The aim of the webinar is to introduce the audience, in particular non-lawyers, to the legal framework of text and data mining, focusing on the main aspects of the law at the European level.
the OpenAIRE Research graph is a massive collection of metadata and links connecting research entities such as articles, datasets, software, and other research outputs
The OpenAIRE project, in the vanguard of the open access and open data movements in Europe was commissioned by the EC to support their nascent Open Data policy by providing a catch-all repository for EC funded research. CERN, an OpenAIRE partner and pioneer in open source, open access and open data, provided this capability and Zenodo was launched in May 2013.
In support of its research programme CERN has developed tools for Big Data management and extended Digital Library capabilities for Open Data. Through Zenodo these Big Science tools could be effectively shared with the long-tail of research.
IIIF for Interoperability and Dissemination of Research Results: The NewsEye ...Jean-Philippe Moreux
The document discusses how the NewsEye European Project uses IIIF (International Image Interoperability Framework) to disseminate research results from analyzing digitized historical newspapers. It describes how NewsEye uses IIIF to display thumbnails and pages from newspapers. The project also exposes corpora and researcher datasets as IIIF collections to facilitate access and reuse of the data. Storytelling tools like Exhibit are highlighted as ways for researchers to showcase collections and narratives to the public.
OpenAIRE presentation for ICT - Brussels 27-29 Sept, 2010OpenAIRE
This document provides an overview of the OpenAIRE project, which links open access repositories with European FP7 project information. It describes OpenAIRE's four-step deposition process for uploading and metadata, capabilities for searching and browsing publications as well as measuring the impact of FP7 projects. OpenAIRE is supported by 38 partners across Europe and provides access to research data and publications in various domains through its open source software.
Big Data Europe SC6 WS 3: Ron Dekker, Director CESSDA European Open Science A...BigData_Europe
Slides for keynote talk at the Big Data Europe workshop nr 3 on 11.9.2017 in Amsterdam co-located with SEMANTiCS2017 conference by Ron Dekker, Director CESSDA: European Open Science Agenda: where we are and where we are going?
The document summarizes the European Commission's support for open science initiatives. It discusses the EC's consultation on open science which identified four main drivers of open science: big data, digitization of research, global science community, and public demand. It also lists several EU-funded open science projects and notes that the EC aims to provide the best conditions for European researchers through its open science policies.
the OpenAIRE Research graph is a massive collection of metadata and links connecting research entities such as articles, datasets, software, and other research outputs
The OpenAIRE project, in the vanguard of the open access and open data movements in Europe was commissioned by the EC to support their nascent Open Data policy by providing a catch-all repository for EC funded research. CERN, an OpenAIRE partner and pioneer in open source, open access and open data, provided this capability and Zenodo was launched in May 2013.
In support of its research programme CERN has developed tools for Big Data management and extended Digital Library capabilities for Open Data. Through Zenodo these Big Science tools could be effectively shared with the long-tail of research.
IIIF for Interoperability and Dissemination of Research Results: The NewsEye ...Jean-Philippe Moreux
The document discusses how the NewsEye European Project uses IIIF (International Image Interoperability Framework) to disseminate research results from analyzing digitized historical newspapers. It describes how NewsEye uses IIIF to display thumbnails and pages from newspapers. The project also exposes corpora and researcher datasets as IIIF collections to facilitate access and reuse of the data. Storytelling tools like Exhibit are highlighted as ways for researchers to showcase collections and narratives to the public.
OpenAIRE presentation for ICT - Brussels 27-29 Sept, 2010OpenAIRE
This document provides an overview of the OpenAIRE project, which links open access repositories with European FP7 project information. It describes OpenAIRE's four-step deposition process for uploading and metadata, capabilities for searching and browsing publications as well as measuring the impact of FP7 projects. OpenAIRE is supported by 38 partners across Europe and provides access to research data and publications in various domains through its open source software.
Big Data Europe SC6 WS 3: Ron Dekker, Director CESSDA European Open Science A...BigData_Europe
Slides for keynote talk at the Big Data Europe workshop nr 3 on 11.9.2017 in Amsterdam co-located with SEMANTiCS2017 conference by Ron Dekker, Director CESSDA: European Open Science Agenda: where we are and where we are going?
The document summarizes the European Commission's support for open science initiatives. It discusses the EC's consultation on open science which identified four main drivers of open science: big data, digitization of research, global science community, and public demand. It also lists several EU-funded open science projects and notes that the EC aims to provide the best conditions for European researchers through its open science policies.
The document summarizes the European Commission's policy on open access to publications and research data resulting from publicly funded research. It outlines the Commission's role in setting open access mandates for EU-funded projects and proposing legislation. It also discusses next steps, including expanding open access requirements in Horizon 2020 and adopting recommendations to member states on access and data management policies.
The document discusses recommendations for research data and the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). It promotes making data FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interusable, and Reusable) according to the FAIR guiding principles. The EOSC aims to provide a single access point for managing and analyzing research data across disciplines through three layers - a data layer, service layer, and governance layer. The EOSC seeks to enable high performance computing, data fusion across disciplines, big data analytics, and privacy protection by leveraging Member State investments and ensuring legacy and sustainability of data through bottom-up governance.
