This presentation was provided by Matt Spitzer of the Center for Open Science (COS) during the NISO virtual conference, The Preprint: Integrating the Form into the Scholarly Ecosystem, held on February 14, 2018.
Presentation at the Online Information Conference, London 20th November 2013. Taking a look at the drivers behind the emerging Web of Data and how libraries need to be and can be part of it in the future.
OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard: from repositories to repositories (Open ...OpenAIRE
Poster presented at the International Open Repositories 2017 Conference, Brisbane - 27 July. OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard: one-stop-shop web service where content providers
interact with OpenAIRE.
Slides from my workshop at Open Repositories 2016 about DSpace's Linked Data support. The slides include a short introduction into the Semantic Web and Linked Data, the main ideas behind the Linked Data support of DSpace, information on how to configure this feature and some examples about how to query DSpace installations for Linked Data.
Presentation at the Online Information Conference, London 20th November 2013. Taking a look at the drivers behind the emerging Web of Data and how libraries need to be and can be part of it in the future.
OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard: from repositories to repositories (Open ...OpenAIRE
Poster presented at the International Open Repositories 2017 Conference, Brisbane - 27 July. OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard: one-stop-shop web service where content providers
interact with OpenAIRE.
Slides from my workshop at Open Repositories 2016 about DSpace's Linked Data support. The slides include a short introduction into the Semantic Web and Linked Data, the main ideas behind the Linked Data support of DSpace, information on how to configure this feature and some examples about how to query DSpace installations for Linked Data.
DSpace-CRIS slides presented at ORCID's Better Together webinar on 19.09.2019, full slide deck with ORCID introduction at https://doi.org/10.23640/07243.9884033.v2.
Video Recording available at https://vimeo.com/361523018
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
4th OpenAIRE Workshop - Legal and Sustainability Issues for Open Access Infrastructures
Nov. Vilnius
Background to the Sustainability of OpenAIRE - Dr. Birgit Schmidt, Scientific Manager - Goettingen State and University Library
Starting from scratch – building the perfect digital repositoryVioleta Ilik
By establishing a digital repository on the Feinberg School of Medicine (FSM), Northwestern University, Chicago campus, we anticipate to gain ability to create, share, and preserve attractive, functional, and citable digital collections and exhibits. Galter Health Sciences Library did not have a repository as of November 2014. In just a few moths we formed a small team that was charged at looking to select the most suitable open source platform for our digital repository software. We followed the National Library of Medicine master evaluation criteria by looking at various factors that included: functionality, scalability, extensibility, interoperability, ease of deployment, system security, system, physical environment, platform support, demonstrated successful deployments, system support, strength of development community, stability of development organization, and strength of technology roadmap for the future. These factors are important for our case considering the desire to connect the digital repository with another platform that was an essential piece in the big FSM picture – VIVO. VIVO is a linked data platform that serves as a researchers’ hub and which provides the names of researchers from academic institutions along with their research output, affiliation, research overview, service, background, researcher’s identities, teaching, and much more.
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
Scholarly citations from one publication to another, expressed as reference lists within academic articles, are core elements of scholarly communication. Unfortunately, they usually can be accessed en masse only by paying significant subscription fees to commercial organizations, while those few services that do made them available for free impose strict limitations on their reuse. In this paper we provide an overview of the OpenCitations Project (http://opencitations.net) undertaken to remedy this situation, and of its main product, the OpenCitations Corpus, which is an open repository of accurate bibliographic citation data harvested from the scholarly literature, made available in RDF under a Creative Commons public domain dedication.
Paper at: https://w3id.org/oc/paper/occ-lisc2016.html
Oss and libraries enabling arabic libraries and creating opportunitiesMassoud AlShareef
What is Open Source?
Who is using Open Source?
Open Source Community and Governance
Why should libraries care?
Library Software Overview
Open Source and Library Software today
Open Source and Arabic Libraries today
Why should Arabic libraries care even more?
