Webinars
NCPs (26)
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Fai una domanda su #COVID-19
Gli esperti rispondono
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Friday, 27 November 2020
Questo webinar si è svolto il 27 novembre e non è più possibile inviare domande. Le domande ricevute e le risposte degli esperti sono disponibili al seguente link: https://zenodo.org/record/4550702#.YDN3PZNKho4
Hai curiosità su come stanno lavorando i ricercatori per affrontare la pandemia? Vuoi saperne di più su come si diffonde il contagio o sui sintomi della malattia Covid-19? Vuoi capire come leggere i dati o dove trovare fonti affidabili?
Un gruppo di esperti sarà online per due ore per rispondere a tutte le domande che riceveranno. L’evento – inserito all’interno della Notte europea dei ricercatori 2020 – è rivolto a giovani e studenti delle scuole superiori e consiste in una sessione pubblica e interattiva di domande e risposte. Le domande possono essere inviate in anticipo a questo modulo oppure potranno essere poste direttamente durante l’incontro, che si svolgerà online il 27 novembre dalle 15 alle 17. In entrambi i casi le domande saranno raccolte in forma anonima.
Puoi leggere le domande già inviate o votare quelle che preferisci attraverso questo link.
A RISPONDERE CI SARANNO:
Maria Chironna. Epidemiologa, è in prima linea nell’affrontare l’emergenza da Covid-19 in Puglia. Professoressa associata di Igiene all’Università degli Studi di Bari ‘Aldo Moro’, è responsabile del laboratorio di Epidemiologia molecolare e sanità pubblica dell’Azienda Ospedaliero Universitaria Consorziale Policlinico, che si occupa del monitoraggio dei dati dell’emergenza in corso
Gianluigi de Gennaro. Coordinatore della ricerca scientifica internazionale sulla relazione tra inquinamento atmosferico e diffusione dell’epidemia da Covid-19. Professore associato di Chimica dell’Ambiente all’Università degli Studi di Bari ‘Aldo Moro’ dove si occupa di qualità dell’aria e studio del respiro umano.
Emma Lazzeri. Ricercatrice, esperta di comunicazione scientifica e scienza aperta, studia i modi in cui i ricercatori si scambiano le informazioni e i risultati degli esperimenti all’interno della comunità scientifica e con il resto della società. Lavora presso il Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche.
Luca Lista. Esperto di analisi di dati, fa parte del gruppo di lavoro COVIDSTAT dell’INFN per l’analisi statistica dei dati della pandemia (http://covid19.infn.it). Professore ordinario di fisica sperimentale all’Università degli Studi “Federico II” di Napoli, è direttore della sezione di Napoli dell’Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare.
Graziano Pesole. Esperto in bioinformatica e genomica, è autore di studi sui genomi isolati da SarsCOv2, con cui ha contribuito all’analisi evolutiva e genomica dei ceppi isolati in Italia. Professore ordinario di biologia molecolare all’Università degli studi Aldo Moro di Bari e ricercatore associato del CNR-IBIOM.
MODERATRICE:
Tina Simoniello. Biologa e giornalista scientifica, da oltre 20 anni collabora con le pagine di medicina di Repubblica e per l’inserto di scienza e tecnologia RLab ha curato la rubrica Scienza a Scuola. È cofondatrice del giornale di scienza online Galileo, ed è stata redattrice di Scienza & Società, periodico dell’università Bocconi. È coautrice di una biografia di Rita Levi-Montalcini per l’editore L’Asino d’oro.
Comitato scientifico:
RICORDATI DI COMPILARE IL QUESTIONARIO!
- Recordings: Registrazione, Domande e risposte
Praticare l’Open Science nelle scienze della Terra e dell’ambiente
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Tuesday, 24 November 2020
Thursday, 26 November 2020
Tuesday, 01 December 2020
Thursday, 03 December 2020
Un ciclo di 4 webinar per conoscere i principi della scienza aperta e approfondire aspetti e strumenti specifici per le Scienze della Terra e dell’ambiente.
L’attuale sistema delle riviste ad abbonamento con cui i ricercatori si scambiano informazioni e conoscenze limita e impoverisce il meccanismo di verifica e controllo dei risultati ottenuti da parte dei “pari” e di tutta la comunità scientifica, nonché la fertilizzazione di nuove idee. Inoltre in questo sistema si trascura di dare accesso a una parte fondamentale per il sostegno di quanto si riporta negli articoli pubblicati: i dati.
