Introduction to Open Data Policies in H2020 Nancy Pontika, PhD Open Access Aggregation Officer, CORE The Open University, UK 25th October 2017 Idea Methodolog y Data CollectionAnalysis Publish Journal article, Dissertation, Book, Source Code, etc. J l ti l , i t ti , , , t . Experiments, Interviews, Observations, etc. i t , I t i , ti , t . Numbers, Code, Text, Images, sound records, etc. , , t, I , , t . Statistics, processes, analysis, documentation, etc. ti ti , , l i , t ti , t . Research Lifecycle Open Access routes Gold Route- Journals l l Pure Open Access Journals l Hybrid Open Access Journals i l Green Route - Repositories Institutional repositories Disciplinary repositories Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions. What makes it possible is the internet and the consent of the author or copyright-holder. (Source: https://legacy.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/brief.htm) Idea Methodolog y Data CollectionAnalysis Publish Experiments, Interviews, Observations, etc. i t , I t i , ti , t . Numbers, Code, Text, Images, sound records, etc. , , t, I , , t . Statistics, processes, analysis, documentation, etc. t ti ti , , l i , t ti , t . Journal article, Dissertation, Book, Source Code, etc. J l ti l , i t ti , , , t . Research Lifecycle: focus on the publications Open Access in Horizon2020 “The European Commission sees open access not as an end in itself but as a tool to facilitate and improve the circulation of information in the European Research Area (ERA) and beyond.” (Source: https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/sites/horizon2020/files/FactSheet_Open_Access.pdf) It is mandated: • Immediate deposit of peer reviewed scientific publications – i.e. journal articles • Deposit in a repository (machine readable form and even Gold OA) – Respect embargo periods • If possible use an open license – e.g. Creative Commons Attribution, CC-BY • When possible deposit research data (Source: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi- oa-pilot-guide_en.pdf) Research Lifecycle: focus on data Idea Methodology Data CollectionAnalysis Publish Experiments, Interviews, Observations, etc. i t , I t i , ti , t . Numbers, Code, Text, Images, sound records, etc. , , t, I , , t . Statistics, processes, analysis, documentation, etc. t ti ti , , l i , t ti , t . Journal article, Dissertation, Book, Source Code, etc. J l ti l , i t ti , , , t . Versioning control, Storage & Management rsi i tr l, t r t Workflow Management Systems r fl t st s Interactive computing I t r ti ti Wikis, Blogs, Social Media i i , l , i l i What constitutes research data? ‘Research data’ refers to information, in particular facts or numbers, collected to be examined and considered as a basis for reasoning, discussion or calculation. In a research context, examples of data include statistics, results of experiments, measurements, observations resulting from fieldwork, survey results, interview recordings and images. The focus is on research data that is available in digital form. (Source: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-pilot- guide_en.pdf) H2020 areas participating in pilot (2016- 2017)• Future and Emerging Technologies • Research Infrastructures • Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies – Information and Communication Technologies • Nanotechnologies, Advanced Materials, Advanced Manufacturing and Processing, and Biotechnology • Societal Challenge: Food security, sustainable agriculture and forestry, marine and maritime and inland water research and the bioeconomy • Societal Challenge: ‘Climate action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials’ – except raw materials • Societal Challenge: ‘Europe in a changing world – inclusive, innovative and reflective Societies’ • Science with and for Society • Cross-cutting activities – focus areas – part Smart and Sustainable Cities. * Projects in other areas can participate on a voluntary basis(Source: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-pilot-guide_en.pdf) The scope of participation is growing... • In 2014-15 work programme, 7 areas participated in the pilot. • In the 2016 work programme, new topics joined in 3 areas (research infrastructures, nanotechnologies and food security) • All calls covered by the 2017 work programme will be part of the pilot. A move from a pilot to a mandate. H2020 Open Research Data Pilot (ORD) (Source: http:// ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-pilot-guide_en.pdf and https://ec.europa.eu/research/press/2016/pdf/opendata-infographic_072016.pdf) Open access to research data Refers to the right to access and reuse digital research data under the terms and conditions set out in the Grant Agreement. Why have Open Access to both Publications and Data? • build on previous research results (improved quality of results) • encourage collaboration and avoid duplication of effort (greater efficiency) • speed up innovation (faster progress to market means faster growth) • involve citizens and society (improved transparency of the scientific process). FAIR Data The data, including associated metadata, needed to validate the results presented in scientific publications Other curated and/or raw data, including associated metadata, as specified in the data management plan Doesn’t apply to all data (researchers to define as appropriate) Don’t have to share data if inappropriate – exemptions apply Which data does the ORD pilot apply to? Beneficiaries participating in the ORD pilot will: • Deposit data in a research data repository • Take measures to enable third parties to access, mine, exploit, reproduce and disseminate (free of charge for any user) this research data • Provide information via the chosen repository about tools and instruments necessary for validating the results (where possible, provide the tools and instruments themselves) Key requirements of the ORD pilot • If results are expected to be commercially or industrially exploited • If participation is incompatible with the need for confidentiality in connection with security issues • Incompatible with existing rules on the protection of personal data • Would jeopardise the achievement of the main aim of the action • If the project will not generate / collect any research data • If there are other legitimate reasons to not take part in the Pilot Projects can opt out at any stage Can opt out totally or partially (i.e. for some data only) Should describe issues in the project DMP Exemptions – reasons for opting out Data Management Plans Projects participating in the pilot will be required to develop a Data Management plan (DMP), in which they will specify what data will be open. Note that the Commission does NOT require applicants to submit a DMP at the proposal stage. A DMP is therefore NOT part of the evaluation. DMPs are a deliverable. Where relevant*, H2020 proposals can include a section on data management which is evaluated under the criterion ‘Impact’ • What types of data will the project generate/collect? • What standards will be used? • How will this data be shared/made available? If not, why? • How will this data be curated and preserved? * For “Research and Innovation actions” and “Innovation Actions” DMPs are a project deliverable for those participating in the open data pilot. Not a fixed document – should evolve and gain precision – Deliver first version within initial 6 months of project – More elaborate versions whenever important changes to the project occur. At least at the mid-term and final review. Informantion on RDM: what and when PROPOSAL STAGE IN PROJECT How can researchers make data open? 1.Choose the dataset(s) to share – What can be made open? This step may need to be revisited if problems are encountered later. 2.Apply an open license  – Determine what IP exists. Apply a suitable licence e.g. CC-BY 3.Make the data available  – Provide the data in a suitable format. Use repositories.   4.Make it discoverable  – Post on the web, get a unique ID, register in catalogues… https://okfn.org Licensing research data openly This DCC guide outlines the pros and cons of each approach and gives practical advice on how to implement a data licence Source: http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/licen se-research-data Which licenses are appropriate? Creative Commons clauses that limit sharing NC NonCommercial What counts as commercial? ND NoDerivatives Severely restricts use These clauses are not open licensesHorizon 2020 Open Access guidelines point to: or Deposit in research data repositories The EC guidelines point to Re3data as one of the registries that can be searched to find a home for data Source: http://service.re3data.org/search Zenodo is a multi-disciplinary repository that can be used for the long-tail of research data • Multidisciplinary repository accepting – Multiple data types – Publications – Software • Assigns a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) • Links funding, publications, data & software Zenodo (Source: www.zenodo.org) Metadata and documentation Metadata is basic descriptive information to help others identify and understand the structure of the data e.g. title, author... Documentation provides the wider context e.g. the methodology / workflow, software, tools and any information needed to understand and reuse the data Relevant standards should be used for interoperability – check out the Metadata Standards Directory from the Research Data Alliance (Source: http://rd-alliance.github.io/metadata-directory) FOSTER project Facilitate Open Science Training for European Research • Network of open access trainers • Programme of open science courses • Portal to training materials • E-learning courses on open access and open data (Source: www.fosteropenscience.eu) FOSTER Course Source: https://www.fosteropenscience.eu/content/horizon-2020-open-research-data- pilot-0 Slides attribution: Slides 12-24 are based on ”The Horizon2020 Open Data Pilot” by Sara Jones, Digital Curation Center https:// www.slideshare.net/sjDCC/h2020-open-data-pilot Thank you!