62 research outputs found
The research librarian of the future: data scientist and co-investigator
There remains something of a disconnect between how research librarians themselves see their role and its responsibilities and how these are viewed by their faculty colleagues. Jeannette Ekstrøm, Mikael Elbaek, Chris Erdmann and Ivo Grigorov imagine how the research librarian of the future might work, utilising new data science and digital skills to drive more collaborative and open scholarship. Arguably this future is already upon us but institutions must implement a structured approach to developing librariansâ skills and services to fully realise the benefits
Southern Ocean laminated diatom ooze: mat deposits and potential for palaeo-flux studies, ODP leg 177, Site 1093
International audienceLaminated diatom ooze samples collected during ODP Leg 177 were analysed using scanning electron microscope (SEM) and optical microscopy to test their potential as high-resolution records of Polar Front hydrography, surface production, and export. SEM analysis from two intervals, marine isotope stage (MIS) 29 and 12/11, respectively, recovered from 50°S in the Atlantic Ocean (ODP Site 1093, Hole A, sections 13H-4 0â18 cm and 23H-4 0â22 cm), show abundant and well-preserved Thalassiothrix antarctica mats, thought to be indicative of rapid export from the surface and deposition in the sediment. A preliminary analysis of laminae succession points to a possible annual couplet/triplet succession of laminae, and suggests exceptionally high local sedimentation rates of 57 and 80 cm kyrâ1 for MIS 12/11 and 29, respectively. Such high accumulation rates imply that local export from the surface layer and sequestration of biogenic silica and organic matter to the sediments may have been much higher than previously suggested
Open Science by Default: a FOSTER Approach
The European Commission has described RRI as a framework consisting of six key pillars: Engagement (science and society). Gender Equality. Science Education (knowledge and tools for future researchers and other societal actors). Open Access (publications and data). Ethic (codes of conduct, transparency). Governance (responsibility, trustiness and compliance). Open science is based on these principles: Open methodology, open software, open data, open access, open peer review and open educational resources. Both conceptions share collaboration among different stakeholders, ethical principles governing science, best practices to share and collaborate in science, and science accessible to citizens, among others. FOSTER (Facilitate Open Science Training for European Research) is a EC funded project under the 7th FP that aims to Integrate open science principles and practice in the current research workflow, and support especially young researcher to adopt those practices. In order to achieve these objectives, FOSTER has implemented different learning and dissemination approaches: face to face training activities, free online courses, workshops and seminars. The results lead to conclude there is no one-size-fits-all solution: audience, culture, disciplines, societies must be taken into account to embrace RRI and open science principles. This communication presents some of the results of FOSTER project related to their training activities, based on 2 years of intensive training of all stakeholders in the research ecosystem.European Unionâs Seventh Framework Programme Grant Agreement No. 612425.Peer reviewe
LEARN-TEACH: a pilot to boost Ocean Literacy in High Schools
Raising the Ocean Literacy of all levels of society is now a policy priority for the European Commission. The long-term objective is better appreciation of the socio-economic benefits and ecosystem services that the marine environment provides, and encourage better stewardship of the seas. One long-term, and potentially self-sustainable, concept is to put sufficient mutual incentives in place so that researchers, teachers and students in high-schools science and mathematics classes accessorize school curricula with the latest marine research results and knowledge. Summary of preliminary teachers consultations at Copenhagen International School suggest that teachers are prepared and willing to include recent marine research, research data and knowledge in high school science classes and carry over the research data to athematics/statistics classes and exercises. However the active participation of researchers is sought to provide guidance and translation of latest research findings, and point toreal data sources
Winning Horizon 2020 with Open Science?
Open Science (OS) offers researchers tools and workflows for transparency, reproducibility, dissemination and transfer of new knowledge. Ultimately, this can also have an impact on in research evaluation exercises, e.g. Research Excellence Framework (REF), set to demand greater âsocietal impactâ in future, rather than just research output[1]. OS can also be an effective tool for research managers to transfer knowledge to society, and optimize the use and re-use by unforeseen collaborators. For funders, OS offers a better return on investment (ROI) for public funding, and underpins the EU Digital Agenda by measurably contributing to economic growth. This brief showcases why and how Open Science can optimize your Horizon 2020 proposal evaluation
Winning Horizon 2020 with Open Science
Investing in research towards solutions for Societal Challenges is a key priority of the EU Innovation Union[1], and the EC has placed focus on âOpen Innovation, Open Science and Open to the Worldâ[2] as a strategy to make the EU leader in Research & Innovation.
Open Science is about removing all barriers to full sphere basic research knowledge and outputs (research data, research code, publications, policy briefs), and thus feeding Open Innovation and the knowledge-based economy. The concept is central to EUâs Responsible Research and Innovation philosophy[3], and removing barriers to basic research measurably contributes to the EUâs Blue/Green Growth Agenda[4]. Despite the potential of the internet age to deliver on that promise, only 50% of todayâs basic research is freely available[5].
The workshop will demonstrate how and why Open Science can be a key tool for research managers formulating and managing grant proposals.
Learning Outcomes follow FP7 FOSTER Open Science Learning Objectives (http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15603) :
- Understand ECâs Open Science Agenda priorities;
- Gain insight into what is, and will be, mandated on access to research, and data management;
- Be capable to integrate Open Science in the research concept, and its impact;
- Understand Open Scienceâs impact on EC Evaluation process based on examples from 2014-2015.
The topics is presented as a tool to alleviate daily problems with formulating competitive grant proposals, in a way that optimised knowledge transfer and dissemination strategies, as well as the societal impact of research projects.
The workshop can bring total beginners up to speed with the EC position on Open Innovation, and can upgrade existing knowledge on the topic of Open Science synergies and conflicts with IPR and Data Protection.
[1] EC Digital Agenda & Access to Knowledge http://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/en/open-access-scientific-knowledge-0
[2] Commissioner Moedas Press Release, 22 June 2015 http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_SPEECH-15-5243_en.htm
[3] Responsible Research and Innovation for Societal Challenges
http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/document_library/pdf_06/responsible-research-and-innovation-leaflet_en.pdf
[4] Houghton, J., Swan, A., Brown, S., 2011. Access to research and technical information in Denmark [WWW Document]. URL http://www.deff.dk/uploads/media/Access_to_Research_and_Technical_Information_in_Denmark.pdf
[5] Proportion of OA Peer-Reviewed Papers at the European & World Levels 2004-2011, EC Report http://www.science-metrix.com/pdf/SM_EC_OA_Availability_2004-2011.pd
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