Open Science: for a Better Science
Tuesday 21/02/2017
Aula “Cesare Musatti”, Scuola di Psicologia via Venezia 8, Padova Italy. Publishing Open Access: who pays?
Sitations are the way that researchers communicate how
their work builds on and relates to the work of others and
they can be used to trace how a discovery spreads and is
used by researchers in different disciplines and countries.
Creating a truly comprehensive map of scholarship,
however, relies on having a curated machine-readable
database of citation information, where the provenance of
every citation is clear and reusable. The Initiative for Open
Citations (I4OC), a campaign launched on 6 April 2017,
sought to make publisher members of Crossref aware that
they could open up the citation metadata they already give
to Crossref simply by asking them. With the support of
major publishers and the endorsement of funders and other
organisations, more than 50% of citation data in Crossref
is now freely available, up from less than 1% before the
campaign. This provides the foundation of a well-structured,
open database of literally millions of datapoints that anyone
can query, mine, consume and explore. The presenter will
discuss the aims of the campaign, the new innovative
services that are already using the data, what more still
needs to be done and how you can support the initiative.
Catriona J MacCallum, Hindawi
How can we ensure research data is re-usable? The role of Publishers in Resea...LEARN Project
How can we ensure research data is re-usable? The role of Publishers in Research Data Management, by Catriona MacCallum. 2nd LEARN Workshop, Vienna, 6th April 2016
The fourth paradigm: data intensive scientific discovery - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
There is broad recognition within the scientific community that the emerging data deluge will fundamentally alter disciplines in areas throughout academic research. A wide variety of researchers - from scientists and engineers to social scientists and humanities researchers - will require tools, technologies, and platforms that seamlessly integrate into standard scientific methodologies and processes.
'The fourth paradigm' refers to the data management techniques and the computational systems needed to manipulate, visualize, and manage large amounts of research data. This talk will illustrate the challenges researchers will face, the opportunities these changes will afford, and the resulting implications for data-intensive researchers.
In addition, the talk will review the global movement towards open access, research repositories and open science and the importance of curation of digital data. The talk concludes with some comments on the research requirements for campus e-infrastructure and the end-to-end performance of the network.
The Challenges of Making Data Travel, by Sabina LeonelliLEARN Project
1st LEARN Workshop. Embedding Research Data as part of the research cycle. 29 Jan 2016. Presentation by Sabina Leonelli, Exeter Centre for the Study of Life Sciences (Egenis) & Department of Sociology, Philosophy and Anthropology, University of Exeter
Curating the Scholarly Record: Data Management and Research LibrariesKeith Webster
Presentation at the National Data Service Conference "New Frontiers in Data Discovery: Collaboration with Research Libraries.", Pittsburgh, 20 October 2016
Data management: The new frontier for librariesLEARN Project
Presentation at 3rd LEARN workshop on Research Data Management, “Make research data management policies work”, by Kathleen Shearer, COAR, CARL/ABCR, RDC/DCR, ARL, SSHRC/CSRH.
"Open Science, Open Data" training for participants of Software Writing Skills for Your Research - Workshop for Proficient, Helmholtz Centre Potsdam - GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Telegrafenberg, December 16, 2015
Sitations are the way that researchers communicate how
their work builds on and relates to the work of others and
they can be used to trace how a discovery spreads and is
used by researchers in different disciplines and countries.
Creating a truly comprehensive map of scholarship,
however, relies on having a curated machine-readable
database of citation information, where the provenance of
every citation is clear and reusable. The Initiative for Open
Citations (I4OC), a campaign launched on 6 April 2017,
sought to make publisher members of Crossref aware that
they could open up the citation metadata they already give
to Crossref simply by asking them. With the support of
major publishers and the endorsement of funders and other
organisations, more than 50% of citation data in Crossref
is now freely available, up from less than 1% before the
campaign. This provides the foundation of a well-structured,
open database of literally millions of datapoints that anyone
can query, mine, consume and explore. The presenter will
discuss the aims of the campaign, the new innovative
services that are already using the data, what more still
needs to be done and how you can support the initiative.
Catriona J MacCallum, Hindawi
How can we ensure research data is re-usable? The role of Publishers in Resea...LEARN Project
How can we ensure research data is re-usable? The role of Publishers in Research Data Management, by Catriona MacCallum. 2nd LEARN Workshop, Vienna, 6th April 2016
The fourth paradigm: data intensive scientific discovery - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
There is broad recognition within the scientific community that the emerging data deluge will fundamentally alter disciplines in areas throughout academic research. A wide variety of researchers - from scientists and engineers to social scientists and humanities researchers - will require tools, technologies, and platforms that seamlessly integrate into standard scientific methodologies and processes.
'The fourth paradigm' refers to the data management techniques and the computational systems needed to manipulate, visualize, and manage large amounts of research data. This talk will illustrate the challenges researchers will face, the opportunities these changes will afford, and the resulting implications for data-intensive researchers.
In addition, the talk will review the global movement towards open access, research repositories and open science and the importance of curation of digital data. The talk concludes with some comments on the research requirements for campus e-infrastructure and the end-to-end performance of the network.
The Challenges of Making Data Travel, by Sabina LeonelliLEARN Project
1st LEARN Workshop. Embedding Research Data as part of the research cycle. 29 Jan 2016. Presentation by Sabina Leonelli, Exeter Centre for the Study of Life Sciences (Egenis) & Department of Sociology, Philosophy and Anthropology, University of Exeter
Curating the Scholarly Record: Data Management and Research LibrariesKeith Webster
Presentation at the National Data Service Conference "New Frontiers in Data Discovery: Collaboration with Research Libraries.", Pittsburgh, 20 October 2016
Data management: The new frontier for librariesLEARN Project
Presentation at 3rd LEARN workshop on Research Data Management, “Make research data management policies work”, by Kathleen Shearer, COAR, CARL/ABCR, RDC/DCR, ARL, SSHRC/CSRH.
