Resources by relevance

By  European Commission
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Intended audience Librarians and Repository managers, PHD Students, Policy makers and Funders, Project Managers, Publishers, Researchers and Students, Research Administration
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

This course introduces you to open peer review (OPR), an emerging practice which is gaining momentum as part of Open Science. Upon completing this course, you will:

  • understand what OPR means and how it supports Open Science
  • be aware of OPR workflows and which aspects of the review process can be conducted openly
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Intended audience Librarians and Repository managers, PHD Students, Policy makers and Funders, Publishers, Project Managers, Researchers and Students, Research Administration
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

This course shows you how sharing preprints can improve your research and support Open Science. By the end of the course, you will:

  • know what preprints are
  • be able to find a suitable preprints platform to share your early findings
  • understand the pro and cons of sharing preprints
  • be aware of h...
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Intended audience Librarians and Repository managers, PHD Students, Policy makers and Funders, Project Managers, Publishers, Researchers and Students
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

This course helps you to become skilled in Open Access (OA) publishing in the context of Open Science. By the end of the course, you will:

  • understand how to publish your work openly and be aware of the advantages
  • be able to find an OA publisher for your research
  • know how to find a suitable repository to...
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Intended audience Librarians and Repository managers, PHD Students, Policy makers and Funders, Project Managers, Publishers, Research Administration, Researchers and Students
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

This course introduces Open Source Software (OSS) management and workflow as an emerging but critical component of Open Science. The course explains the role of software sharing and sustainability in reproducibility, trust and longevity, and provides different perspectives around the sharing and reuse of computational code and methods, namely...

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Intended audience PHD Students, Policy makers and Funders, Research Administration, Researchers and Students, Publishers, Librarians and Repository managers
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

Data-driven research is becoming increasingly common in a wide range of academic disciplines, from Archaeology to Zoology, and spanning Arts and Science subject areas alike. To support good research, we need to ensure that researchers have access to good data. Upon completing this course, you will:

  • understand which data you ...
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Intended audience Librarians and Repository managers, PHD Students, Policy makers and Funders, Publishers, Research Administration, Researchers and Students
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

This course introduces some practical steps toward making your research more open. We begin by exploring the practical implications of open research, and the benefits it can deliver for research integrity and public trust, as well as benefits you will accrue in your own work. After a short elaboration of some useful rules of thumb, we move qu...

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Intended audience Industry and Business, Programmers, Project Managers, Publishers, Researchers and Students, Text and Data miners
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

This tutorial includes three parts that describe how to use the Wheat Phenotypic Information Extractor and the two end-user applications, WheatIS and AlvisIR, that integrates its results for the use case developed by Inra during the OpenMinTeD project.The application extracts information related to wheat on phenotypes, genes, markers, species...

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Intended audience Policy makers and Funders, Project Managers, Publishers, Researchers and Students, Text and Data miners
Level: Introductory: no previous knowledge is required

The objective of this tutorial is to showcase how Social Science researchers can take full advantage of the OpenMinTeD TDM platform for Detecting and Linking Variables in Scientific Publications.
 

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Intended audience Policy makers and Funders, Project Managers, Publishers, Researchers and Students, Text and Data miners
Level: Introductory: aware of

This tutorial walks users through the simple process of creating a workflow in the OpenMinTeD platform that allows them to identify acknowledged projects (i.e. funding information) from scientific publications.