L’Open Science è un modo di fare ricerca improntato alla trasparenza e alla collaborazione che ha l’obiettivo di eliminare le barriere di accesso e facilitare la diffusione della conoscenza. In concreto, nel quotidiano del lavoro scientifico, applicare i principi della scienza aperta può comportare l’esigenza di dotarsi di metodi e strumenti adatti che spesso sono specifici per discipline e aree di ricerca.
Questo corso intende fornire le conoscenze di base per applicare i principi dell’Open Science e dell’Open Access alle scienze della Terra e dell’ambiente. Rivolto a docenti, ricercatori, tecnici, studenti di dottorato, assegnisti di ricerca che lavorano in questo settore, il ciclo di webinar prevede quattro lezioni di due ore e mezza ciascuna, di cui mezz’ora riservata alle domande e alla discussione. Attraverso specifici software si cercherà di favorire l’interazione e lo scambio con i partecipanti, i quali alla fine di ciascun modulo e dopo aver completato un breve questionario sugli argomenti trattati, potranno avere un attestato di partecipazione.
Obbiettivi di apprendimento. Alla fine del corso i partecipanti:
- saranno in grado comprendere le motivazioni alla base dell’Open Science/Open Access e le sue dinamiche;
- conosceranno le attuali iniziative europee sull’Open Science/Open Access, e in particolare quelle legate alla loro area disciplinare;
- avranno gli strumenti per implementare le buone pratiche dell’Open Science/Open Access nel quotidiano delle loro attività di ricerca (per esempio per la gestione e la condivisione dei dati secondo i principi FAIR, per rendere Open Access le pubblicazioni, eccetera);
- avranno gli strumenti necessari per ottemperare agli obblighi della Commissione Europea in materia di Open Access ai dati e alla letteratura scientifica;
- avranno le competenze di base per interagire con le infrastrutture di ricerca nel loro settore specifico.
Programma:
24 novembre, 14.00-16.30. Introduzione e motivazioni: Open Science e accesso ai dati scientifici.
26 novembre, 14.00-16.30. Approcci federati all’integrazione di dati scientifici multidisciplinari e servizi per l’accesso e l’utilizzo: l’esperienza dell’infrastruttura di ricerca EPOS.
1 dicembre, 14.00-16.30. Gestione dei dati della ricerca: dati Open, FAIR e DMP.
3 dicembre, 14.00-16.30. Dimostrazione pratica con strumenti e servizi per l’Open Science.
Docenti:
Daniele Bailo, INGV
Massimo Cocco, INGV
Emma Lazzeri, CNR/ISTI
Mario Locati, INGV
Alessandro Sarretta, CNR/IRPI
Comitato tecnico scientifico:
Maria Silvia Giamberini, CNR/IGG
Gina Pavone, CNR/ISTI
COVID-19: best practices, tools and contact points in Greece
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Thursday, 05 November 2020
Friday, 06 November 2020
“COVID-19: best practices, tools and contact points in Greece”
Athena Research Center (ARC), in the context of activities undertaken between OpenAIRE National Open Access Desk, RDA National Node and ELIXIR-GR, organises a new series of informative and educational webinars around COVID-19 research. The digital events are taking place in collaboration with the following scientific institutions: National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, National Center for Research & Technology Hellas, Hellenic Pasteur Institute, Biomedical Sciences Research Center “Alexander Fleming”, Biomedical Research Foundation of the Academy of Athens, Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas, Hellenic Academic Libraries Link, and the research infrastructure Inspired-RIs.
Τhe new series of digital events follows the first webinar held in April that aimed at collecting and promoting all efforts and knowledge around managing the virus crisis to the Greek scientific and academic community. This time, the purpose focuses, also, on knowledge exchange based on Open Science practices and on training in research data management and software development. Indicative subject areas to be covered are:
- information about the current status in Greece, such as the Flagship Action or national accomplishments in clinical studies etc.
- providing guidance to researchers for Open Science best practices’ implementation through the adoption of Horizon 2020 Guidelines for open access to publications, data and other research outputs
- use of services and tools for research data processing and analysis, open source development and management, such as Argos, OpenRefine, Galaxy etc.