"Open Science, Open Data" training for participants of Software Writing Skills for Your Research - Workshop for Proficient, Helmholtz Centre Potsdam - GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Telegrafenberg, December 16, 2015
The purpose, practicalities, pitfalls and policies of managing and sharing da...Danny Kingsley
Talk to the Royal Society of Chemistry, Chemical Information and Computer Applications Group conference - Measurement, Information and Innovation: Digital Disruption in the Chemical Sciences. Tuesday 20th October 2015, RSC, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London
Responsible metrics for research - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
Following the publication of the "Metric tide" report - which called for more open and transparent metrics and indicators for research - a panel of experts will discuss the challenges and opportunities from both a policy and more technical level (for example highlighting some of the issues relating to standards and research infrastructure).
Discussion will also focus on implementation challenges (who, how, what and when).
This session will examine new data environment concepts like ‘big data’ and ‘stream analytics’, and the impact of the new data environment on privacy (and related constructs) and how this will feed into the way we carry out research from data collection through to publication. This of course is not a fixed thing; the environment is in a constant state of change. Working out what is happening right now is a challenge and as for what will happen next …
Enabling Precise Identification and Citability of Dynamic Data: Recommendatio...LEARN Project
Enabling Precise Identification and Citability of Dynamic Data: Recommendations of the RDA Working Group, by Andreas Rauber – 2nd LEARN Workshop, Vienna, 6th April 2016
Open Data in a Big Data World: easy to say, but hard to do?LEARN Project
Presentation at 3rd LEARN workshop on Research Data Management, “Make research data management policies work”
Helsinki, 28 June 2016, by Sarah Callaghan, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
This is a presentation I gave at the Library of Congress as part of a NFAIS/FLICC/CENDI meeting as outlined here: http://www.chemspider.com/blog/making-the-web-work-for-science-presentation-at-the-library-of-congress.html
The presentation provides an overview of some of the challenges the publishers face moving forward, how they are responding to it, how InChI is an enabling technology, how quality is important.
Implementing Open Access: Effective Management of Your Research DataMartin Hamilton
The slides from my session with the DCC's Martin Donnelly at the Understanding ModernGov "Implementing Open Access" event in June 2014. Our talk is all about the support available from Jisc and the DCC to help you manage your research data, and potential future initiatives that might help institutions to handle the move to "open science".
The Needs of stakeholders in the RDM process - the role of LEARNLEARN Project
Presentation at 3rd LEARN workshop on Research Data Management, “Make research data management policies work”
Helsinki, 28 June 2016, by Martin Moyle/Paul Ayris, UCL Library Services
Liberating facts from the scientific literature - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
Text and data mining (TDM) techniques can be applied to a wide range of materials, from published research papers, books and theses, to cultural heritage materials, digitised collections, administrative and management reports and documentation, etc. Use cases include academic research, resource discovery and business intelligence.
This workshop will show the value and benefits of TDM techniques and demonstrate how ContentMine aims to liberate 100,000,000 facts from the scientific literature, and ContentMine will provide a hands on demo on a topical and accessible scientific/medical subject.
LA BIBLIOTECA APERTA. Tecniche e strategie di condivisione
16-17 marzo 2017 Fondazione Stelline di Milano
Le biblioteche accademiche e di ricerca di fronte alle sfide della open science. Giovedì 16 marzo, ore 14,30 (Sala Leonardo)
Gestire i dati di ricerca: nuove prospettive di collaborazione e integrazione
Diritto d'autore e riforma del copyright / Antonella De Robbiolibriedocumenti
Conferenza tenuta presso la ex SSAB da Antonella De Robbio (Università di Padova) il 13-05-2014 nell'ambito dell'VIII Ciclo "Biblioteche, libri, documenti : dall'informazione alla conoscenza" Prof.ssa M.T. Biagetti
The purpose, practicalities, pitfalls and policies of managing and sharing da...Danny Kingsley
Talk to the Royal Society of Chemistry, Chemical Information and Computer Applications Group conference - Measurement, Information and Innovation: Digital Disruption in the Chemical Sciences. Tuesday 20th October 2015, RSC, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London
Responsible metrics for research - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
Following the publication of the "Metric tide" report - which called for more open and transparent metrics and indicators for research - a panel of experts will discuss the challenges and opportunities from both a policy and more technical level (for example highlighting some of the issues relating to standards and research infrastructure).
Discussion will also focus on implementation challenges (who, how, what and when).
This session will examine new data environment concepts like ‘big data’ and ‘stream analytics’, and the impact of the new data environment on privacy (and related constructs) and how this will feed into the way we carry out research from data collection through to publication. This of course is not a fixed thing; the environment is in a constant state of change. Working out what is happening right now is a challenge and as for what will happen next …
Enabling Precise Identification and Citability of Dynamic Data: Recommendatio...LEARN Project
Enabling Precise Identification and Citability of Dynamic Data: Recommendations of the RDA Working Group, by Andreas Rauber – 2nd LEARN Workshop, Vienna, 6th April 2016
Open Data in a Big Data World: easy to say, but hard to do?LEARN Project
Presentation at 3rd LEARN workshop on Research Data Management, “Make research data management policies work”
Helsinki, 28 June 2016, by Sarah Callaghan, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
This is a presentation I gave at the Library of Congress as part of a NFAIS/FLICC/CENDI meeting as outlined here: http://www.chemspider.com/blog/making-the-web-work-for-science-presentation-at-the-library-of-congress.html
The presentation provides an overview of some of the challenges the publishers face moving forward, how they are responding to it, how InChI is an enabling technology, how quality is important.
Implementing Open Access: Effective Management of Your Research DataMartin Hamilton
The slides from my session with the DCC's Martin Donnelly at the Understanding ModernGov "Implementing Open Access" event in June 2014. Our talk is all about the support available from Jisc and the DCC to help you manage your research data, and potential future initiatives that might help institutions to handle the move to "open science".
