1 - What does the guidance say and what changes
might journals and platforms consider*?
*HUGE DISCLAIMER: my suggestions and not guaranteed steps to
achieve Plan S certification
9. Guidance is split into 5 sections
1. Introductory section
2. Mandatory conditions - all publication venues
3. Mandatory technical conditions - all publication venues
4. Strongly recommended additional criteria - all publication venues
5. Specific conditions - Open Access journals and Open Access
publishing platforms
10. Business models
‘All scholarly articles that result from research funded by members of cOAlition
S must be openly available immediately upon publication without any embargo
period.’
Action:
- get funding information into article metadata to identify articles funded by
cOAlition S funders;
- remove embargo periods from your websites;
- update agreements/licenses and website information.
11. REMEMBER
Publishers and journals are not asked to make these changes for DOAJ, for
Plan S, for the EU, for funding agencies….
These changes are for users: information about the journal’s policies,
practices, business processes must be available to readers and authors…
And they must be easy to find, easy to read, easy to understand so…
Users understand immediately and easily what content is available to them,
who is making it available and what they can do with that content.
12. Business models
‘not... support ‘hybrid’ Open Access publishing when such fees are not part of
transformative arrangements’
Action:
- register the journal under a transformative agreement at ESAC
https://esac-initiative.org/about/transformative-agreements/
- update the website
13. Business models
‘The journal/platform must either enable authors to publish with immediate and
permanent Open Access (without any kind of technical or other form of
obstacles)... or to deposit the AAM or VoR in an Open Access repository at no
extra cost and under an open license
Action:
- change the authentication models on the website;
- think about workflows between Manuscript Submission System
(MSS)/editorial office and repositories & website;
- update site literature, publishing/ authorship agreements, licenses
14. Business models
‘cOAlition S, in partnership with publisher representatives and other
stakeholders, will define the various services (e.g., triaging, peer review,
editorial work, copy editing) publishers will be asked to price.’
Action:
- be prepared to itemise publishing costs on your website at journal level
(at publisher level as a minimum)
- If you have that information now, get it onto your journal website(s)
15. Publishing best practices
‘have a solid system in place for review according to the standards within the relevant
discipline and guided by the core practices and policies outlined by the Committee on
Publication Ethics (COPE).’
Action:
- read https://publicationethics.org/core-practices and make sure you have publicly
available documentation stating the peer review policy.
The journal does not need to be a member of COPE!
16. Publishing best practice
‘a detailed description of its editorial policies and decision-making processes.
In addition, at least basic statistics must be published annually’
Action:
- document and make public all editorial processes;
- start collecting and publishing statistics on
• The number of submissions
• The number of reviews requested
• The number of reviews received
• Approval rate
• Average time between submission and publication
Talk to your manuscript submissions system (MSS) provider now.
17. Copyright
‘The journal/platform must accept the retention of copyright by the authors or
their institutions, at no extra cost…
Action:
- update your copyright forms so copyright remains with the authors;
- update the website, making sure there are no conflicting copyright
statements;
- state clearly what range of the content the new copyright terms apply to;
- go back and get updated copyright agreements for content already
published.
18. Licensing
‘...the publication must be openly available immediately with a Creative
Commons Attribution license (CC BY) unless an exception has been agreed
by the funder.’
Action:
- get CC licenses for your content / change licenses to CC BY, CC BY-SA
or CC0 (CC BY-ND by special request only);
- update agreements/licenses, website information
- be sure to state clearly what range of content the CC license applies to
and what the licensing terms are of the content not covered by CC
licenses
- avoid copyright/licensing clash!
Question: what happens when CC licences are disallowed?
19. Licensing and self-archiving
‘...must allow the author/institution to make either the Version of Record (VoR),
the Author’s Accepted Manuscript (AAM), or both versions available under an
open license (as defined below) via an Open Access repository, immediately
upon publication.’