Arabic Library Software Success Stories
Creating Opportunities: Open Source Software should play a role in driving our National ICT Strategy?
The article discusses the availability of information about Open Source Software for LMS and digitization. The term open source describes practices in production and development that promote access to the end product's source materials which is freely available throughout the web.
David Shotton - OpenCon Oxford, 1st Dec 2017Crossref
David Shotton, Senior Researcher, Oxford eResearch Centre: http://oerc.ox.ac.uk/people/DavidShotton
Director, OpenCitations http://opencitations.net
david.shotton@opencitations.net
Tony Epstein (Sir Michael Anthony Epstein, discoverer of the Epstein-Barr virus) once said to me something I’ve never forgotten:
“Research that is not published is wasted research.”
We live today in an era of open scholarship and open data, in which the Web is the primary means of communication. For many people, information that is not freely published on the Web might as well not exist. It is thus “wasted research”.
However, within academia, we also have to live in the legacy world of subscription-access journals and subscription-access citation indexes such as Web of Science and Scopus – freely available only to members of rich scholarly institutions like Oxford University that pays hundreds of thousands of dollars annually to obtain access for their members, not to the rest of the world including scholars in developing nations.
Today I will briefly discuss the five factors desirable for scholarly publications – the Five Stars of Online Journal Articles: peer review, open access, enriched content, available datasets and machine-readable metadata [1].
I will then discuss how bibliographic citations, which permit an author to give credit to another person's endeavours and integrate our independent acts of scholarship into a global knowledge network, are being freed from commercial restrictions by publication in the OpenCitations Corpus (http://opencitations.net), an open repository of scholarly citation data that others may build upon, enhance and reuse for any purpose [2, 3].
[1] Shotton D (2012). The Five Stars of Online Journal Articles — a Framework for Article Evaluation. D-Lib Magazine 18 (1/2) (January/February 2012 issue). http://dx.doi.org/10.1045/january2012-shotton
[2] David Shotton (2013). Open citations. Nature, 502 (7471): 295-297. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/502295a
[3] Silvio Peroni, David Shotton, Fabio Vitali (2016). Freedom for bibliographic references: OpenCitations arise. Proceedings of 2016 International Workshop on Linked Data for Information Extraction (LD4IE 2016): 32-43.
https://w3id.org/oc/paper/occ-lisc2016.html
DSpace-CRIS slides presented at ORCID's Better Together webinar on 19.09.2019, full slide deck with ORCID introduction at https://doi.org/10.23640/07243.9884033.v2.
Video Recording available at https://vimeo.com/361523018
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
4th OpenAIRE Workshop - Legal and Sustainability Issues for Open Access Infrastructures
Nov. Vilnius
Background to the Sustainability of OpenAIRE - Dr. Birgit Schmidt, Scientific Manager - Goettingen State and University Library
Starting from scratch – building the perfect digital repositoryVioleta Ilik
By establishing a digital repository on the Feinberg School of Medicine (FSM), Northwestern University, Chicago campus, we anticipate to gain ability to create, share, and preserve attractive, functional, and citable digital collections and exhibits. Galter Health Sciences Library did not have a repository as of November 2014. In just a few moths we formed a small team that was charged at looking to select the most suitable open source platform for our digital repository software. We followed the National Library of Medicine master evaluation criteria by looking at various factors that included: functionality, scalability, extensibility, interoperability, ease of deployment, system security, system, physical environment, platform support, demonstrated successful deployments, system support, strength of development community, stability of development organization, and strength of technology roadmap for the future. These factors are important for our case considering the desire to connect the digital repository with another platform that was an essential piece in the big FSM picture – VIVO. VIVO is a linked data platform that serves as a researchers’ hub and which provides the names of researchers from academic institutions along with their research output, affiliation, research overview, service, background, researcher’s identities, teaching, and much more.