The first two informative events will be carried out on Thursday 5 November and Friday 6 November at 12.00 - 14.00 p.m EET. During these webinars, the above mentioned institutions and research infrastructures will present the latest developments regarding their activities.
For any questions you may have, please don’t hesitate to contact us at .
Programme
- Recordings: 06 November, 05 November,
- Slides: Here
GDPR and training
How to organize GDPR compliant online events
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Wednesday, 28 October 2020
The OpenAIRE Community of Practice for Training coordinators hosted this 1.5 hour-long webinar and collaborative writing sprint on organizing GDPR compliant online events.
Prodromos Tsiavos (Legal Adviser of "Athena" Research & Innovation Center and OpenAIRE) provided good practice advice and Walter Scholger (Zentrum für Informationsmodellierung, Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities, Universität Graz) talked about the Consent Form Wizard https://consent.dariah.eu/ followed by discussions on how to make sure that GDPR requirements are properly addressed and personal data is protected. It covered best practices for online event organisation, including pre- and post-event (registration, carrying out, evaluation, etc.). It also addressed the following aspects: how to inform correctly about a session recording and how to make the recordings available (e.g. with public chat messages, etc.), good practices on making collaborative documents (developed at online sessions) publicly available, issues to consider during large online events, how to optimize the online events workflows, whether national differences in Europe play a big role, etc. Plain language templates and checklists were discussed in breakout group writing sprints and will be shared with a wider training community.
The following good practice recommendations are being developed during the writing sprints:
- Before the event: Template/s: plain language wording for online registration forms (disclaimers, permissions, notice that consent could be withdrawn any time) and good practices for online events registration - e.g. a host organization manages registration on its website and has full control of data and a way to safely manage it, event access under password (not a direct link), etc. Moderator: Rene van Horik (DANS, EOSChub)
- During the event: Wording suggestions for recording announcements, disclaimers and permissions (e.g. what will be captured - video, webcam footage, audio, text chat messages and displayed username; inform participants on how to anonymize themselves - change names, blur video, etc; is the participant’s consent needed - in writing - accept and continue at registration or verbal expression is sufficient, etc.). Any other tips for running online events. Moderator: Ellen Leenarts (DANS, OpenAIRE)
- After the event: Template/plain language wording to deal with personal data in evaluation/feedback forms. GDPR friendly tools and checklists for making online session materials publicly available - recording, collaborative documents, etc. Checklists/workflows for keeping online events documentation, registration and recording: e.g. beware of not keeping backups with actual names and email addresses; anonymize before backing up and storing, secure storage (encrypted?), etc. Retention period: for how long the data could/should be kept and when it will be deleted, etc. Moderator: Iryna Kuchma (EIFL, OpenAIRE)
Equity and inclusion: open science policies
A joint COAR/EIFL/OpenAIRE panel session
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Friday, 23 October 2020
Webinar jointly organised by COAR, EIFL and OpenAIRE on Friday, October
23rd at 12:00 - 13:30 CEST.
This panel addressed equity and inclusion in recent open science policy developments in Asia and Europe.
Moderator: | Iryna Kuchma (EIFL) |
Panelists: |
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Open Access Week 2020 programme:
Research data: accessible infrastructures and innovative tools in Greece
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Friday, 23 October 2020
Athena Research Center (ARC) together with Hellenic Academic Libraries Link (HEAL-link) participate in Open Access Week 2020 in the context of activities for OpenAIRE in Greece. The topic of presentations and discussions to take place is research data management. The event is open to all researchers and to members of research organisations in Greece, both in the public and private sector.
Title: “Research data: accessible infrastructures and innovative tools in Greece”
When: Friday, 23 October 2020
Time: 13:00 p.m - 14:30 p.m
Language: Greek
The theme of the International Open Access Week 2020, 19-25 October, is “Open with Purpose: Taking Action to Build Structural Equity and Inclusion.” The goal is to raise awareness regarding diversity, equity and inclusion of all research communities and forms of knowledge. By reshaping research and creating systems for sharing knowledge we come across with an opportunity for a more equitable, diverse and open framework for all research communities. In particular, Greece is facing important structural changes that will allow open redistribution of research data and will facilitate implementation of Open Science practices.
ARC and HEAL-link concentrated this year’s presentations on issues around research data management and personal data. The presentations will focus on national research data repositories, highlighting their contribution to paneuropean cloud infrastructures and their role in an Open Science environment. Finallt, to limit discouragement in following open practices when dealing with sensitive and personal data, the Amnesia tool for data anonymization will be explained.