The Needs of stakeholders in the RDM process - the role of LEARNLEARN Project
Presentation at 3rd LEARN workshop on Research Data Management, “Make research data management policies work”
Helsinki, 28 June 2016, by Martin Moyle/Paul Ayris, UCL Library Services
Liberating facts from the scientific literature - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
Text and data mining (TDM) techniques can be applied to a wide range of materials, from published research papers, books and theses, to cultural heritage materials, digitised collections, administrative and management reports and documentation, etc. Use cases include academic research, resource discovery and business intelligence.
This workshop will show the value and benefits of TDM techniques and demonstrate how ContentMine aims to liberate 100,000,000 facts from the scientific literature, and ContentMine will provide a hands on demo on a topical and accessible scientific/medical subject.
LA BIBLIOTECA APERTA. Tecniche e strategie di condivisione
16-17 marzo 2017 Fondazione Stelline di Milano
Le biblioteche accademiche e di ricerca di fronte alle sfide della open science. Giovedì 16 marzo, ore 14,30 (Sala Leonardo)
Gestire i dati di ricerca: nuove prospettive di collaborazione e integrazione
Diritto d'autore e riforma del copyright / Antonella De Robbiolibriedocumenti
Conferenza tenuta presso la ex SSAB da Antonella De Robbio (Università di Padova) il 13-05-2014 nell'ambito dell'VIII Ciclo "Biblioteche, libri, documenti : dall'informazione alla conoscenza" Prof.ssa M.T. Biagetti
Disseminazione dei risultati della ricerca e Open Access in Horizon 2020Paola Gargiulo
Brief presentation of OA requirements (publications and research data) in Horizon 2020 and references to OpenAIRE platform (in Italian). References to OA implementation at University of Venice Ca' Foscari
La gestione dei dati della ricerca e il ruolo delle biblioteche: quali sfide ...libriedocumenti
Conferenza tenuta presso la ex SSAB da Paola Gargiulo (CINECA) il 19-04-2013 nell'ambito del 7. ciclo "Biblioteche libri documenti: dall'informazione alla conoscenza", a.a. 2012-2013, Prof.ssa M.T. Biagetti
Intervento al Convegno MICHAEL CULTURE WORKSHOP
Cultural institutions towards Europeana: opportunities, licenses and IPR issues
Le istituzioni culturali verso Europeana: benefici, licenze e IPR.
"diritto di riuso nelle digitalizzazioni. I mille volti della proprietà intellettuale
A ciascuno il suo: diritti e rovesci delle opere digitali nei servizi bibliot...Università di Padova
Intervento a Ebook Lab Italia : Il futuro dei libri, i libri del futuro, Rimini (Italy), 3-5 marzo 2011
Le intricate relazioni tra titolari di diritti e fruitori delle opere generano una complicata trama ove le biblioteche sono il filo conduttore che annoda il tessuto. Diritti e rovesci si possono scatenare nell’offerta di servizi innovativi nel digitale. Ricucire gli strappi e ridurre le distanze tra i vari soggetti, creando alleanze, richiede attenzioni nuove in un gioco di non facile equilibrismo tra titolarità e fruizione, nel rispetto dei diritti di ciascuno.
Open Access in Italia tra passato e futuro: sfide e opportunitàUniversità di Padova
Presentazione di Antonella De Robbio al Workshop annuale Bibliosan, “Ricerca biomedica e pubblicazione dei risultati: la sostenibilità dell’Open Access”, Roma 4 Dicembre 2013 Ministero della Salute
Antonella De Robbio @ Ebook Lab Italia 2011 - A ciascuno il suo: diritti e ro...Ebook Lab Italia
Le intricate relazioni tra titolari di diritti e fruitori delle opere generano una complicata trama di diritti: di proprietà intellettuale, d’autore o editoriali, nel digitale, di accesso all’informazione, diritto alla privacy, … In questo variopinto tessuto le biblioteche e la tipologia istituzionale alla quale esse afferiscono sono il filo conduttore che annoda punti diritti e rovesci. La complessità dell’opera intesa come contenuto intellettuale che si esprime in un certo linguaggio, si manifesta in una determinata forma e si concreta su supporti antichi e nuovi, si accentua nella dimensione digitale laddove mutano le forme in formati più o meno aperti, si chiudono contenuti con lucchetti digitali o si aprono accessi attraverso cancelli più o meno interoperabili. Le biblioteche devono perciò considerare i diritti e i rovesci che si possono scatenare nell’offerta di servizi innovativi entro la sfera del digitale. Le potenzialità delle nuove modalità di trasmissione dei contenuti e gli innovativi dispositivi di delivery delle opere, determinano non solo nuove forme di fruizione e di apprendimento nell’utenza, ma richiedono attenzioni nuove nell’erogazione dei servizi bibliotecari tra titolarità e fruizione in un gioco di non facile equilibrismo. Ricucire gli strappi e ridurre le distanze tra i vari soggetti, significa creare alleanze tra i vari attori in termini di rispetto dei diritti di ciascuno, non solo di proprietà, ma anche di accesso.
Il futuro della comunicazione scientifica tra e-science e open accessUniversità di Padova
Presentazione alla Tavola rotonda su e-science e OA: quale futuro? quale impatto per l'OA e la produzione, lo scambio, la conservazione dei dati della ricerca?
Roma, Tor Vergata, 27 ottobre 2011
OpenAIRE: aggiornamento sull'infrastruttura e strumenti a supporto della gest...Paola Gargiulo
After an illustration of the OA requirements in Horizon 2020, the presentation covers several aspects related to the research data management and the tools offered by OpenAIRE
La gestione dei diritti nel repository istituzionale: i vari volti delle versioni di un paper tra cessioni e licenze.