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
Scholarly citations from one publication to another, expressed as reference lists within academic articles, are core elements of scholarly communication. Unfortunately, they usually can be accessed en masse only by paying significant subscription fees to commercial organizations, while those few services that do made them available for free impose strict limitations on their reuse. In this paper we provide an overview of the OpenCitations Project (http://opencitations.net) undertaken to remedy this situation, and of its main product, the OpenCitations Corpus, which is an open repository of accurate bibliographic citation data harvested from the scholarly literature, made available in RDF under a Creative Commons public domain dedication.
Paper at: https://w3id.org/oc/paper/occ-lisc2016.html
Oss and libraries enabling arabic libraries and creating opportunitiesMassoud AlShareef
What is Open Source?
Who is using Open Source?
Open Source Community and Governance
Why should libraries care?
Library Software Overview
Open Source and Library Software today
Open Source and Arabic Libraries today
Why should Arabic libraries care even more?
Arabic Library Software Success Stories
Creating Opportunities: Open Source Software should play a role in driving our National ICT Strategy?
The article discusses the availability of information about Open Source Software for LMS and digitization. The term open source describes practices in production and development that promote access to the end product's source materials which is freely available throughout the web.
David Shotton - OpenCon Oxford, 1st Dec 2017Crossref
David Shotton, Senior Researcher, Oxford eResearch Centre: http://oerc.ox.ac.uk/people/DavidShotton
Director, OpenCitations http://opencitations.net
david.shotton@opencitations.net
Tony Epstein (Sir Michael Anthony Epstein, discoverer of the Epstein-Barr virus) once said to me something I’ve never forgotten:
“Research that is not published is wasted research.”
We live today in an era of open scholarship and open data, in which the Web is the primary means of communication. For many people, information that is not freely published on the Web might as well not exist. It is thus “wasted research”.
However, within academia, we also have to live in the legacy world of subscription-access journals and subscription-access citation indexes such as Web of Science and Scopus – freely available only to members of rich scholarly institutions like Oxford University that pays hundreds of thousands of dollars annually to obtain access for their members, not to the rest of the world including scholars in developing nations.
Today I will briefly discuss the five factors desirable for scholarly publications – the Five Stars of Online Journal Articles: peer review, open access, enriched content, available datasets and machine-readable metadata [1].
I will then discuss how bibliographic citations, which permit an author to give credit to another person's endeavours and integrate our independent acts of scholarship into a global knowledge network, are being freed from commercial restrictions by publication in the OpenCitations Corpus (http://opencitations.net), an open repository of scholarly citation data that others may build upon, enhance and reuse for any purpose [2, 3].
[1] Shotton D (2012). The Five Stars of Online Journal Articles — a Framework for Article Evaluation. D-Lib Magazine 18 (1/2) (January/February 2012 issue). http://dx.doi.org/10.1045/january2012-shotton
[2] David Shotton (2013). Open citations. Nature, 502 (7471): 295-297. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/502295a
[3] Silvio Peroni, David Shotton, Fabio Vitali (2016). Freedom for bibliographic references: OpenCitations arise. Proceedings of 2016 International Workshop on Linked Data for Information Extraction (LD4IE 2016): 32-43.
https://w3id.org/oc/paper/occ-lisc2016.html
This presentation introduces the COAR Interest Group that will provide a forum about controlled vocabularies to describe Open Access scientific results
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the closing segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Eight: Limitations and Potential Solutions, was held on May 23, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the seventh segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session 7: Open Source Language Models, was held on May 16, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the sixth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Six: Text Classification with LLMs, was held on May 9, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fifth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Five: Named Entity Recognition with LLMs, was held on May 2, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fourth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Four: Structured Data and Assistants, was held on April 25, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the third segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Three: Beginning Conversations, was held on April 18, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Kaveh Bazargan of River Valley Technologies, during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Dana Compton of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the second segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Two: Large Language Models, was held on April 11, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Teresa Hazen of the University of Arizona, Geoff Morse of Northwestern University. and Ken Varnum of the University of Michigan, during the Spring ODI Conformance Statement Workshop for Libraries. This event was held on April 9, 2024
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the opening segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session One: Introduction to Machine Learning, was held on April 4, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the eight and final session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session eight, "Building Data Driven Applications" was held on Thursday, December 7, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the seventh session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session seven, "Vector Databases and Semantic Searching" was held on Thursday, November 30, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the sixth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session six, "Text Mining Techniques" was held on Thursday, November 16, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the fifth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session five, "Text Processing for Library Data" was held on Thursday, November 9, 2023.
