57 research outputs found

    La difusión de la investigación en salud a través de los repositorios

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    Bibliosalud 2023 - XVII Jornadas de Información y Documentación en Ciencias de la Salud “Motívate, Implícate y actúa”. Valladolid los días 19 y 20 de octubre de 2023.N

    El Instituto de Salud Carlos III y el Acceso Abierto. Iniciativas y resultados

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    Presentación llevada a cabo en la jornada "Organismos Públicos de Investigación y el acceso abierto", celebrada el 24 de octubre de 2011 en la sede de la Unidad de Recursos de Información Científica para la Investigación (URICI) del CSIC. La jornada reunió a técnicos de las bibliotecas de investigación del CIEMAT, INIA, ISCIII, IGME, IAC, a un vocal asesor y a la responsable de la Coordinación editorial del IEO y a personal de la URICI y de su proyecto Digital.CSIC. Participaron también en la jornada representantes del Ministerio de ciencia e Innovación y del Departamento de Gestión de la Información Científica Integrada de la FECYT. Conclusiones de la jornada disponibles en: Unidad de Recursos de Información Científica para la Investigación (URICI). Conclusiones de la Jornada de OPIS y el acceso abierto. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/42321 Resto de presentaciones: Bernal, Isabel. Introducción a Digital.CSIC, Estado del arte de repositorios de instituciones públicas de investigación. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/42208 .-- Gómez, Monique. El IAC y el Acceso Abierto. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/170322 .-- González Copeiro, Cristina. El acceso abierto y los repositorios científicos en España: Proyectos RECOLECTA, OPenAIRE y MedOANet. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/170324.Breve introducción del proyecto de acceso abierto del Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII) en la jornada "Organismos Públicos de Investigación y el acceso abierto" en la sede de la Unidad de Recursos de Información Científica para la Investigación (URICI) del CSIC.N

    Los organismos financiadores de la investigación y el acceso abierto

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    ¿Qué es el Acceso Abierto (“Open Access”)? Rutas para el “Acceso Abierto”. Via Dorada en España: SciELO España. Repositorios de Ciencias de la Salud. Políticas de Acceso Abierto de los organismos financiadores: las recomendaciones y los mandatos. Políticas institucionales: recomendaciones y mandatos ¿Qué puedo depositar?. Licencias.¿Quién debe/puede depositar? y ¿cómo?. Plan “S”. Horizon Europe 2021-27. Nuevo desafío: datos abiertos, repositorios de preprints. Futuro de la comunicación científicaN

    Identificadores persistentes de revista, de autor, de objeto digital o de Institución (ISSN, ORCID, DOI, ISNI, ROR, etc.)

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    Sesión sobre identificadores persistentes, se hace un recorrido historico desde los origenes con las citas bibliográficas hasta los más actuales identificadores digitales e interoperables. Los identificadores persistentes o PID hace referencia a un código que permanece constante e identifica digitalmente un objeto, persona u organización, se caracterizan por ser persistentes, únicos y pueden identificar diferentes tipos de entidades (revistas, publicaciones, autores y organizaciones).N

    Biomedical information databases, in Spanish? Present and future

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    Se describen los distintos canales de difusión de la ciencia y cómo han ido evolucionando hasta la actualidad. Se valora la presencia actual del español en el mundo, en general, en el ámbito científico y en el área de ciencias de la salud. Se incide en la importancia de las bases de datos en la búsqueda de información científica española de ciencias de la salud, citando las más importantes en los ámbitos nacional e internacional. Se enumeran distintas herramientas existentes en internet, a través de las cuales los investigadores y los clínicos acceden actualmente a la información científica y cómo afectan a su comportamiento en sus búsquedas de información. Por último, se describen las ventajas de las bases de datos frente a otras herramientas y se enumeran las características que deben tener para mantenerse como herramientas útiles para acceder a la información científica de ciencias de la salud.S

    El Catálogo Nacional de Ciencias de la Salud: Experiencias y desafíos de una herramienta colaborativa