Action:
- decide if the journal will facilitate this as an author service;
- establish the workflows between journal and repositories
- update your publishing/author agreements;
- update the website to clearly state the policy;
- update copyright and licensing pages, watching out for conflicting
statements;
- register the policy with SHERPA/RoMEO (strongly recommended);
20. Permanent Identifiers
Article identifiers
‘Use of persistent identifiers (PIDs) for scholarly publications (with versioning,
for example, in case of revisions), such as DOI (preferable), URN, or Handle.’
Action:
- register for a PID with an agency or via a sponsor; en
- set up the workflow to handle PIDs correctly, incl. getting them in
metadata;
- make sure PIDs are deposited and resolving correctly;
- enable versioning on the website, in PDFs, at the PID registry.
Question: what about other IDs, like ARK?
21. Permanent Identifiers
Author identifiers (strongly recommended)
‘Support for PIDs for authors (e.g., ORCID), funders, funding programmes and
grants, institutions, and other relevant entities’
Actions
- start asking authors to register with these schemes or find out what their
IDs are;
- get that information into the manuscript workflow;
- get that information into the metadata workflow;
- display that information on the website against every article [and in
PDFs?]
22. Archiving and preservation
‘Deposition of content with a long-term digital preservation or archiving
(LTDPA) programme’
Action:
- start contract negotiations with a LTDPA service now - it can take time to
get the content actively deposited in a programme; (don’t assume your
platform will do this for you)
- decide what range of content will be archived.
23. Article metadata
‘High-quality article level metadata in standard interoperable non-proprietary
format, under a CC0 public domain dedication.’
Action:
- make metadata available in an open format;
- update website with statement reflecting that all article metadata from the
journal is available in the “public domain” or with “no rights reserved”
(https://creativecommons.org/share-your-work/public-domain/cc0/);
- update publishing/author agreements, copyright statements and licensing
statements.
- be sure there are no conflicting statements
Question: what does cOAlition S count as a standard, interoperable, non-proprietary
format?
24. Article metadata
‘Metadata must include complete and reliable information on funding provided
by cOAlition S funders (including as a minimum the name of the funder and
the grant number/identifier).’
Action:
- Make space for funding information in MSSs or the like;
- start asking authors to retrieve and declare their funding information when
they submit papers;
- incorporate that information into MSS and display on websites.
25. Article metadata
‘Machine-readable information on the Open Access status and the license
embedded in the article, in standard non-proprietary format.’
Action:
- get that information into the manuscript workflow;
- get OA status and license information into the metadata workflow;
- embed/display that information on the website against every article [and
in PDFs?]
Questions: does it really mean ‘embedded’ here or is displaying enough?
What formats are acceptable here?
26. Article metadata (strongly recommended)
‘...download of full text for all publications (including supplementary text and
data) in a machine-readable community standard format such as JATS XML’
Action:
- get full text into JATS;
- talk to your digital content vendor now;
- start sending your supplementary text and data for conversion;
- get these up on the web site;
- update licensing, copyright, publishing/author agreements
Question: what other formats apart from JATS will be acceptable?
27. Publishing best practice (strongly recommended)
‘OpenAIRE compliance of the metadata’ [https://guidelines.openaire.eu/wiki/Main_Page]
Action: ???
Questions: what does cOAlition S really mean here? The OpenAIRE guidelines refer
primarily to repositories. What aspects of compliance will be looked for?
‘Linking to data, code, and other research outputs that underlie the publication and are
available in external repositories.’
Action: ???
Questions: which repositories? (Is Dropbox considered OK?) Is there a particular
format required?
28. Publishing best practice (strongly recommended)
‘Openly accessible data on citations according to the standards by the
Initiative for Open Citations (I4OC).’
Action: ???
Questions:
- which standards exactly are being referred to? Is it ‘structured, separable,
and open’?
- Is it enough to simply declare that article metadata is available under a
CC0 license?