This presentation was provided by Todd Carpenter, Executive Director, during the NISO webinar on "Strategic Planning." The event was held virtually on November 8, 2023.
This presentation was provided by Rhonda Ross of CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society, and Jonathan Clark of the International DOI Foundation, during the NISO webinar on "Strategic Planning." The event was held virtually on November 8, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the fourth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session four, "Data Mining Techniques" was held on Thursday, November 2, 2023.
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Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
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1. Matthew Spitzer
Center for Open Science
@matthewspitzer
http://cos.io/
@OSFramework
Preprints and the Research Workflow
Funded by:
2. Open-source
OSF Preprints and the OSF supporting it are public goods
infrastructure with open-source code at the COS GitHub repo
(https://github.com/CenterForOpenScience)
3.
4.
5. https://osf.io/preprints
Community Driven approach to
Scholarly Communication requires a
custom approach and integration with
multiple workflows
Any group can launch and manage a
fully functional service for their
community, including use of
• custom domains
• custom taxonomies
• brand identity
• editorial guidelines
13. OpenSesame
OSF
Connecting the research workflow and archiving activities, changes, outputs
with tools to facilitate collaboration, sharing, and ease of access
14. https://osf.io/preprints/discover
But also search across multiple preprint
repositories
Powered by SHARE (share.osf.io), OSF Preprints
aggregates search across local and external preprint
services
Currently over 2M preprintrecords available
8000+ preprints currently
hosted directly on the OSF
across 19 services
15.
16.
17.
18. What public-goods infrastructure means
Deduplication: no need for redundant development, redundant fundraising,
etc.
Economy of scale: Reusable, shared infrastructure, collaborative prioritization
Deployment of expertise: Less technical expertise, more community
education and promotion
Innovation: by lowering the barrier to entry, groups have the freedom to
experiment
19. An example of scale
To enable peer feedback, collaboration and transparency in scientific research practices,
Hypothesis and the Center for Open Science (COS) are announcing a new partnership to
bring open annotation to Open Science Framework (OSF) Preprints and the 17 community
preprint servers hosted on OSF. The partnership enables researchers to engage with each
other, discuss research and share additional information as part of the regular research
workflow. Services currently hosted on the OSF Preprints platform
include AgriXiv, Arabixiv, BITSS, EarthArXiv, EngrXiv, FOCUS
Archive, FrenXiv, InaRxiv, LawArXiv, LISSA, MarXiv, MindRxiv, NutriXiv, PaleorXiv, P
syArXiv, SocArXiv, and SportRxiv.
https://web.hypothes.is/blog/cos-launch/
One integration creates improvement for multiple services, if desired
20. http://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2017/08/open-science.aspx
1. APA Journals has designated PsyArXiv (psychology archive) as the preferred
preprint server for APA titles, with plans to integrate with the submission portals for
some APA-published journals
2. APA will have a branded data repository on the OSF to store and archive
research data, protocols and materials, with data being made open once it is
published in an APA journal
Which means, COS is actively exploring connections to journal
submission systems to allow for easy workflows for preprints to
journals via API
An example of scale
& improvements for traditional publishing
22. What you can do?
Promote preprints to your discipline or community
Post preprints to speed up the pace of communicating your
research: osf.io/preprints
Start a preprint for your community or discipline:
https://cos.io/our-products/osf-preprints/
Contact us:
matt.spitzer@cos.io
cos.io/contact