Text and Data Mining (TDM) has the potential to improve European research productivity and competitiveness by discovering knowledge from large unstructured datasets. However, the current non-"TDM-friendly" EU copyright framework is a major barrier as it lacks harmonized exceptions for research use. The European Commission is considering legislative action to modernize EU copyright rules as part of the Digital Single Market strategy, which could simplify and harmonize exceptions to allow TDM for both commercial and non-commercial research. Stakeholders are awaiting proposals in the Digital Single Market White Paper in June and votes in the European Parliament in April and May on related issues.
Presentació a càrrec de Mireia Alcalá, tècnica de Recursos d'Informació al CSUC, duta a terme al workshop en línia "Research Data Management & Open Science" organitzat per l'IDIBELL el 2 de novembre de 2020.
OpenAIRE at the Open Access day, Vienna, March 2011OpenAIRE
The document discusses OpenAIRE, an initiative to support open access for projects funded by the European Union's FP7 and ERC programs. OpenAIRE aims to build an electronic infrastructure for identifying, depositing, accessing, and monitoring open access publications from EU-funded research. It will provide support structures to help researchers comply with open access policies and will explore scientific data management services. OpenAIRE is a three-year project with 38 partners across Europe that began in December 2009 with a budget of 4.1 million Euros.
The document discusses the European Commission's views on open access. It notes that both green and gold open access models are supported under the EC's Framework Programmes FP7 and Horizon 2020. Common issues discussed include the importance of explanation for open access policies, funding challenges, and the need for support tools. Next steps mentioned are continued monitoring of open access implementation, providing more training and guidance, and working to mainstream open access and develop harmonized global policies and standards.
This document discusses managing research data for open science based on the UK experience. It outlines key aspects of open science such as making research more open, global, collaborative and closer to society. The document discusses mandates for open research data from funding bodies in the UK and EU, including stipulations in Horizon 2020 and requirements from EPSRC. It defines what constitutes research data and examines challenges around research data management, including technology issues, people issues, policy issues and resources. The importance of data skills training for researchers and data professionals is also covered.
The French National Open Science Plan. A national contribution to an internat...Projeto RCAAP
1) The French National Open Science Plan aims to promote open access and open data as the default for publicly funded research in France.
2) Key aspects of the plan include making open access mandatory for government-funded research projects, creating a National Open Science Fund, and supporting the national open repository HAL.
3) An Open Science Committee oversees the plan's implementation, working groups develop recommendations and best practices, and an online forum gathers feedback from researchers. The goal is to coordinate open science efforts across French research institutions and internationally.
OpenAIRE2020, the latest project phase of the OpenAIRE initiative, ends in mid-2018. Yet OpenAIRE will live on as a sustainable legal entity and anticipates continuing to shape the conversation on Open Science implementation in Europe and beyond. This talk will briefly present OpenAIRE's achievements since 2008 and lay out our future priorities for Open Science, including: continued expansion of services from Open Access to Open Science and from Publications to all research artefacts; services for research data management at all levels from local to global; Open Science monitoring and research analytics; engaging researchers and research infrastructures with personalisable services.
The document discusses the challenges and solutions around open access to research data in Europe. It summarizes that Horizon 2020 now mandates open access to publications and open access to research data by default from 2017. It describes how grantees are required to deposit data in repositories and take measures to grant open access, with the ability to opt-out for certain reasons. The approach has been tested in a Horizon 2020 pilot and will expand in 2017 to cover all areas with the same rules, aiming for research data to be as open as possible while allowing necessary closures.
how to innovate lexicography by means of research infrastructureseveline wandl-vogt
This document discusses how research infrastructures like DARIAH, CLARIN, and COST IS1305 ENeL can help innovate lexicography. It provides an example of a Dagaare-Cantonese-English dictionary being added to these infrastructures, which would provide benefits like sustainability, increased visibility through international publishing platforms, and greater interoperability and collaboration opportunities. Overall, the author argues that research infrastructures can support elexicography by facilitating diversity, communication, and knowledge sharing across cultures through technical and social networks.
Presentation of the OpenAIRE webinars during the Open Access Week 2016OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE is hosting a week of webinars from October 24-28, 2016 celebrating Open Access Week. The webinars will cover topics like the fundamentals of open science, the Horizon 2020 open access mandate, open research data in H2020 and the Zenodo repository, policies for open science, and OpenAIRE guidelines and services for repository managers. Each webinar will be held at 12:00 CEST and provide information on the topic and registering can be done on OpenAIRE's website.
Open AIRE - The use of an Open Science e-Infrastructure for research analysis and impact measurement
Inge Van Nieuwerburgh (Ghent University), Natalia Manola (University of Athens)
SND provides a coordinated structure for describing, depositing, sharing, and finding research data from its member institutions. It aims to support researchers in fulfilling open data standards, properly curating and handling data, and ensuring data remains under university control. SND has expanded from its initial 7 members to include all major Swedish universities and research institutes. It utilizes distributed secured storage through SUNET and SNIC and will continue to strengthen collaborations with these and other partners in 2020 to further develop its services and connect to initiatives like EOSC and RDA.
Evolving Strategies for Open Access Implementation: Some Findings from the Op...OpenAIRE
A year an a half into its implementation, the EC post-grant funding initiative for FP7 projects run under the OpenAIRE2020 project is already producing some findings, both in the area of APC-based Gold Open Access and in providing support to APC-free Open Access journals and platforms. While exploring the rather fragmented Open Access landscape across Europe, this presentation will look into the evolution of the multiple parallel strategies for Open Access implementation under the light of the work carried out within this post-grant funding initiative. It's argued that a widespread progress will require support for the different co-existing strategies.
