Free tools and supporting infrastructure to provide open access to scientific publications and data including: OpenAIRE, Zernodo, opendoar.org, Sherpa/Romeo, re3data.org, and DOAJ.org
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.
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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: 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.
An short introduction to the PRIME (Publisher, Repository and Institutional Metadata Exchange) project, by Brian Hole, at the JISC Managing Research Data programme launch workshop in Nottingham, UK, October 25th 2012.
Open data in ubi systems research - introduction to open science and open dat...Heli Väätäjä
This is the second set of slides is the introduction to Open Science and Open Data in research. Slides are from the seminar on Open Data in Ubiquitous Systems Research aimed for doctoral students in HCI and CS.
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
Talk given at the “Shareable by Design: Making research data available for access” workshop, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, November 12 2014
This presentation provides an introduction to the Open Access policies and requirements in Horizon 2020. It explains what the requirements are, how to choice between publishing in an open access journal or depositing in an open access repository and it gives information on costs and journal policies. OpenAIRE is an information infrastructure and network that promotes and facilitates Open Science in Europe.
- Find a list of qualitative OA journals on https://doaj.org/
- Find information on APCs per journal on the Open APC project: https://treemaps.intact-project.org/apcdata/openapc/#journal/
- Find a repository: http://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/opendoar, http://roar.eprints.org/, https://explore.openaire.eu/participate/deposit-publications
- EC’s model amendment to publishing agreements: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/other/hi/oa-pilot/h2020-oa-guide-model-for-publishing-a_en.pdf
- Check publishers policy: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/index.php
- How to comply with H2020 mandate OA publications: https://www.openaire.eu/how-to-comply-to-h2020-mandates-for-publications
- For further questions and help, contact us at: https://www.openaire.eu/support/helpdesk
- For further information, check: https://www.openaire.eu/
An short introduction to the PRIME (Publisher, Repository and Institutional Metadata Exchange) project, by Brian Hole, at the JISC Managing Research Data programme launch workshop in Nottingham, UK, October 25th 2012.
Open data in ubi systems research - introduction to open science and open dat...Heli Väätäjä
This is the second set of slides is the introduction to Open Science and Open Data in research. Slides are from the seminar on Open Data in Ubiquitous Systems Research aimed for doctoral students in HCI and CS.
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
Talk given at the “Shareable by Design: Making research data available for access” workshop, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, November 12 2014
This presentation provides an introduction to the Open Access policies and requirements in Horizon 2020. It explains what the requirements are, how to choice between publishing in an open access journal or depositing in an open access repository and it gives information on costs and journal policies. OpenAIRE is an information infrastructure and network that promotes and facilitates Open Science in Europe.
- Find a list of qualitative OA journals on https://doaj.org/
- Find information on APCs per journal on the Open APC project: https://treemaps.intact-project.org/apcdata/openapc/#journal/
- Find a repository: http://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/opendoar, http://roar.eprints.org/, https://explore.openaire.eu/participate/deposit-publications
- EC’s model amendment to publishing agreements: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/other/hi/oa-pilot/h2020-oa-guide-model-for-publishing-a_en.pdf
- Check publishers policy: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/index.php
- How to comply with H2020 mandate OA publications: https://www.openaire.eu/how-to-comply-to-h2020-mandates-for-publications
- For further questions and help, contact us at: https://www.openaire.eu/support/helpdesk
- For further information, check: https://www.openaire.eu/
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?
OpenAIRE services and tools - presentation at #DI4R2016OpenAIRE
Presentation at Digital Infrastrctures for Research Conference 2016 (Sept. 30). Title: Open Access and Open Data in Horizon 2020: for Research managers and Project Coordinators, by Pedro Príncipe (University of Minho)
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
Webinar on Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020OpenAIRE
Joint Webinar FOSTER and OpenAIRE: Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020, presented by Antónia Correia (FOSTER, University of Minho) and Pedro Príncipe, (OpenAIRE, University of Minho).
The aim of this Webinar was to present:
- Open Access in H2020: summary of requirements;
- Open Access in H2020: practical implementation;
- Supporting the compliance: OpenAIRE services and tools.