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    In 2012, Carlos III Health Institute, by means of the National Library of Health Sciences and in partnership with the Virtual Health Libraries of the Autonomous Communities, promoted with a public and open nature the National Union Catalogue for Publications on Health Sciences. It can be accessed freely and universally through its webpage and connects with the main ILL systems. This communication addresses the evolution and improvement of the Catalogue from its creation until the present time, its performance in Beta version and final implementation, as well as upcoming developments. In 2014, the first developments of the Catalogue were reported in the 15th National Conference on Information and Documentation in Health Sciences (http://jornadasbibliosalud.isciii.es/posteres/). From that moment on, the bibliographical information from journals and collections of the participating libraries have been steadily incorporated. In 2017, once a new improved version of the application was developed, a beta version of the Catalogue was launched and most of the collections initially uploaded were updated. In 2018, a resolution on the operation and coordination of the Catalogue was published in order to make official ISCIII’s support to this tool, it was officially launched in November of that year, the first meeting of its Technical Committee took place and it began its intensive use. Since the last report was issued in 2014, 9.287 journals and 193.093 collections corresponding to 266 libraries from every Autonomous Community have been added. The number of participating centers has also increased by 54. Moreover, a webpage and a blog have been implemented, the participating libraries receive technical and documental support suited to their needs, a connection with the GTBIB and ILL17 applications has been established, 142 new membership applications have been signed and access statistics have been elaborated. The possibility of a new version of the application, featuring technical improvements, is been evaluated as a future development. CNCS emerges as a collaborative tool of a public nature. Today, we are facing challenges that, when successfully addressed, will lead to improvements that will allow the Catalogue to consolidate and become a constantly evolving living resource, just like the 17 realities that compose it

    The National Health Sciences Catalogue: Experiences and challenges of a colaborative tool

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    In XVI Jornadas Nacionales de Información y Documentación en Ciencias de la Salud, Oviedo (Spain), 4-5 April 2019. [Conference paper][EN] In 2012, Carlos III Health Institute, by means of the National Library of Health Sciences and in partnership with the Virtual Health Libraries of the Autonomous Communities, promoted with a public and open nature the National Union Catalogue for Publications on Health Sciences. It can be accessed freely and universally through its webpage and connects with the main ILL systems. This communication addresses the evolution and improvement of the Catalogue from its creation until the present time, its performance in Beta version and final implementation, as well as upcoming developments. In 2014, the first developments of the Catalogue were reported in the 15th National Conference on Information and Documentation in Health Sciences (http://jornadasbibliosalud.isciii.es/posteres/). From that moment on, the bibliographical information from journals and collections of the participating libraries have been steadily incorporated. In 2017, once a new improved version of the application was developed, a beta version of the Catalogue was launched and most of the collections initially uploaded were updated. In 2018, a resolution on the operation and coordination of the Catalogue was published in order to make official ISCIII’s support to this tool, it was officially launched in November of that year, the first meeting of its Technical Committee took place and it began its intensive use. Since the last report was issued in 2014, 9.287 journals and 193.093 collections corresponding to 266 libraries from every Autonomous Community have been added. The number of participating centers has also increased by 54. Moreover, a webpage and a blog have been implemented, the participating libraries receive technical and documental support suited to their needs, a connection with the GTBIB and ILL17 applications has been established, 142 new membership applications have been signed and access statistics have been elaborated. The possibility of a new version of the application, featuring technical improvements, is been evaluated as a future development. CNCS emerges as a collaborative tool of a public nature. Today, we are facing challenges that, when successfully addressed, will lead to improvements that will allow the Catalogue to consolidate and become a constantly evolving living resource, just like the 17 realities that compose it.N

    El Catálogo Nacional de Ciencias de la Salud: Experiencias y desafíos de una herramienta colaborativa

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    In 2012, Carlos III Health Institute, by means of the National Library of Health Sciences and in partnership with the Virtual Health Libraries of the Autonomous Communities, promoted with a public and open nature the National Union Catalogue for Publications on Health Sciences. It can be accessed freely and universally through its webpage and connects with the main ILL systems. This communication addresses the evolution and improvement of the Catalogue from its creation until the present time, its performance in Beta version and final implementation, as well as upcoming developments. In 2014, the first developments of the Catalogue were reported in the 15th National Conference on Information and Documentation in Health Sciences (http://jornadasbibliosalud.isciii.es/posteres/). From that moment on, the bibliographical information from journals and collections of the participating libraries have been steadily incorporated. In 2017, once a new improved version of the application was developed, a beta version of the Catalogue was launched and most of the collections initially uploaded were updated. In 2018, a resolution on the operation and coordination of the Catalogue was published in order to make official ISCIII’s support to this tool, it was officially launched in November of that year, the first meeting of its Technical Committee took place and it began its intensive use. Since the last report was issued in 2014, 9.287 journals and 193.093 collections corresponding to 266 libraries from every Autonomous Community have been added. The number of participating centers has also increased by 54. Moreover, a webpage and a blog have been implemented, the participating libraries receive technical and documental support suited to their needs, a connection with the GTBIB and ILL17 applications has been established, 142 new membership applications have been signed and access statistics have been elaborated. The possibility of a new version of the application, featuring technical improvements, is been evaluated as a future development. CNCS emerges as a collaborative tool of a public nature. Today, we are facing challenges that, when successfully addressed, will lead to improvements that will allow the Catalogue to consolidate and become a constantly evolving living resource, just like the 17 realities that compose it