This presentation was delivered at the PUBMET2016 conference in Zadar, Croatia, http://pubmet.unizd.hr/
The document discusses text and data mining (TDM) projects in Europe. It describes how TDM can be used to understand the past by mining historical books, predict the future by mining newspapers, and save lives by mining scientific publications about diseases. It also outlines some current barriers to TDM in Europe like a lack of awareness, skills and tools, licensing and copyright issues. Two EU projects are highlighted: FutureTDM which aims to identify TDM barriers and policy solutions, and OpenMinTeD which builds a collaborative TDM infrastructure.
This document discusses the legality of text and data mining (TDM) in Europe. TDM can infringe on copyrights and database rights unless permitted by a license or exception. Currently, only the UK and France have exceptions explicitly allowing non-commercial TDM. The EU is proposing a new mandatory exception, but it may still be limited to non-commercial research. The OpenMinTeD project aims to identify legal tools to support TDM through recommending licenses and lobbying for legislation balancing exclusive rights with exceptions.
Background checking normally includes the investigation of education, any criminal offense, credit history etc. But today, one more thing has been added to the factors of background checking, and that is the checking of the social media accounts of the prospective employees. However, there are both benefits and risks involved in it.
The document summarizes the European Commission's policy on open access to publications and research data resulting from publicly funded research. It outlines the Commission's role in setting open access mandates for EU-funded projects and proposing legislation. It also discusses next steps, including expanding open access requirements in Horizon 2020 and adopting recommendations to member states on access and data management policies.
The document discusses recommendations for research data and the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). It promotes making data FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interusable, and Reusable) according to the FAIR guiding principles. The EOSC aims to provide a single access point for managing and analyzing research data across disciplines through three layers - a data layer, service layer, and governance layer. The EOSC seeks to enable high performance computing, data fusion across disciplines, big data analytics, and privacy protection by leveraging Member State investments and ensuring legacy and sustainability of data through bottom-up governance.
Text and Data Mining (TDM) has the potential to improve European research productivity and competitiveness by discovering knowledge from large unstructured datasets. However, the current non-"TDM-friendly" EU copyright framework is a major barrier as it lacks harmonized exceptions for research use. The European Commission is considering legislative action to modernize EU copyright rules as part of the Digital Single Market strategy, which could simplify and harmonize exceptions to allow TDM for both commercial and non-commercial research. Stakeholders are awaiting proposals in the Digital Single Market White Paper in June and votes in the European Parliament in April and May on related issues.
Presentació a càrrec de Mireia Alcalá, tècnica de Recursos d'Informació al CSUC, duta a terme al workshop en línia "Research Data Management & Open Science" organitzat per l'IDIBELL el 2 de novembre de 2020.
OpenAIRE at the Open Access day, Vienna, March 2011OpenAIRE
The document discusses OpenAIRE, an initiative to support open access for projects funded by the European Union's FP7 and ERC programs. OpenAIRE aims to build an electronic infrastructure for identifying, depositing, accessing, and monitoring open access publications from EU-funded research. It will provide support structures to help researchers comply with open access policies and will explore scientific data management services. OpenAIRE is a three-year project with 38 partners across Europe that began in December 2009 with a budget of 4.1 million Euros.
The document discusses the European Commission's views on open access. It notes that both green and gold open access models are supported under the EC's Framework Programmes FP7 and Horizon 2020. Common issues discussed include the importance of explanation for open access policies, funding challenges, and the need for support tools. Next steps mentioned are continued monitoring of open access implementation, providing more training and guidance, and working to mainstream open access and develop harmonized global policies and standards.
This document discusses managing research data for open science based on the UK experience. It outlines key aspects of open science such as making research more open, global, collaborative and closer to society. The document discusses mandates for open research data from funding bodies in the UK and EU, including stipulations in Horizon 2020 and requirements from EPSRC. It defines what constitutes research data and examines challenges around research data management, including technology issues, people issues, policy issues and resources. The importance of data skills training for researchers and data professionals is also covered.
The French National Open Science Plan. A national contribution to an internat...Projeto RCAAP
1) The French National Open Science Plan aims to promote open access and open data as the default for publicly funded research in France.
2) Key aspects of the plan include making open access mandatory for government-funded research projects, creating a National Open Science Fund, and supporting the national open repository HAL.
3) An Open Science Committee oversees the plan's implementation, working groups develop recommendations and best practices, and an online forum gathers feedback from researchers. The goal is to coordinate open science efforts across French research institutions and internationally.
OpenAIRE2020, the latest project phase of the OpenAIRE initiative, ends in mid-2018. Yet OpenAIRE will live on as a sustainable legal entity and anticipates continuing to shape the conversation on Open Science implementation in Europe and beyond. This talk will briefly present OpenAIRE's achievements since 2008 and lay out our future priorities for Open Science, including: continued expansion of services from Open Access to Open Science and from Publications to all research artefacts; services for research data management at all levels from local to global; Open Science monitoring and research analytics; engaging researchers and research infrastructures with personalisable services.
The document discusses the challenges and solutions around open access to research data in Europe. It summarizes that Horizon 2020 now mandates open access to publications and open access to research data by default from 2017. It describes how grantees are required to deposit data in repositories and take measures to grant open access, with the ability to opt-out for certain reasons. The approach has been tested in a Horizon 2020 pilot and will expand in 2017 to cover all areas with the same rules, aiming for research data to be as open as possible while allowing necessary closures.
how to innovate lexicography by means of research infrastructureseveline wandl-vogt
This document discusses how research infrastructures like DARIAH, CLARIN, and COST IS1305 ENeL can help innovate lexicography. It provides an example of a Dagaare-Cantonese-English dictionary being added to these infrastructures, which would provide benefits like sustainability, increased visibility through international publishing platforms, and greater interoperability and collaboration opportunities. Overall, the author argues that research infrastructures can support elexicography by facilitating diversity, communication, and knowledge sharing across cultures through technical and social networks.