This Webinar was part of the FOSTER moderated Course on Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020. More information available at: https://www.openaire.eu/item/course-on-open-access-to-publications-in-horizon-2020 and https://www.fosteropenscience.eu/node/2618.
A user journey in OpenAIRE services through the lens of repository managers -...OpenAIRE
A user journey in OpenAIRE services through the lens of repository managers (II – OpenAIRE dashboard for content providers, usage statistics and the catch-all broker service). OpenAIRE-connect & OpenAIRE Advance workshop at the Open Repositories Conference, June 10, 2019, Hamburg.
Conference Opening Science to Meet Future Challenges, Warsaw, March 11, 2014, organized by Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modelling, University of Warsaw.
About the Webinar
Open Access (OA) has become a widely accepted and rapidly growing method of publishing scholarly content. As OA distribution gains traction, a high priority for the community is establishing and building the infrastructure needed to efficiently manage this content. This infrastructure includes such elements as OA publication charge management by third parties, fee structures and payments, visual and machine-readable identification of OA availability and reuse rights, and discovery layer functions. In 2013, NISO launched a project on Open Access Metadata to develop recommendations for the availability and reuse rights issues, but that addresses only a piece of the total infrastructure issue.
In the first part of NISO’s two-part series, the focus is on Knowing What is Open. When content is published by a strictly Open Access publisher or in a completely open access online journal, knowing what is freely available to read by the user can be fairly obvious. This is less clear for hybrid titles, where open access is set at an article-by-article level. Even when a journal is fully open access, mechanisms are necessary for conveying the OA status of articles and their reuse rights to other systems, such as discovery platforms. This webinar will discuss just what it means to say content is "open access," what the various flavors of OA are,and how people and other systems can determine how open something is and both discover and access such content. Issues around license rights, the scale of openness, and the application of this data in discovery contexts will also be covered.
Introduction
Speakers:
The Lifecycle of Open Access Content
Susan Dunavan, Senior Product Manager, SIPX
Franny Lee, Co-Founder & VP Business Development, SIPX
How Open is Open Access?
Darlene Yaplee, Chief Marketing Officer, PLOS
Untangling Open Access Issues in Scholarly Communication
Greg Tananbaum, Consultant; NISO Open Access Metadata and Indicators Working Group Co-Chair
Horizon 2020 Open Access to Publications Mandate: OpenAIRE Webinar (Oct. 22, ...OpenAIRE
Eloy Rodrigues (University of Minho) on the Open Access to Publications Mandate in H2020 (in collaboration with FOSTER) - Date: Wednesday, October 22 2014.
Similar to Supporting infrastructures for Open Access (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. May 6th, 2020.
This Call focused the presentation of the new User Interface of Provide Dashboard and the presentation of 4 use cases using the Provide service.
Was also an opportunity to share the most recent updates and novelties in the OpenAIRE Content Provider Dashboard, and to get feedback from community.
Recording available here: https://youtu.be/J4m_ryRxtnY
20200504_OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar: GDPR and Sharing DataOpenAIRE
Presentation by Jacques Flores Dourojeanni (Research Data Management Consultant Utrecht University Library), as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on May 4th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200504_Research Data & the GDPR: How Open is Open?OpenAIRE
Presentation by Prodromos Tsiavos (Senior Legal Advisor - ARC/ Director - Onassis Group) as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on May 4th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200504_Data, Data Ownership and Open ScienceOpenAIRE
Presentation by Thomas Margoni (Senior Lecturer in Intellectual Property and Internet Law, Co-director, CREATe, University of Glasgow) as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on May 4th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200429_Research Data & the GDPR: How Open is Open? (updated version)OpenAIRE
Presentation by Prodromos Tsiavos (Senior Legal Advisor - ARC/ Director - Onassis Group) as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on April 29th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200429_Data, Data Ownership and Open ScienceOpenAIRE
Presentation by Thomas Margoni (Senior Lecturer in Intellectual Property and Internet Law, Co-director, CREATe, University of Glasgow) as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on April 29th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
20200429_OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar: GDPR and Sharing DataOpenAIRE
Presentation by Jacques Flores Dourojeanni (Research Data Management Consultant Utrecht University Library), as delivered during the OpenAIRE Legal Policy Webinar series on April 29th 2020.