- Do you have to be a member of Crossref?
- Do you have to become a signatory of I4OC?
29. Author services (strongly recommended)
‘Direct deposition of publications (in a machine-readable community standard
format and including complete metadata) by the publisher into author
designated or centralised Open Access repositories that fulfil the Plan S
criteria.’
Action:
- start asking for this information upon acceptance, in publishing/author
agreements;
- start working with Plan S compliant repositories to establish what a
successful deposit looks like;
- update the website.
Questions: when will a list of Plan S compliant repositories be available and
where from? What other metadata formats will be acceptable?
30. Part 2 - What might the certification process look like
at DOAJ and what is the difference between DOAJ
certification and Plan S certification?*
*HUGE DISCLAIMER: whether or not DOAJ will be actively involved in
the collection of Plan S certification criteria is unconfirmed.
31. Plan S certification
Plan S certification will be separate to DOAJ certification.
It will be possible to be indexed in DOAJ (and even have the Seal!) but not apply for
Plan S certification.
For journals not in DOAJ or Plan S compliant, it will be possible to apply for both at
the same time.
For journals already in DOAJ, it will be possible to apply for Plan S certification.
It is not be possible to be Plan S compliant but not DOAJ compliant because one
of Plan S’ criteria is that a journal must be indexed in DOAJ.
We will not be undertaking a re-application style project like the one in 2015 where we
made everyone apply again to remain indexed.
33. My suggestions for other things to start on now
1. Communications
Start talking to stakeholders to get buy-in: publishers, editors, societies, members, authors,
subscribers, consortia, 3rd party vendors (mss, content converters, website hosts), talk to legal
dept. about contractual changes, talk to finance about budgets.
2. DOAJ
If it’s already open access, submit your journal to DOAJ for DOAJ indexing now! Talk to DOAJ
about copyright and licensing, if you need to. We can help you!
3. Content strategy
Decide on your content strategy: when you make changes to licensing and copyright
statements, implement archiving and preservation programmes, PIDs etc, decide what content
will be covered? All of it, back archive material too? Only going forward from 2020, 2021?
4. Partners
Start negotiations with the 3rd party services (repositories, PIDs, archiving services etc)
mentioned in these slides, particularly SHERPA/RoMEO!
35. What’s next from cOAlition S?
A consultant has just been appointed by Plan S to start the data review.
At some point a final set of compliant data, how they will be exposed and where, will be determined.
cOAlition S is commissioning task forces to deep dive into some of the areas. For example:
- Support for society publishers
- ‘a gap analysis of Open Access journals/platforms to identify fields and disciplines where
there is a need to increase the share of Open Access journals/platforms.’
‘by the end of 2021, [cOAlition S will] issue a statement on Plan S principles as they apply to
monographs and book chapters, together with related implementation guidance’
‘cOAlition S will support the development of a tool that researchers can use to identify whether
venues fulfil the requirements.’
‘cOAlition S will develop or adopt a model ‘License to Publish’ for their grantees.’
36. What’s next from cOAlition S?
Expect a lot more discussion with ‘major research funders world-wide in order to foster
alignment with the Plan S guidelines among collaborating authors’ particularly with Latin
America whose own AmeliCA is very different to Plan S.
cOAlition S will establish on-going monitoring to maintain transparency and a clear
understanding of costs and prices. Caps might be implemented.
Where journals receive funding from cOAlition S members to support publication fees,
that funding will cease 31st December 2024.
‘Before the end of 2024, ... a formal review process that examines the requirements,
effects, and impact of Plan S.’
37. What’s next from DOAJ?
Three promises
1. We will continue to push important questions of clarification to cOAlition S on
behalf of publishers
2. We will make the site and supporting literature accessible, responsive, easy to read
and more user-friendly.
3. We will implement a simple and user-friendly application form
Follow us at https://blog.doaj.org and https://twitter.com/DOAJplus to keep up to date
with developments