Presentazione alla giornata in occasione della settimana internazionale dell'Open Access 2015 in Aula Magna, Università di Firenze 21 ottobre 2015
Open access in chemistry: from ACS Spring Meeting 2011ChemistryCentral
Open access in chemistry: information wants to be free. A presentation given at the Internet and Chemistry session at the ACS Spring National Meeting 2011.
Workshop at the Internation Post-Doc Initaitive - IPODI (Technischen Universität Berlin) on June 15th on Copyright, Green Road and Golden Road of Open Access and Creative Commons licenses
Academic libraries are increasingly investing in new efforts to support their research and teaching faculty in the activities they care about most. Learn why becoming a publisher can help meet the most fundamental needs of your research community and at the same time can help transform today’s inflationary cost model for serials. We will explore not only why to become a publisher but exactly how to achieve it, step by step, including careful selection of publishing partners, choosing the right platform for manuscript submission and editorial workflow management, one-time processes to launch a new journal, conducting peer reviews, maintaining academic quality, and measuring impact. We’ll also cover the broader range of publishing activities where libraries can have an impact, including open access monographs, general institutional repositories and subject-based author self-archiving repositories. We will close with a review of tools, services, and communities of support to nurture the new library publishing venture.
See accompanying handouts 1-7
Lauren Collister
Electronic Publications Associate, University of Pittsburgh
Timothy S. Deliyannides
Director of the Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing and Head of Information Technology, University of Pittsburgh
This presentation in intended to introduce Open Access (OA); the OA movement; OA advantages for authors, institutions and society; OA business models and publishing in OA; important tools for research and publishing; and other ‘open’ initiatives.
Trends in Open Access to Research Publications - Case Study of Oncology JournalsSimon Cotterill
A presentation about Open Access (OA) in research with a case study of journals in oncology and discussion about issues relating to OA and implications for Higher Education Institutions. This was a short paper presented at the OER14 Conference at the Centre for Life, Newcastle.
A presentation given to Direction Générale de la Recherche Scientifique et du Développement, Oran, Algeria.
Dr Tom Olyhoek gives a nice overview on the state of open access publishing, how DOAJ is central to the movement, and he describes some of the more recent developments on the DOAJ web site.
Contains content in English, French and Arabic
Open Access For Subject Specialist LibrariansMolly.ak
This presentation about open access was given to subject specialist librarians at the University of Michigan on June 9th, 2008. It provides an introduction to open access, describes the various controversies surrounding open access, and offers strategies for faculty and librarians interested in improving access to scholarly work.
Open Access & Preprints for Scholars and JournalsAuthorea
How can more scholars and journals embrace preprints to make research freely accessible? Authorea & Scholastica address this question and more in this slideshow, which overviews:
- The history and benefits of preprints
- Recent OA mandates by governments and funding bodies
- Steps scholars and journals can take to support Green OA via preprints
- New OA publishing models journals are pioneering using preprints
Open Access & Preprints for Scholars and JournalsAuthorea
How can more scholars and journals embrace preprints to make research freely accessible? Authorea & Scholastica address this question and more in this slideshow, which overviews:
- The history and benefits of preprints
- Recent OA mandates by governments and funding bodies
- Steps scholars and journals can take to support Green OA via preprints
- New OA publishing models journals are pioneering using preprints
A presentation made to the U.S. Food & Drug Administration’s Office of Science & Engineering Laboratories on the current state of open access in the United States and how DOAJ is tackling issues of quality in open access publishing
Open Access + Preprints for Scholars and Journals Scholastica
How can more scholars and journals embrace preprints to make research freely accessible? Scholastica and Authorea address this question and more in this slideshow, which overviews:
- The history and benefits of preprints
- Recent OA mandates by governments and funding bodies
- Steps scholars and journals can take to support Green OA via preprints
- New OA publishing models journals are pioneering using preprints
PER UNA SCIENZA PARTECIPATA COMUNICARE AL MEGLIO LA RICERCA AL GRANDE PUBBLICO.
Padova, 16 ottobre 2015 . #SciPar
"Open Publishing: choices, bolts and nuts
!"
www.scicomm.it
Twitter : #SciPar
Presentazione "Open Access per la comunicazione scientifica" con note al convegno Pubblica, Blogga Twitta. Fare carriera nella scienza oggi.
Padova, 2-3 ottobre 2014
Hashtag: #socialpeer
Some librarians’s snippets: about the dark side of Google BooksUniversità di Padova
Intervento al Law Tech Seminar 2010
Google Books: meraviglia o minaccia dell’era digitale?
25 ottobre 2010, ore 15.00-19.00
Facoltà di Giurisprudenza
Sala conferenze, via Verdi 53, Trento
La gestione dei diritti nella digitalizzazione di massa: casi a confrontoUniversità di Padova
Intervento al Seminario
TUTELA DEI BENI CULTURALI E DIRITTO D'AUTORE
Un dialogo sperimentale tra saperi
Trento, 9 aprile 2013
Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia (aula 110)
Nella giungla degli antichi diritti - d’autore, editoriali - tra diagrammi di flusso che calcolano aperture più o meno estese del pubblico dominio - da Paese a Paese – in mezzo alle opere orfane nelle terre di nessuno, tra i paradossi dei diritti nel digitale e relativi DRM posti ai contenuti, le biblioteche continuano ad erogare i loro servizi. Distribuzione di contenuti, interoperabilità tecnica e organizzativa, prestito digitale, e diritti di accesso ai contenuti creano potenziali aspettative nei netizen e nelle comunità che ruotano attorno alle biblioteche web 2.0. In bilico tra vecchi diritti e le comunità che premono verso nuove forme di e-democracy, le biblioteche evolvono e mutano.
Realizzazione portale web per la comunità accademica (docenti e studenti) foc...Università di Padova
Progetto CRUI/SIAE: La Cultura del Diritto d'autore
SOGGETTO CAPOFILA: Università degli Studi di Padova – Centro di Ateneo per le Biblioteche (CAB )
Coordinamento progetto: Antonella De Robbio
http://dirittoautore.cab.unipd.it/
La biblioteca accademica nella filiera della comunicazione scientifica: ridef...Università di Padova
Presentazione al Convegno annuale alle Stelline 2013
Le Biblioteche in Cerca di Alleati, Milano (Italy). Palazzo Stelline, 14-15 March 2013.