More information and recordings: https://www.openaire.eu/item/openaire-legal-policy-webinars
COVID-19: Activities, tools, best practice and contact points in GreeceOpenAIRE
Presentation from the webinar organized by the Greek OpenAIRE and RDA Nodes (Athena RC) and Elixir-GR to inform participants of EU and national efforts, in collaboration with the following research organizations: Flemming, CERTH, HEAL-Link, Demokritos, Univ. of Athens (Medical School).
Presentation of the 2nd Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics: 1) OpenAIRE Content provider dashboard updates; Main topic: DSpace-CRIS for OpenAIRE: implementation of the CRIS guidelines and beyond; 3) Community questions & comments.
Presentation of the 2nd Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics: 1) OpenAIRE Content provider dashboard updates;
2) OpenAIRE aggregation and enrichment processes: specifications and good practices;
3) Community questions & comments.
Presentation of the 2nd Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics: 1) OpenAIRE infrastructure updates;
2) Main topic: OpenAIRE Broker Service;
3) Community questions & comments.
Presentation of the 2nd Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics: 1) OpenAIRE infrastructure updates;
2) Main topic: OpenAIRE Usage Statistics service: technical details and upcoming developments;
3) Community questions & comments.
Presentation of the 1st Content Providers Community Call, targeting the following topics:
1) OpenAIRE infrastructure updates;
2) Main topic: OpenAIRE Guidelines V4: specifications and implementation roadmap and use cases;
3) Community questions & comment.
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.
Toxic effects of heavy metals : Lead and Arsenicsanjana502982
Heavy metals are naturally occuring metallic chemical elements that have relatively high density, and are toxic at even low concentrations. All toxic metals are termed as heavy metals irrespective of their atomic mass and density, eg. arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, thallium, chromium, etc.
DERIVATION OF MODIFIED BERNOULLI EQUATION WITH VISCOUS EFFECTS AND TERMINAL V...Wasswaderrick3
In this book, we use conservation of energy techniques on a fluid element to derive the Modified Bernoulli equation of flow with viscous or friction effects. We derive the general equation of flow/ velocity and then from this we derive the Pouiselle flow equation, the transition flow equation and the turbulent flow equation. In the situations where there are no viscous effects , the equation reduces to the Bernoulli equation. From experimental results, we are able to include other terms in the Bernoulli equation. We also look at cases where pressure gradients exist. We use the Modified Bernoulli equation to derive equations of flow rate for pipes of different cross sectional areas connected together. We also extend our techniques of energy conservation to a sphere falling in a viscous medium under the effect of gravity. We demonstrate Stokes equation of terminal velocity and turbulent flow equation. We look at a way of calculating the time taken for a body to fall in a viscous medium. We also look at the general equation of terminal velocity.
What is greenhouse gasses and how many gasses are there to affect the Earth.moosaasad1975
What are greenhouse gasses how they affect the earth and its environment what is the future of the environment and earth how the weather and the climate effects.
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.
The ability to recreate computational results with minimal effort and actionable metrics provides a solid foundation for scientific research and software development. When people can replicate an analysis at the touch of a button using open-source software, open data, and methods to assess and compare proposals, it significantly eases verification of results, engagement with a diverse range of contributors, and progress. However, we have yet to fully achieve this; there are still many sociotechnical frictions.
Inspired by David Donoho's vision, this talk aims to revisit the three crucial pillars of frictionless reproducibility (data sharing, code sharing, and competitive challenges) with the perspective of deep software variability.
Our observation is that multiple layers — hardware, operating systems, third-party libraries, software versions, input data, compile-time options, and parameters — are subject to variability that exacerbates frictions but is also essential for achieving robust, generalizable results and fostering innovation. I will first review the literature, providing evidence of how the complex variability interactions across these layers affect qualitative and quantitative software properties, thereby complicating the reproduction and replication of scientific studies in various fields.