    SciELO España : 18 años de comunicación científica en abierto

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    Cuatro años antes de la firma de la Declaración de Budapest que se reconoce a nivel internacional como el comienzo del movimiento de Acceso Abierto, se pone en marcha el primero de los sitios SciELO. Fue en Brasil, impulsado por el Centro Latinoamericano y del Caribe de Información en Ciencias de la Salud (BIREME), perteneciente a la Organización Panamericana de la Salud (OPS). Corría el año 1998. Los objetivos eran ambiciosos: por un lado, se perseguía la indexación de las revistas nacionales de calidad – tratando así de complementar las principales bases de datos internacionales – y la publicación de los textos completos con acceso gratuito en Internet en la modalidad conocida hoy como Vía Dorada. Por otro lado, SciELO se buscó la labor conjunta y cooperativa de los principales agentes implicados en la comunicación científica para mejorar la calidad, visibilidad, uso y impacto de las revistas editadas a nivel nacional. Han pasado ya 20 años, hoy la Red SciELO (http://www.scielo.org) cubre 15 países iberoamericanos, además de Sudáfrica, que publican sus propias colecciones de modo descentralizado, dando acceso a más de 1200 títulos de revistas que publican unos 45.000 artículos por año, que suponen, en Enero de 2018, más de 745000 artículos de acceso abierto. El artículo hace un recorrido por los veinte años de historia de la Red SciELO y el portal SciELO España (http://scielo.isciii.es), puesto en marcha por el Instituto de Salud Carlos III a través de la Biblioteca Nacional de Ciencias de la Salud, en el año 2000. Se narra su desarrollo y evolución, se perfilan las principales características de su colección de revistas, se da cuenta de los mecanismos puestos en marcha para mejorar la visibilidad de las publicaciones y se describe la experiencia española en cuanto al trabajo colaborativo con editores para mejorar la calidad de las revistas científicas, con la celebración de 3 reuniones de editores SciELO a nivel nacional. También se plantean algunos de sus principales desafíos, entre ellos, la ampliación de su temática (España es la única colección monográfica de la red) abriéndola a las distintas disciplinas, y la plena adopción del SciELO Publishing Schema basado en la norma ANSI/NISO Z39.96-2012, JATS.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    REPISALUD, un repositorio multiinstitucional: la gestión, difusión y preservación del conocimiento en organismos de investigación

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    This communication presents the Project aimed to create, implement and develop an institutional repository, called REPISALUD, within the context of a Public Biomedical Research Organization: the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII) and its Foundations, the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC) and the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas (CNIO). It describes the main aspects in the implementation of the repository, suggesting future actions and developments that will lead to the consolidation of REPISALUD. The creation of REPISALUD is part of an institutional project to promote Open Access, which began after the signing by the directors of the three institutions of the Berlin Declaration in 2016. The Project is being led by the libraries or documentation units of the institutions involved. This Project is based on the need to create a unified Open Access platform for the scientific and technical publications of the ISCIII and its foundations. REPISALUD offers the advantage of uniting in a single repository the scientific production of the three institutions and, therefore, having a single Access point for all the collections. The communication describes the procedures to be followed and the most relevant aspects of the development in relation to the definition of the repository, choice of the software, the planning and implementation of the project, as well as its maincharacteristics: open content policy, interoperability and service to the researcher, etc., thus creating a fundamental tool for the preservation, dissemination and organization of the scientific productivity generated within the participating institutions. In the design of the repository, special attention has been paid to the inclusion of funding data, theen richment of information on the authors of the three institutions, through links to their identifiers (ORCID, ResearcherID and Scopus Author ID), and the policy of inclusion of all types of scientific productivity, including, in addition to the articles and contributions to conferences, training material, institutional, dissemination, research data, etc., so that the repository can become a true reflection of all scientific activity of the three institutions
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