Presentation of the OpenAIRE webinars during the Open Access Week 2016OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE is hosting a week of webinars from October 24-28, 2016 celebrating Open Access Week. The webinars will cover topics like the fundamentals of open science, the Horizon 2020 open access mandate, open research data in H2020 and the Zenodo repository, policies for open science, and OpenAIRE guidelines and services for repository managers. Each webinar will be held at 12:00 CEST and provide information on the topic and registering can be done on OpenAIRE's website.
Open AIRE - The use of an Open Science e-Infrastructure for research analysis and impact measurement
Inge Van Nieuwerburgh (Ghent University), Natalia Manola (University of Athens)
SND provides a coordinated structure for describing, depositing, sharing, and finding research data from its member institutions. It aims to support researchers in fulfilling open data standards, properly curating and handling data, and ensuring data remains under university control. SND has expanded from its initial 7 members to include all major Swedish universities and research institutes. It utilizes distributed secured storage through SUNET and SNIC and will continue to strengthen collaborations with these and other partners in 2020 to further develop its services and connect to initiatives like EOSC and RDA.
Evolving Strategies for Open Access Implementation: Some Findings from the Op...OpenAIRE
A year an a half into its implementation, the EC post-grant funding initiative for FP7 projects run under the OpenAIRE2020 project is already producing some findings, both in the area of APC-based Gold Open Access and in providing support to APC-free Open Access journals and platforms. While exploring the rather fragmented Open Access landscape across Europe, this presentation will look into the evolution of the multiple parallel strategies for Open Access implementation under the light of the work carried out within this post-grant funding initiative. It's argued that a widespread progress will require support for the different co-existing strategies.
This presentation was delivered at the PUBMET2016 conference in Zadar, Croatia, http://pubmet.unizd.hr/
The document discusses text and data mining (TDM) projects in Europe. It describes how TDM can be used to understand the past by mining historical books, predict the future by mining newspapers, and save lives by mining scientific publications about diseases. It also outlines some current barriers to TDM in Europe like a lack of awareness, skills and tools, licensing and copyright issues. Two EU projects are highlighted: FutureTDM which aims to identify TDM barriers and policy solutions, and OpenMinTeD which builds a collaborative TDM infrastructure.
This document discusses the legality of text and data mining (TDM) in Europe. TDM can infringe on copyrights and database rights unless permitted by a license or exception. Currently, only the UK and France have exceptions explicitly allowing non-commercial TDM. The EU is proposing a new mandatory exception, but it may still be limited to non-commercial research. The OpenMinTeD project aims to identify legal tools to support TDM through recommending licenses and lobbying for legislation balancing exclusive rights with exceptions.
Background checking normally includes the investigation of education, any criminal offense, credit history etc. But today, one more thing has been added to the factors of background checking, and that is the checking of the social media accounts of the prospective employees. However, there are both benefits and risks involved in it.
This document provides a summary of how the color red has impacted humans throughout history. It notes that red pigments were used in some of the earliest artworks and the name "Adam" is derived from the Hebrew word for red. The document also discusses how red has a powerful effect on our brains, making humans stronger, more alert, competitive, and attracted to each other, and how it is prominent in many national flags and on lips.
This document outlines an iPhone portfolio containing a blog called "Commodity-Guru" with 3 pages, and 3 Xcode frameworks. The portfolio includes the Commodity-Guru blog, Xcode Framework-1 contained within the blog, Xcode Framework-2 contained within Framework-1, and Xcode Framework-3 contained within Framework-2 in a nested hierarchy.
Graffiti is mostly illegal and seen as vandalism under the law. Laws like the Criminal Damage Act 1971 make it an offense to damage property without permission, with fines or imprisonment as possible punishments. However, some places designate walls where street art is allowed legally. Temporary tape art that does not damage surfaces is also usually permitted. While street artists hold no rights over works created on private property, some cities commission murals to encourage legal street art.
This document appears to be a customer satisfaction survey report for an Indian transformer manufacturing company. It includes an introduction to the company's business divisions, products, worldwide presence and target population for the survey. It then outlines the research methodology including sampling design, data collection procedures and variables studied. The main body of the report analyzes customer responses related to pre-sale and post-sale satisfaction levels, reasons for purchase, brand and quality awareness. It concludes with findings on customer satisfaction, comparisons to competitors and prospects for future business.
ICRAF Scientists, Leigh Winowiecki and Tor Vagen, present on the application of systematic mapping and monitoring techniques for assessing Soil Organic Carbon (SOC), highlighting the utility for the Sustainable Development Goals, and the United Nations Conventions: CBD, UNFCCC and UNCCD, at the Global Symposium on Soil Organic Carbon: http://www.fao.org/about/meetings/soil-organic-carbon-symposium/en/
The Global Symposium on Soil Organic Carbon (GSOC17) is a scientific meeting, held over three days at FAO headquarters in Rome, Italy, on 21-23 March 2017 with 300-500 participants representing all geographical regions and countries of the world.