I will then present some software engineering and AI techniques that can support the strategic exploration of variability spaces. These include the use of abstractions and models (e.g., feature models), sampling strategies (e.g., uniform, random), cost-effective measurements (e.g., incremental build of software configurations), and dimensionality reduction methods (e.g., transfer learning, feature selection, software debloating).
I will finally argue that deep variability is both the problem and solution of frictionless reproducibility, calling the software science community to develop new methods and tools to manage variability and foster reproducibility in software systems.
Exposé invité Journées Nationales du GDR GPL 2024
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
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.
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.
1. Supporting Infrastructures
to Open Research
An overview of free Open Access tools
Emilie Hermans
Project Assistant OpenAIRE, UGent
@openaire_eu
@openaccess_be
1
2. 1. Publish in any journal of your choice
How make your publication OA?
Subscription based Open Access Journal
2. Deposit an OA version in a repository
2Open Access Week 21/10/2015
Add metadata:
funder, grant ID number, acronym, publication date….
3. • Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ
doaj.org/
• Article Processing Charge (APC)
Publishing in an OAjournal
Finding an OA journal:
3Open Access Week 21/10/2015
4. • SHERPA/ROMEO: www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo
• Overview of copyright policies and self-archiving
permissions
Check publishers policies
What can I deposit?
4Open Access Week 21/10/2015
5. Sherpa/Romeo vocabulary
Pre-print
Before peer review
Publisher’s version
With lay-out
Embargo
Period during which
access to the article
is limited
Post- Print
After peer review
5Open Access Week 21/10/2015
7. • Institutional
• Subject
Finding a publication repository
• The Directory of Open Access Repositories:
opendoar.org/
• Or use Zenodo
7Open Access Week 21/10/2015
8. What about research data?
Open Access Week 21/10/2015 8Picture by Brian Herzog- Swissarmylibrarian.com - source
9. • Registry of research data repositories (re3data)
• www.re3data.org
Finding a data repository
9
11. As Open as you want
Re3data: access
11Open Access Week 21/10/2015
12. Re3data: certified
The research data repository is either certified
or supports a repository standard.
Trusted repositories
190 trusted, open access repositories
12Open Access Week 21/10/2015
13. Zenodo
The “catch-all” repository
• All research and data welcome
• Citeable. Discoverable
• Community Collections
• Funding
• Flexible licensing
• Safe
• DropBox integration
• Easy: upload – describe - publish
13Open Access Week 21/10/2015
17. 17Open Access Week 21/10/2015
OpenAccess Policies
FP7
• Open Access pilot:
7 areas (special clause 39)
Horizon 2020
• Obligation to provide Open
Access in all areas
• Allowed embargoes:
6/12 months
• Allowed embargoes: 6/12
months
• Research data pilot in 9 areas
or you can opt-in
18. OpenAccess in Horizon 2020
“Ensure open access…
as soon as possible and at the latest
on publication, deposit a machine-
readable electronic copy of the
published version or final peer-
reviewed manuscript accepted for
publication in a repository for
scientific publications”
• The grant agreement states:
http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/mga/gga/h2020-mga-gga-multi_en.pdf
19. OpenAIRE
An Open Knowledge & Research Information Infrastructure.
OpenAIRE : aims for the widest possible
dissemination of, and access to research
output. Offers infrastructure, tools,
information and helpdesk system
FACILITATING THE
OPEN ACCESS
POLICY OF THE
EUROPEAN
COMMISSION
19Open Access Week 21/10/2015
20. OpenAIRE as infrastructure
Literature
Repositories
OA Journals
Funding Info
Validation
Cleaning
De-duplicating
Inferring
Linking
Organiza
tions
Projects
AuthorsDatasets
Publications
Data
Providers
…
Monitoring
Reporting
Classification
Clustering
Analysis
CRIS systems
A mini EU-CRIS system
Data
Repositories
Metadata
Full text
Usage data
Discovery
Crowdsourcing
Zenodo
APIs
Data Providers OpenAIRE Platform Services
Evaluation
Impact
20
21. OpenAIRE services
What can we do?