Il lavoro è inquadrato nel rapporto tra scienza e società, e come il ruolo della biblioteca accademica agisce nell'equilibro mutato tra scienza e società a seguito delle nuove tecnologie. Il primo punto è il mercato dell'economia della conoscenza focalizzato sul valore della catena informativa nella comunicazione scientifica che non può essere solo un valore "economico". Si arriva poi al ruolo della biblioteca accademica nel penetrare nell'ambiente sociale... passando attraverso la riflessione dei modelli economici, non tanto quali sono esistenti ad oggi, ma cosa si intende per modello economico ..
OpenAccess policies as tools for innovative research and educational challenges.Università di Padova
Intervention to the International Conference
The future of political science: an international and interdisciplinary conversation, Università degli Studi di Padova, 14-15 december 2012.
Google Books: per le biblioteche sarà la fine o un nuovo inizio?Università di Padova
Presentazione al Convegno Annuale delle Stelline 2011
L’Italia delle biblioteche: scommettendo sul futuro nel 150 anniversario dell’unità nazionale, Milano (Italy), 3-4 March 2011
Il lavoro vuole fornire un'analisi dei principali progetti di digitalizzazione, la loro tipologia e l’impatto che hanno avuto in termini di dimensione culturale, a livello locale, nazionale, europeo o internazionale, le spinte che hanno determinato le linee di sviluppo ad oggi presenti nel mercato, le forme del coinvolgimento delle biblioteche nel contesto di tali iniziative, tra ieri, oggi e domani.
Presentazione al Seminario a Ca' Foscari, Venezia
"Il sangue del cordone ombelicale:
dimensioni etiche, sociali, giuridiche ed economiche"
11 Febbraio 2012, Venezia.
Accesso Aperto e diritti: un difficile equilibrio tra tutele e libertàUniversità di Padova
Intervento al Convegno a Torino, 15 novembre 2013 "Left or Right”, un convegno di approfondimento dedicato al diritto d’autore, ai dati aperti e all’open Source. Un nuovo concetto si evidenzia anche in seno alle PA, soprattutto in attuazione del C.A.D. (codice dell’amministrazione digitale) e in relazione, quindi, ai concetti di open source, free software ed open content, ed inizia finalmente un concreto dibattito su open government e open data. L’Unione Europea ha cercato di armonizzare le diverse leggi sul diritto d’autore degli stati membri, ma le leggi nazionali ancora oggi variano tra loro in modo considerevole, col permanere di una notevole contraddizione legislativa, sulla materia, all’interno dell’Unione.
Conference presentation. Diritti vecchi e nuovi tra servizi bibliotecari e social web: come cambiano le regole di un gioco di ruolo. In Proceedings I diritti della biblioteca: accesso alla conoscenza, proprietà intellettuale e nuovi servizi. The Rights of the Library Access to Knowledge, Intellectual Property, New Services, Milano. Palazzo delle Stelline. 6-7 marzo 2008.
This presentation, created by Syed Faiz ul Hassan, explores the profound influence of media on public perception and behavior. It delves into the evolution of media from oral traditions to modern digital and social media platforms. Key topics include the role of media in information propagation, socialization, crisis awareness, globalization, and education. The presentation also examines media influence through agenda setting, propaganda, and manipulative techniques used by advertisers and marketers. Furthermore, it highlights the impact of surveillance enabled by media technologies on personal behavior and preferences. Through this comprehensive overview, the presentation aims to shed light on how media shapes collective consciousness and public opinion.
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
1. Open Science: for a Better Science
Antonella De Robbio
Publishing Open Access: who pays?
DIPARTIMENTO DI PSICOLOGIA GENERALE DIPARTIMENTO DI
PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E DELLA SOCIALIZZAZIONE
DIPARTIMENTO DI FILOSOFIA, SOCIOLOGIA, PEDAGOGIA E
PSICOLOGIA APPLICATA
2. The openness of science was born as a social norm,
shared by informal knowledge communities.
4. Open Access has been perceived as a
threat to the publishers' profits
Eric Dezenhall
5. • Prices for online access to articles
from two major publishers have
increased 145% over the past six
years, with some journals costing as
much as $40,000
• Subscription to The Journal of
Comparative Neurology = 300 books.
• More than 15,000 academics have
already joined a boycott of Elsevier,
the huge Dutch publisher, in protest
at its journal pricing and access
policies.
• Harvard's faculty advisory council
said major publishers had created an
"untenable situation" at the university
by making scholarly interaction
"fiscally unsustainable" and
"academically restrictive", while
drawing profits of 35% or more.
6. How much money do journal
publishers make? A lot
profit margins range from 32% to nearly 42%. Elsevier's profit
of over €878 million converts to just over $1 billion.
Apple Inc., arguably the most successful company in the world
currently, show a profit margin of 20%
7. Commercial Publishers and High Cost of Access
While students struggle to afford access to crucial journals, the largest
publishers continue to make profit margins at and in excess of 30%
8. Reader Pays' pricing model or Subscription Model
2014 Annual Financial Report Elsevier
2015 Annual Financial Report RELX Group
9. RELX Group was previously known as Reed Elsevier. The
company announced the change of the operating company's
name to RELX Group in February 2015
11. Green OA vs. Gold OA.
Which one to choose?
300 italian
Red road: Is the APC
model a viable option to
the transition?
Black road:
•Vanity Publishing: Scam
or Spam?