The Global Symposium on Soil Organic Carbon will contribute to the efforts of ending hunger and malnutrition, climate change adaptation, reversing land degradation, and overall sustainable development while linking sustainable soil management and climate change mitigation and adaptation.”
L'ultimo Kelly Global Workforce Index, l’indagine globale condotta da Kelly Services coinvolgendo più di 164.000 persone in 28 Paesi), offre una dettagliata panoramica sull’atteggiamento e la mentalità dei Baby Boomer nei confronti del mercato del lavoro attuale.
Quali sono le percezioni dei Baby Boomer sulle attuali opportunità e sfide?
Quale è la loro visione sul pensionamento e il loro atteggiamento nei confronti di altri gruppi di età?
In particolare, si esamina come i Baby Boomer percepiscono i colleghi che appartengono a fasce di età differenti, soprattutto i Millennial (i nati dal 1980), ai quali vengono affidate responsabilità sempre crescenti nell’ ambito della selezione e gestione dei Baby Boomer.
I Baby Boomer oggi si aspettano di andare in pensione più tardi o di arrivare al pensionamento gradualmente e la maggior parte delle aziende non ha una strategia per attirare o trattenere questa categoria di lavoratori.
Scopri i consigli di Kelly per aiutare i datori di lavoro a “sbloccare” nuove fonti di vantaggio competitivo.
The document presents an overview of various natural factors that influence architecture and design. It discusses geology, topography, hydrography, hydrology, soil, vegetation, wildlife, and climate factors such as precipitation, wind direction, humidity, temperature, and orientation. For each topic, it provides brief definitions and descriptions of key concepts.
This document discusses Open Science policies and practices in Eastern Europe. It summarizes national Open Access strategies in countries like the Czech Republic, Estonia, and Slovakia. It also describes work on open research data policies and platforms in Poland and data practices at the University of Debrecen in Hungary. Additionally, it lists several national e-infrastructures in countries like Croatia, Lithuania, and Slovenia that are compatible with OpenAIRE. Finally, it discusses how European Commission policies have acted as a catalyst for national-level Open Science policies and infrastructure development.
This document summarizes the key points from a presentation on European perspectives on open science policy:
1. It outlines the 8 open science policy priorities established by the European Commission, including open access to publications and data, establishing the European Open Science Cloud, rewarding open science practices, research integrity, and citizen science.
2. It discusses the progress made on open access policies over the past 10 years from FP7 to Horizon 2020, including mandatory open access to publications and open access to research data by default from 2017 onward.
3. It introduces the concept of the proposed Horizon 2020 Open Research Europe publishing platform as a way to rapidly publish open access peer-reviewed articles and pre-prints resulting from Horizon 2020 projects
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
The document discusses open science and open innovation. It describes how open access to scientific data, publications, code, and workflows through online platforms is enabling new forms of collaborative scientific inquiry across traditional boundaries. Global collaboratories can now engage in research at unprecedented scales using open data. The benefits of open science include accelerating scientific discovery, empowering citizens and entrepreneurs to make new innovations based on open data and code, and transforming the nature of scientific research.
Using Healthcare Data for Research @ The Hyve - Campus Party 2016Kees van Bochove
In this presentation, Kees van Bochove, founder & CEO of The Hyve, a services company in biomedical open source software, presents a number of different types of healthcare data. As an example, he also provides details of a project in which The Hyve participates and which uses that kind of data. Covered are: translational medicine data using tranSMART and cBioPortal, population health data using OMOP and OHDSI, and personal health data processing using open mHealth Shimmer and Apache Kafka.
OPERAS: open access in the european research area through scholarly communica...pierre mounier
The OPERAS project aims to create a federated infrastructure to support open access scholarly communication across Europe. It involves 21 partners from 10 European countries working on 2 H2020 projects. The infrastructure currently indexes 800,000 documents by 250,000 authors receiving 50 million visitors annually, and could potentially impact 1.2 million researchers. Partners will collaborate on common actions like communication, research and development, best practices, standards, and business models. The project will be developed in phases from 2017-2028, starting with a design phase and moving towards establishing an ERIC to operate the full infrastructure.
Efforts to Promote Open Science in European Research LibrariesLIBER Europe
The document summarizes efforts by European research libraries to promote open science. It discusses LIBER's role in advocating for open science policies and initiatives. It also outlines the European Commission's support for open science through Horizon 2020 mandates, the European Open Science Cloud, and the Open Science Policy Platform. National initiatives in Finland promoting open data and research are also described. The National Library of Finland supports open science through its strategy, policies, and training. Libraries play an important role in raising awareness, providing training and infrastructure to enable open sharing of research outputs and data.
Beyond OpenAIRE2020 aims to foster open science by linking scholarly communications infrastructure across Europe. It consolidates publication, data, and software repositories into an integrated system. The initiative also aims to empower researchers with open science training and tools for research data management. Finally, Beyond OpenAIRE2020 seeks to test innovations in scholarly communications like open peer review and metrics.
Presentation delivered by Natalia Manola during the EOSCSummit 2018 (June 11th, 2018) during the session Progress of implementation "Progress towards the EOSC (services, architecture, access, rules, data)"
1. SoBigData is a proposed research infrastructure integrating existing national infrastructures for big data analytics and social mining across Europe.
2. It involves 12 participating organizations from 8 countries and aims to provide researchers access to skills, data, tools, and services for cutting-edge social mining experiments through 2019.
3. The proposal seeks funding through Horizon 2020 to establish a networked, virtual ecosystem for big data analysis and social data mining across Europe.