Open Access Week: Open Science Ambassadors
How can early career researchers boost Open Science? A joint OpenAIRE/Eurodoc webinar.
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Thursday, 22 October 2020
During this webinar, Oleksandr Berezko (General Board Member at Eurodoc) and Sara Pilia (Equality Working Group Co-coordinator at Eurodoc) will present the Eurodoc Open Science Ambassadors training programme for Early Career Researchers (ECR), and the activities of the Eurodoc Equality Working Group, which aims to remove the barriers encountered by those ECRs who experience exclusion and discrimination.
Eurodoc
Eurodoc Open Science Ambassadors
Eurodoc Equality Working Group
Open Access Week: Towards a scholarly commons
Platform interoperability and open access transformation
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Thursday, 22 October 2020
What does it mean to be a part of the scholarly commons? According to FORCE11, the scholarly commons is an agreement among researchers and other stakeholders in scholarly communication to make research open and participatory for anyone, anywhere. It is not another sharing platform, but a set of principles, concrete guidance to practice, and actions towards inclusivity of diverse perspectives from around the globe. |
Equity and inclusion: community-owned infrastructures for open science
A joint EIFL/COAR/OpenAIRE panel session.
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Wednesday, 21 October 2020
Webinar jointly organised by COAR, EIFL and OpenAIRE.
This panel:
- discussed why community/good governance is important and how that relates to equity and inclusion
- provided some concrete models of good governance that other infrastructures can adopt in their own context
Moderator: | Kathleen Shearer (COAR) |
Panelists: |
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Speaker bio's:
Dominique Babini
Dominique Babini is from Argentina, holds a doctorate in political science and a postgraduate degree in information science. Open access and open science advisor, and previously repository developer and manager, at the Latin American Council of Social Sciences (CLACSO), a network of 736 research institutions in 52 countries, where she now coordinates CLACSO's open access/open science International Campaign.
Janneke Adema
Janneke Adema is an Assistant Professor in Digital Media at the Centre for Postdigital Cultures at Coventry University. In her research she explores the future of scholarly communications and experimental forms of knowledge production, where her work incorporates processual and performative publishing, radical open access, scholarly poethics, media studies, book history, cultural studies, and critical theory. She explores these issues in depth in her various publications, but also by supporting a variety of scholar-led, not-for-profit publishing projects, including the Radical Open Access Collective, Open Humanities Press, ScholarLed, and Post Office Press (POP). She is currently Co-PI on the Community-Led Open Publication Infrastructures for Monographs (COPIM) project (copim.ac.uk). You can follow her research on openreflections.wordpress.com.
Tom Olyhoek
Open Access Week: Public release of the OpenAIRE-DARIAH Community gateway
How to make your research more visible and more connected
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Tuesday, 20 October 2020
A paramount challenge in present-day knowledge production is to communicate research results in ways that align with our increasingly digital and also increasingly diverse research workflows.
Research discovery platforms that have been developed from EU grants and will remain open to the public are game changers in this respect. They support the visibility and discoverability of all sorts of research outputs (datasets, software, protocols, teaching materials etc.) to showcase a broader view of scholarship and enable a greater transparency of scholarly communication.
This webinar aims to introduce an instance of them, the OpenAIRE-DARIAH Community Gateway. Built on the top of the OpenAIRE Research Graph, the OpenAIRE Community Gateways work as single access points to a virtual space that connects metadata descriptions of all scholarly objects that are important to the given community.
The DARIAH dashboard brings together publications and a broad range of research data (digital critical editions, plain text, archived data, audiovisual data, raw data, encoded documents, software applications, source code, images, structured graphics, databases, structured text, scientific and statistical data formats) that are hosted by DARIAH services such as NAKALA and TextGrid. As such, it significantly reduces the fragmentation of DARIAH research outputs across the web. A major benefit of such a discovery environment is that it provides scholarly communities with a single entry point to DARIAH-affiliated research outputs. This entry point, in turn, is embedded into the context of a bigger collection of Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage corpus enabling therefore arts and humanities researchers to find DARIAH outputs more easily, as an integral part of their discovery routine.
The webinar welcomes all the DARIAH communities, including humanities scholars, librarians, research support professionals, service providers and national representatives.