•Predatory Publishing (is
not OA),
•Hijacked Journals
•Misleading metrics
14. The copyright as false problem
• most intellectual content (90%) are hindered inside editorial
platforms because copyright transfert agreement
• the copyright is perceived as strong legal barrier, because copyright
laws influence in a negative way the dissemination of intellectual
research output
• authors, Universities, aren’t awake about difference between
authorship and ownership
• disastrous consequences about rights ceased to third market actors
which limit or slowdown the dissemination processes and negatively
influence the impact on the community, with heavy cultural, social
and economic relapses.
15. authors must take the
control of their right and
learn to determine the
conditions under which
her or his work is made
available on open access,
choosing to deposit a
copy of a work in a
repository or publish in
an open access journal.
19. Libraries typically must pay 4 to 6 times as much per page for journals
owned by commercial publishers as for journals owned by non-profit
societies.
These differences in price do not reflect differences in the quality of
the journals.
Commercial journals are on average less cited than the non-profits and
the average cost per citation of commercial journals ranges from 5 to
15 times as high as that of their non-profit counterparts
Bergstrom, C. T. & Bergstrom, T. C. The costs and benefits of library site licenses to
academic journals. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 101, 897-902 (2004).
Can 'author pays' journals compete with 'reader pays'?
Nature, Thursday 26 January 2017
Bergstrom, C. T. & Bergstrom, T. C
20. Article Processing Charge Model:
A red road?
https://www.elsevier.com/__data/promis_misc/j.
https://www.springeropen.com/get-published/art
21. Wellcome Trust and COAF
Open Access Spend, 2014-15
Table 3: Top 5 publishers (by volume of COAF-supported research) and APC spend
The Charity Open Access Fund
(COAF) is a partnership between six
health research charities, including
the Wellcome Trust, to enable free
and unrestricted access to the
published outputs of the research
22.
23. Elsevier selling access to open
access again
According to
public data available on Figshare
, Wellcome Trust paid
Elsevier £2,168.08 to
make open access the
article
24. Download full-text articles
and selected book
chapters in PDF and
HTML formats (where
available) up to the
amount of articles
specified in your pre-
purchased bundle. View
abstracts in references of
HTML articles where
available.
One-time purchase. The
bundle expires after 12
months.
Purchase bundles of 100,
200 or 500 articles and
chapters, with a discounted
price-per-article for bundles
larger than 500.
Access to downloaded full
text for 24 hours, with the
ability to print and store
documents for future
reference.
25. The Hijacked journals list includes journals
for which someone has created a counterfeit
website, stealing the journal’s identity and
soliciting articles submissions using the
author-pays model (gold open-access).
26. Changing the journal funding model to
pre-payment doesn’t increase publisher
market power
The model does nothing to
resolve this disparity in
pricing. APC vary widely
It remains an unknown, and possibly
quite expensive, factor in
determining what the model would
actually cost
pre-payment
through APCs offers
an economically
sound path
to decrease publish
er market power
and
to reduce prices.
pre-payment also
offers the opportunity
to reduce publisher
pricing power if we
let authors have
an economic role
The total revenue
include
subscriptions and
grant funding
allocated for
article processing
charges: Double
Diping
Without reliable data, it is impossible to predict the
true costs to research institutions of the “flipped”
model.”
need data
27. small data stewardship
Open APC initiative. Datasets
on fee-based Open Access
publishing openapc@uni-
bielefeld.de
• varie istituzioni europee
convogliano i loro dati su come
hanno speso i soldi per APC in
un unico punto
• Il confronto con altri atenei (UK
o USA) fa capire come nei
diversi paesi ci siano strategie di
pubblicazione diverse.
• https://github.com/OpenAPC/op
enapc-de/wiki/Data-Submission-
Handout
Dati richiesti
• (*) istituzione
• (*) periodo (anno di
pagamento APC)
• (*) euro
• (*) doi
• (*) hybrid oa (TRUE/FALSE)
• Publisher
• Journal full title
• ISSN
• Fulltext url
L’apertura della scienza nasce entro comunità di conoscenza informali
come norma sociale
Clay Shirky, Internet e il collegio invisibile di Maria Chiara Pievatolo
http://btfp.sp.unipi.it/?p=322
La scienza aperta come questione sociale
Study on the economic and technical evolution of the scientific publication markets in Europe
https://www.ulb.ac.be/unica/docs/librarians_2006_scientific_pub_study.pdf
Nel rapporto della Commissione europea sui modelli di business dell’editoria scientifica, già nel 2006 emergeva che nei trent’anni passati i prezzi dei periodici scientifici avevano subito un incremento regolare che ha portato, tra gli anni 1975 e 2005, ad un aumento del 200%-300% oltre l’inflazione. I profitti dichiarati da alcuni oligopoli dell’editoria commerciale arrivano anche al 48%.
V. Study on the economic and technical evolution of the scientific publication markets in Europe, reperibile all’URL: <http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/pdf/scientific-publication-study_en.pdf>.
Secondo un rapporto di Nature, già nel 2007, un gruppo editoriale tra cui l’ Ass American Publishers aveva ingaggiato il PR Eric Dezenhall come consulente di pubbliche relazioni, per aiutarli a ostacolare il movimento OA
I consigli di Dezenhall che ha fama di essere il pit-bull delle pi-erre [affare ExxonMobil vs. Greenpeace]
furono di concentrarsi nelle reti sociali e nei forum su termini come garanzia di qualità, integrità e sostenibilità economica abbinate al concetto di peer-reviewed journals e editoria tradizionale. Instillando il concetto che OA = scarsa qualità
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v445/n7126/full/445347a.html
messaggi semplici “il pubblico accesso è pari alla censura governativa”
Unire le forze con gruppi ideologicamente contrari alle iniziative di accesso pubblico come la PubMed Central del NIH
approccio strategico: creare equiparazione mentale tra i modelli editoriali tradizionali e la peer review portando alla falsa percezione che OA equivale a scarsa qualità e convincere gli scienziati che “il mondo senza articoli peer-reviewed sarebbe catastrofico”
L’Incremento dei prezzi per accesso online ai periodici dei maggiori editori è stato negli ultimi sei anni pari al 145%, con alcuni periodici che sono arrivati a costare $40.000.