OpenAIRE at Workshop on CRIS and OAR, May 2010OpenAIRE
This document provides an overview of the OpenAIRE project, which aims to promote open access to peer-reviewed scientific publications and research data. It discusses the project's goals of setting up infrastructure and tools to support deposition, searching, and visualization of open access publications and research data. It also addresses challenges around interoperability between current research information systems (CRIS) and institutional repositories (IR), and OpenAIRE's approaches to create relations between publications, projects, and primary research data from different systems through its data model and mappings.
OpenMinted: It's Uses and Benefits for the Social Sciencesopenminted_eu
Presentation as presented at the ITOC workshop in Philadelphia, 20 February 2016.
Uses and Benefits for the Social Sciences research community.
By GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences
(1) OpenAIRE provides training and services to support open science practices like open access, FAIR data, and linked data.
(2) Their training includes webinars and workshops delivered through a network of national open access desks, and support materials like primers, guides, and FAQs.
(3) OpenAIRE's services include repositories for publications and data (Zenodo), a data management planning tool, and dashboards to link, discover, and monitor research outputs. They are building an OpenAIRE Science Graph to create a contextual catalog for the EOSC.
Due to the increasing uptake of semantic technologies, ontologies are becoming part of a growing number of software development projects. As a result, ontology development teams have to combine their activities with software development practices. In this presentation some practices, tools and examples of new trends in ontological engineering are provided.
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 is a 36-month, 4.1 million euro project with 38 partners across Europe to build open access infrastructure for research. It will create a portal for depositing and searching open access publications, set up national open access liaison offices, and work with research communities in health, environment, information and communication science, and socio-economic sciences to support open access to publications and research data.
Open APC Data in Germany - A Contribution to Open Access MonitoringDirk_Pieper
This document summarizes the Open APC Data in Germany project. It describes how the project aggregates publication fee (APC) data from German universities and research institutions and makes it openly available. The goals are to increase transparency around APCs, support the transition to open access, and enable analysis of APC trends over time. The project is coordinated by Bielefeld University and involves contributions from over 15 other institutions. APC data is standardized, enriched with identifiers, and published using open licenses and version control to facilitate reuse. The new INTACT project will expand this work with bibliometric analysis and more efficient reporting workflows between universities, funders, and publishers. Challenges for international collaboration on APC data include differences in
Similar to UKSG webinar: The Law on TDM in Europe: an introduction with Nancy Pontika, Open University (20)
This session will demystify (generative) AI by exploring its workings as an advanced statistical modelling tool (suitable for any level of technical knowledge). Not only will this session explain the technological underpinnings of AI, it will also address concerns and (long-term) requirements around ethical and practical usage of AI. This includes data preparation and cleaning, data ownership, and the value of data-generated - but not owned - by libraries. It will also discuss the potentials for (hypothetical) use cases of AI in collections environments and making collections data AI-ready; providing examples of AI capabilities and applications beyond chatbots.
CATH DISHMAN, CENYU SHEN,
KATHERINE STEPHAN
Although scholarly communications has become more open, problems with predatory and problematic publishers remain. There are commercial providers of lists, start-up/renegade Internet lists of good/bad and the researchers, publishers and assessors that try to understand and process what being on/off a list means to themselves, their careers and their institutions. Still, these problems persist and leaves many asking: where is the list?
Christina Dinh Nguyen, University of Toronto Mississauga Library
In the world of digital literacies, liaison and instructional librarians are increasingly coming to terms with a new term: algorithmic literacy. No matter the liaison or instruction subjects – computer science, sociology, language and literature, chemistry, physics, economics, or other – students are grappling with assignments that demand a critical understanding, or even use, of algorithms. Over the course of this session, we’ll discuss the term ‘algorithmic literacies,’ explore how it fits into other digital literacies, and see why it as a curriculum might belong at your library. We’ll also look at some examples of practical pedagogical methods you can implement right away, depending on what types of AL lessons you want to teach, and who your patrons are. Lastly, we’ll discuss how librarians should view themselves as co-learners when working with AL skills. This session seeks to bring together participants from across the different libraries, with diverse missions/vision/mandates, to explore ways we can all benefit from teaching AL. If time permits, we may discuss how text and data librarians (functional specialists) can support the development of this curriculum.
David Pride, The Open University
In this paper, we present CORE-GPT, a novel question- answering platform that combines GPT-based language models and more than 32 million full-text open access scientific articles from CORE. We first demonstrate that GPT3.5 and GPT4 cannot be relied upon to provide references or citations for generated text. We then introduce CORE-GPT which delivers evidence-based answers to questions, along with citations and links to the cited papers, greatly increasing the trustworthiness of the answers and reducing the risk of hallucinations.
Cath Dishman, Cenyu Shen, Katherine Stephan
Although scholarly communications has become more open, problems with predatory and problematic publishers remain. There are commercial providers of lists, start-up/renegade Internet lists of good/bad and the researchers, publishers and assessors that try to understand and process what being on/off a list means to themselves, their careers and their institutions. Still, these problems persist and leaves many asking: where is the list?
This plenary panel will discuss the problems of “predatory” publishing and what, if anything, publishers, our community and researchers can do to try and help minimise their abundancy/impact.
eth Montague-Hellen, Francis Crick Institute, Katie Fraser, University of Nottingham
Open Access is a foundational topic in Scholarly Communications. However, when information professionals and publishers talk about its future, it is nearly always Gold open access we discuss. Green was seen as the big solution for providing access to those who couldn’t afford it. However, publishers have protested that Green destroys their business models. How true is this, and are we even all talking the same language when we talk about Green?