Integrated scientific information:
Metadata, publications, data, funders information,
organizations, authors….
• Help with reporting
• Generate a publication lists
• Disseminate your project
21Open Access Week 21/10/2015
24. Grant id number
Visibility
• Detailed info
• Link to Cordis
• App box
• List of publications
• Data
• Stats
Project page
24Open Access Week 21/10/2015
30. OpenAIRE tools
• Help with reporting:
• You can find your publications and project
listed at www. openaire.eu. This is embedded
in the EC’s project portal (Cordis).
• Generate your publication lists:
• OpenAIRE provides you with a button that
will automatically generate a publication list.
• Disseminate your project:
• Embed information in own website
• Use info and statistics
• Add publications and data to your project
30Open Access Week 21/10/2015
31. How can we help?
• Guides
• Factsheets
• Workshops
• Webinars
• Helpdesk
• FAQ
32. Helpdesk system
Ask a question
• The National Open
Access Desks (NOADs):
• Support on a national
level
32Open Access Week 21/10/2015
33. Researcher
decides where
to publish
Check publishers
policies on
www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo
Open Access Journals:
doaj.org
Open Access Repositories:
www.opendoar.org
Data Repositories:
www.re3data.org
Or use Zenodo:
zenodo.org
Check for Article
Processing Charges
Subscription-based
journal
Use tools
and service
www.openaire.eu
In short:
This is a derivative based on a scheme by “www.fosteropenscience.eu”, used under CC BY.
33
You can always deposit your work in a repository:
Easier to find with a search engine
Services such as a digitial object identifier
Open access may enhance citation rates
Add Associeted metadata
DOAJ is an online directory that indexes and provides access to high quality, open access, peer-reviewed journals
search by subject, license and publisher
Pre-print: the version of the paper initially submitted to a journal publisher for consideration
Post-print: paper accepted by the journal for publication
Publisher’s version: the final page layout and formatting of the published version
Embargo: distribution only after a certain date
KUL: Lirias, Gent: Biblio, Antwerpen: IRUA, Bxl: Pure or Di-Fuse…
Opendoar provides a quality controlled list of academic open access repositories.
search by subject, country, language, software or content type.
How will you access your data in five years?
Flash drives/memory sticks
Server of your institution
Icons: general Information, Open Access, licenses, Persistent identifiers, Certificates and Standards and policy.
You can search by subject, content type or country.
Restricted means that external users can overcome access barriers. Shared data is not open fe passwordprotection
If repositories meet certain standards, they can get a seal of approval: sustainability of your data.
-long term preservation.
Integraty, datasets are accessible, are the datasets provided in a usable format, is the data reliable and does the repository provide a unique persistent identifier so the data can be referred to
- open to all research output from all fields of science,
- all data gets a digital object identifier to make them easily and uniquely citable.
- You can also create your own community where you can accept or reject all datasets, articles, but also working papers, presentation or images from your project.
- It is integrated in reporting lines for research funded by the European commission via openAIRE.
- Although they are highly supportive of open access they accept data under a variety of licenses.
- It is safe: it uses the same cloud infrastructure as research data from CERN's Large Hadron Collider. It is a safe way to store data since data is stored in CERN Data Center. Both data files and metadata are kept in multiple online replicas.
- They also integrated github. And if you would like to upload files straight from you dropbox, that’s possible too.
Article level metrics: metrics that measure the overall performance and reach of published research articles.
- post-print
- Deposit in a Repository
Open Access publications and research data are harvested from repositories. But also descriptive metadata will be ingested and linked to publicatios. All this information is cleaned, de-duplicated and linked.
By developing a European-wide research information system
a range of services can be developed.
keep track of your research result.
Visibility
Article-Level Metrics (ALMs): measuring the impact of research
Further you can see the references made in the article and related data and similar publication.
equipped with a helpdesk system. specific questions: by the subject or by your function.
Questions are answered by a team of specialist, not any on a technical level but there are people of all countries involved able to answer country specific questions; The NOADs: national open access desks, are representatives of open access for their country and can help you with any country specific questions.