15,000 autori accademici si sono uniti all’iniziativa di Tim Gowers [sito Il Costo della Conoscenza] joined a boycott of Elsevier, per protestare contro l’editore olandese, multinazionale tra i 100 footsie che detiene un grossa fetta del mercato editoriale scientifico.
FTSE 100 - acronimo di 'Financial Times Stock Exchange' - l’indice azionario delle 100 società più capitalizzate quotate al London Stock Exchange. (joint venture con il Financial Times)
Il sistema è assurdo e i costi insostenibili, la ricerca viene terribilmente danneggiata, dicono ad Harvard. Un anno di abbonamento a The Journal of Comparative Neurology è pari a 300 libri.
La risposta è l’Open Access, ma servono POLICY CHIARE. Per questo Harvard da anni ha adottato policy per l’OA per il controllo del copyright.
A inizio 2012 la comunità accademica ha dato l’avvio alla campagna di boicottaggio The Cost of Knowledge con una petizione di protesta contro il modello economico editoriale di Elsevier. Si chiedeva agli editori di abbassare i prezzi di abbonamento e di proporre modelli alternativi che guardassero all’Open access.
Reed Elsevier è un FTSE 100 - acronimo di 'Financial Times Stock Exchange' - viene pronunciato volutamente footsie che tradotto in italiano significa "piedino" alludendo all'intesa che si deve creare per fare business. E’ l’indice azionario delle 100 società più capitalizzate quotate al London Stock Exchange. (joint venture con il Financial Times)
"Elsevier 2009 $2 billion (miliardi) profits could fund worldwide OA at $1,383 per article," Heather Morrison, 04/27/10
"Wiley STM: 3rd quarter profits up 18%," Heather Morrison, 04/26/10
http://www.relx.com/investorcentre/reports%202007/Documents/2014/reed_elsevier_ar_2014.pdf
Il modello economico basato sulla sottoscrizione che è quello a noi più familiare in quanto di derivazione dall’era della stampa, è nettamente contrapposto all’emergente modello alternativo, tipico dell’era digitale, noto come Open Access.
Per realizzare i suoi obiettivi, l'open access utilizza due strategie:
l'auto-archiviazione in repository aperti a carattere istituzionale o disciplinare: l'autore può depositare la versione precedente la stampa (preprint), la versione stampata (publisher version) o la versione successiva a quella già pubblicata (post-print) del saggio, in accordo con le scelte relative al diritto d'autore e sottoscritte con l'editore;
pubblicazione di saggi su riviste ad accesso aperto, che garantiscono la peer review e adottano un modello economico improntato a criteri di liberalità: i testi sono accessibili liberamente e gratuitamente a tutti; i costi di pubblicazione, quando richiesti, sono coperti da una quota versata dall'autore o dall'istituzione di appartenenza; la tendenza è comprendere i costi di pubblicazione nel budget stanziato per la ricerca.
DOAJ – Directory of Open Access Journals
Nella comunicazione scientifica è fenomeno recente: author-pay stampa/pubblicazione di poche centinaia di copie, acquisto in anticipo di un numero determinato di copie.
Nell’editoria accademica il meccanismo è subdolo e strumentalizza l’Open Access:
contatti personali di autori via mail da parte di
società di servizi editoriali che si configurano come for-profit companies offrendo servizi personalizzati a
“categorie di autori accademici”, solitamente giovani ricercatori, o dottorandi, solleticando il senso di autopromozione personale
Si tratta di falso Open Access, editori che strumentalizzano l’OA e che operano attraverso forme di spam via mail, contattando autori, e agendo ai limiti dello scam.
si stanno configurando modelli di impresa editoriali che pur presentando non poche ambiguità, creano scenari complessi che richiederebbero un monitoraggio in termini di qualità di tutto il processo, e non solo dei contenuti. Nuovi modelli economici emergenti?
Lista di Beall 2013: 225 editori e 106 periodici definiti “predatori”, pericoloso incremento della crescita di editori e periodici in violazione di norme e codici etici: nel 2011 la lista includeva 23 editori e nel 2010 solo 18 e nessun periodico indipendente.
3500 archivi open access in tutto il mondo
Noi della comunità KURENAI Kyoto University Research Information Repository - si legge nel post - siamo orgogliosi di sottolineare che il nostro repository giapponese fornisce in accesso aperto la versione finale d'autore dei lavori originali del Professor Shinya Yamanaka [10], a cui quest'anno è stato assegnato il Premio Nobel per la Medicina e Fisiologia. In particolare si segnala che il suo lavoro di ricerca chiave – Induction of pluripotent stem cells from adult human fibroblasts by defined factors, pubblicato sulla rivista "Cell" il 30 novembre 2007 – e che ha determinato l'assegnazione del Premio, è stato depositato in KURENAI il 22 febbraio 2008 [11] nella collezione del Center for iPS Cell Research and Application dell'Università di Kyoto.
After the 2014 scandal they self-reported an internal audit (with no external or independent oversight) and apparently refunded a total of “about $70,000” to readers who had ‘mistakenly’ been allowed to purchase articles that should have been open access. There was no independent audit of Elsevier’s systems – this was all self-reported.
I do not trust Elsevier to self-report on the scale of these events – I really really think governments should step-in here and external, independent auditors should be given access to their internal systems to determine independently the scale of these “mistakes” that defraud readers to the financial benefit of Elsevier.
Now as you know recently I’ve been looking at 2-years worth of Wellcome Trust open access APC payment data.
This post is just to let the world know that in 2017 Elsevier are doing it again. They are selling articles that have been paid-for to be open access.
According to public data available on Figshare, Wellcome Trust paid Elsevier £2,168.08 to make open access an article entitled:
A multi-center comparison of diagnostic methods for the biochemical evaluation of suspected mitochondrial disorders paid to be open access on behalf of WT Grant number: 096919, Professor DM Turnbull, Newcastle University.