Chris Banks, Imperial College London, Caren Milloy, Jisc,
Transitional agreements were developed in response to funder policy and institutional demand to constrain costs and facilitate funder compliance. They have since become the dominant model by which UK research outputs are made open access. In January 2023, Jisc instigated a critical review of TAs and the OA landscape to provide an evidence base to inform a conversation on the desired future state of research dissemination. This session will discuss the key findings of the review and its impact on a sector-wide consultation and concrete actions in the UK and beyond.
Michael Levine-Clark, University of Denver, Jason Price, SCELC Library Consortium
As transformative agreements emerge as a new standard, it is critical for libraries, consortia, publishers, and vendors to have consistent and comprehensive data – yet data around publication profiles, authorship, and readership has been shown to be highly variable in availability and accuracy. Building on prior research around frameworks for assessing the combined value of open publishing and comprehensive read access that these deals provide, we will address multi-dimensional perspectives to the challenges that the industry faces with the dissemination, collection, and analysis of data about authorship, readership, and value.
Hylke Koers, STM Solutions
Get Full Text Research (GetFTR) launched in 2020 with the objective of streamlining discovery and access of scholarly content in the many tools that researchers use today, such as Dimensions, Semantic Scholar, Mendeley, and many others. It works equally well for open access content as it does for subscription-based content, providing researchers with recognizable buttons and indicators to get them to the most up-to-date version of content with minimal effort. Currently, around 30,000 OA articles are accessed every day via GetFTR links.
Gareth Cole, Loughborough University, Adrian Clark, Figshare
Researchers face more pressure to share their research data than ever before. Owing to a rise in funder policies and momentum towards more openness across the research landscape. Although policies for data sharing are in place, engagement work is undertaken by librarians in order to ensure repository uptake and compliance.
We will discuss a particular strategy implemented at Loughborough University that involved the application of conceptual messaging frameworks to engagement activities in order to promote and encourage use of our Figshare-powered repository. We will showcase the rationale behind the adoption of messaging frameworks for library outreach and some practical examples.
Mark Lester, Cardiff Metropolitan University
This talk will outline how a completely accidental occurrence led to brand new avenues for open research advocacy and reasons for being. This advocacy has occurred within student communities such as trainee teachers, student psychologists and (especially) those soon losing access to subscription-based library content. Alongside these new forms of advocacy, these ethical example of AI use cases has begun to form a cornerstone of directly connecting the work of the library to new technology.
Simon Bell, Bristol University Press
The UN SDG Publishers Compact, launched in 2020, was set up to inspire action among publishers to accelerate progress to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, asking signatories to develop sustainable practices, act as champions and publish books and journals that will “inform, develop and inspire action in that direction”.
This Lightning Talk will discuss how our new Bristol University Press Digital has been developed as part of our mission to contribute a meaningful and impactful response to this call to action as well as the global social challenges we face.
Using thematic tagging to create uniquely curated themed eBook collections around the Global Social Challenges, Bristol University Press Digital responds directly to the need to provide the scholarly community access to a comprehensive range SDG focussed content while minimising time and resource at the institution end in collating content and maintaining collection relevance to rapidly evolving themes
Jenni Adams, University of Sheffield, Ric Campbell, University of Sheffield
Academic researchers are becoming increasingly aware of the need to make data and software FAIR in order to support the sharing and reuse of non-publication outputs. Currently there is still a lack of concise and practical guidance on how to achieve this in the context of specific data types and disciplines.
This presentation details recent and ongoing work at the University of Sheffield to bridge this gap. It will explore the development of a FAIR resource with specialist guidance for a range of data types and will examine the planned development of this project during the period 2023-25
TASHA MELLINS-COHEN
COUNTER & Mellins-Cohen Consulting, JOANNA BALL
DOAJ, YVONNE CAMPFENS
OA Switchboard,
ADAM DER, Max Planck Digital Library
Community-led organizations like DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals), COUNTER (the standard for usage metrics) and OA Switchboard (information exchange for OA publications) are committed to providing reliable, not-for-profit services and standards essential for a well-functioning global research ecosystem. These organizations operate behind the scenes, with low budgets and limited staffing – no salespeople, marketing teams, travel budgets, or in-house technology support. They collaborate with one another and with bigger infrastructure bodies like Crossref and ORCID, creating the foundations on which much scholarly infrastructure relies.
These organizations deliver value through open infrastructure, data and standards, and naturally services and tools have been built by commercial and not-for-profit groups that capitalize on their open, interoperable data and services – many of which you are likely to recognize and may use on a regular basis.
Hear from the Directors of COUNTER, DOAJ and OA Switchboard, as well as a library leader, on the role of these organizations, the challenges they face and why support from the community is essential to their sustainability.
CAMILLE LEMIEUX
Springer Nature
What is the current state of diversity, equity, and inclusion in the scholarly publishing community? It's time to take a thorough look at the 2023 global Workplace Equity (WE) Survey results. The C4DISC coalition conducted the WE Survey to capture perceptions, experiences, and demographics of colleagues working at publishers, associations, libraries, and many more types of organizations in the global community. Four key themes emerged from the 2023 results, which will be compared to the findings from the first WE Survey conducted in 2018. Recommendations for actions organisations can consider within their contexts will be proposed and discussed.