Today (14th February 2017), from Elsevier’s ScienceDirect website, I found that this article was behind a paywall. To be able to access this at home (outside the paywall), Elsevier charged me $43.14 including tax, in return for 24 hours access to this paid-for “open access” article. I bought access to the article to prove beyond doubt that Elsevier really were selling this open access article and it wasn’t just some fleeting browser error that they could explain away.
Below is a screenshot of my emailed electronic receipt as proof, with my home address crudely redacted to protect my privacy.
If you are a journalist and would like to talk more about this case, or the history and extent of ‘paywalled open access’ please email me at: ross.mounce@gmail.com
In the mean time I shall be contacting both the Wellcome Trust and Elsevier to alert them about this issue, again.
Esempi
Advanced Science Index
African Quality Centre for Journals
American Standards for Journals and Research (ASJR)
CiteFactor
Cosmos Impact Factor
Directory of Indexing and Impact Factor (DIIF)
Directory of Journal Quality Factor
Einstein Institute for Scientific Information (EISI)
Eurasian Scientific Journal Index (ESJI)
General Impact Factor
Global Impact Factor
Impact Factor Services for International Journals(I.F.S.I.J.)
IndexCopernicus
Infobase Index
Institute for Science Information (ISI)
International Impact Factor Services
International Institute for Research
International Institute of Organized Research (I2OR)
International Journal Impact Factor (IJIF)
International Scientific Indexing (ISI)
International Scientific Institute (ISI) (scijournal.org)
International Services for Impact Factor and Indexing(ISIFI)
International Society for Research Activity (ISRA) Journal Impact Factor (JIF)
Jour Informatics
Journal Impact Factor
Journals Impact Factor (JIFACTOR)
Journal Influence Factor
Journals Consortium. Journal Influence Factor (JIF)
JPR Impact Factor
Open Academic Journals Index
Pubicon Science Index
Science Impact Factor
Scientific Indexing Services (SIS)
Scientific Journal Impact Factor
SCIJOURNAL.ORG (International Scientific Institute)
Technical Impact Factor
Universal Impact Factor
AGROCHIMICA e Agrochimica
controllare anche questa
http://www.verificheonline.net/
http://www.newjuris.com/index.php/VERIFICHE/index
Epistemologia di Franco Angeli
Stesso ISSN 0392-9760
Stessa copertina
Nomi comitato editoriale presi probabi
Falso
http://epistemologia-journal.com//index.html
Indirizzi fasulli, nomi volutamente con refusi «Evandero» al posto di «Evandro»
Evandero Agazzi
Università di Genova
[email_address]
O con refusi voluti su dominio postale @uninc al posto di @unimcCondirettore
Marco Buzzoni
Università di Macerata
[email_address]
Comitato di Redazione
Marco Borga (Redattore Capo - Chief of Staff)
[email_address]
Fabio Minazzi (Redattore Recensioni - Book Review Editor)
[email_address]
Michele Marsonet, Luisa Montecucco, Dario Palladino, Carlo Penco, PaoloAldo Rossi, Valentina Savojardo, Nicla Vassallo
di Redazione
Paolo Musso: musso.pl@libero.com. Books for review must be sent to the Review Editor: Prof. Fabio Minazzi, c/o Dicom, Via Mazzini n. 5 - 21100 Varese, Italy
Contattaci (via form)
indirizzo : TILGHER-GENOVA S A S, VIA ASSAROTTI 31/15, GENOA, ITALY, 16122
???
http://bgp.he.net/dns/epistemologia-journal.com
http://scholarlyoa.com/other-pages/hijacked-journals/
http://publicationethics.org/
Gli abusi nella peer-review sono numerosi e rilevanti.
Nel 1999 è stata fondato da un gruppo di redattori il COPE Committee on Publication Ethics):
oltre 500 casi segnalati dal COPE.
Il sito web non è trasparente sulle metriche che usa e fornisce informazioni scarse sulla propria identità e ubicazione. Non è chiaro chi operi dietro al sito e quale sia la sua esperienza. Mancano inoltre informazioni economiche.
L’inclusione delle riviste nella loro lista è a pagamento
I valori bibliometrici per la maggior parte delle riviste aumenta di anno in anno
La compagna usa Google Scholar come database di riferimento per il calcolo delle metriche (Google Scholar non seleziona a priori, ma nel suo database sono indicizzati anche editori e periodici predatori)
La metrica usa il termine “impact factor” nel nome.
La metodologia per il calcolo del valore è artificiosa, non poggia su basi scientifiche e non è originale.
La compagnia esiste al solo scopo di guadagnare soldi da riviste di discutibile reputazione e dubbia qualità, che dicono di usare la via aurea strumentalizzando l’OA
La compagnia viene pagata da editori predatori per assegnare a riviste discutibili alti valori bibliometrici fasulli di modo da presentarle a ignari giovani studiosi come prestigiose di modo che si incrementino le sottomissioni di articoli e perciò i guadagni dell’editore predatore (che si spaccia per Gold)
In alternative la compagnia è una copertura per editori esistenti e assegna valori bibliometrici fasulli ai propri periodici.
Va citato il recente Piano nazionale olandese come esempio illuminante con lo scopo di implementare la transizione nazionale del sistema della ricerca olandese verso l’open access. Tre gli obiettivi del piano nazionale: 1. Promuovere l’open access per le pubblicazioni scientifiche 2. Promuovere un uso e riuso ottimale dei dati di ricerca. 3. Adattare i sistemi di valutazione legati al merito di modo che ricomprendano le linee open access e open data, allineando il sistema degli incentivi legati al merito entro obiettivi di open science.
Il National Plan Open Science promosso dal Governo olandese è stato ufficialmente presentato il 9 febbraio 2017 dal Ministro dell’Educazione, Cultura e delle Scienze.