Rob Johnson, Research Consulting
Angela Cochran, American Society of Clinical Oncology
Gaynor Redvers-Mutton, Biochemical Society
Since 2015, the number of self-published learned societies in the UK has decreased by over a third, with the remaining societies experiencing real-term revenue declines. All around the world, society publishers are struggling with increased competition from commercial publishers and the rise of open access business models that reward quantity over quality. We will delve into the distinctive position of societies in research, examine the challenges confronting UK and US learned society publishers, and explore actionable steps for libraries and policymakers to support the continued relevance of learned society publishers in the evolving scholarly landscape.
Simon Bell, Clare Hooper, Katharine Horton, Ian Morgan
Over the last few years we have witnessed a seismic shift in the scholarly ecosystem. Three years since outset of the COVID pandemic and the establishment UN Publishers Compact, this is discussion-led presentation will look at how four UK Universities Presses have adopted a consultative and collaborative approach on projects to support their institutional missions, engage with the wider scholarly community while building on a commitment to make a meaningful difference to society.
This panel discussion will combine the perspectives of four UK based university presses, all with distinct identities and varied publishing programs drawn from humanities, arts and social sciences, yet with a shared recognition and value of the importance to collaborate and co-operate on a shared vision to support accessibility and inclusivity within the wider scholarly community and maintain a rich bibliodiversity.
While research support teams are generally small and specialist in nature, an increased demand of its service has been observed across the sector. This is particularly true for teaching-intensive institutions. As a pilot to expand research support across ARU library, the library graduate trainee was seconded to the research services team for a month. This dialogue between the former trainee and manager will discuss what the experience and outcomes of the secondment were from different perspectives. The conversation will also explore the exposure Library and Information Studies students have to research services throughout their degree.
TIM FELLOWS & EMILY WILD, Jisc
Octopus.ac is a UKRI funded research publishing model, designed to promote best practice. Intended to sit alongside journals, Octopus provides a space for researcher collaboration, recording work in detail, and receiving feedback from others, allowing journals to focus on narrative.
The platform removes existing barriers to publishing. It’s an entirely free, open space for researchers, without editorial and pre-publication peer review processes. The only requirement for authors is a valid ORCiD ID. Without barriers, Octopus must provide feedback mechanisms to ensure the community can self-moderate. During this session, we’ll explore Octopus’ aims to foster a collaborative environment and incentivise quality.
David Parker, Publisher and Founder, Lived Places Publishing
Dr. Kadian Pow, Lecturer in Sociology and Black Studies & LPP Author, Birmingham City University
Natasha Edmonds, Director, Publisher and Industry Strategy, Clarivate
Library patrons want to search for and locate authors by particular identity markers, such as gender identification, country of origin, sexual orientation, nature of disability, and the many intersectional points that allow an author to express a point-of-view. Artificial Intelligence, skilled web researchers, and data scientists in general struggle to achieve accuracy on single identity markers, such as gender. And what right does anybody have to affix identity metadata to an author other than the author theirselves? And what of the risks in disseminating author identity metadata in electronic distribution platforms and in library catalog systems? Can a "fully informed" author even imagine all the possible misuses of their identity metadata?
More from UKSG: connecting the knowledge community (20)
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
Gender and Mental Health - Counselling and Family Therapy Applications and In...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
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For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.pptHenry Hollis
The History of NZ 1870-1900.
Making of a Nation.
From the NZ Wars to Liberals,
Richard Seddon, George Grey,
Social Laboratory, New Zealand,
Confiscations, Kotahitanga, Kingitanga, Parliament, Suffrage, Repudiation, Economic Change, Agriculture, Gold Mining, Timber, Flax, Sheep, Dairying,
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
UKSG webinar: The Law on TDM in Europe: an introduction with Nancy Pontika, Open University
1. The project
@openminted_eu
16 partners
Athena RIC, Univ. of Manchester, Univ. of Darmstadt, INRA, EMBL-EBI, Agro-
Know, LIBER, Univ. of Amsterdam, Open University UK, EPFL, CNIO, Univ. of
Sheffield, GESIS, GRNET, Frontiers, Univ. of Glasgow
16 partners
Athena RIC, Univ. of Manchester, Univ. of Darmstadt, INRA, EMBL-EBI, Agro-
Know, LIBER, Univ. of Amsterdam, Open University UK, EPFL, CNIO, Univ. of
Sheffield, GESIS, GRNET, Frontiers, Univ. of Glasgow
6 mining research groups
3 content providers
1 data center
1 library association
2 legal experts
6 community related partners
2 SMEs
5. Thank you
Dr Giulia Dore
Post-doc Research Assistant in Law, School of Law, CREAte,
University of Glasgow
giulia.dore@glasgow.ac.uk
Dr Nancy Pontika
Open Access Aggregation Officer, CORE
The Open University
nancy.pontika@open.ac.uk
.
5
6. Thank you
Dr Giulia Dore
Post-doc Research Assistant in Law, School of Law, CREAte,
University of Glasgow
giulia.dore@glasgow.ac.uk
Dr Nancy Pontika
Open Access Aggregation Officer, CORE
The Open University
nancy.pontika@open.ac.uk
.
5
Editor's Notes
Athena RICUniv. of Manchester (NacTem) Univ. of DarmstadtINRAEMBL-EBIAgro-KnowLIBERUniv. of AmsterdamOpen University UKEPFLCNIOUniv. of Sheffield (GATE) GESISGRNETFrontiersUniv. of Stirling