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Fai una domanda su #COVID-19

Gli esperti rispondono

  • 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 

AMA banner def covid19

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: 

Elisabetta Bissaldi,  

Marco Circella,  

Francesca De Leo, 

Annamaria Demarinis,  

Fabio Gargano, 

Emma Lazzeri,  

Loredana Le Pera,  

Gina Pavone,  

Stefania Petraccone, 

Allegra Via, 

RICORDATI DI COMPILARE IL QUESTIONARIO!

From Open Science to Inclusive Science

From Open Science to Inclusive Science

  • Friday, 25 October 2019

From Open Science to Inclusive Science with Paola Masuzzo

Friday, Oct 25, 2019 from 2pm to 3pm (CEST)

A lot is happening in the Open Science world, as everybody realizes more and more the importance of open, transparent and participatory research practices.

However, we tend to forget, in the ongoing conversations, what Open Science means to different audiences, coming from diverse or even underrepresented backgrounds.

In this webinar, we will be talking about Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Inclusiveness.

Masuzzo will make the case that these are non-negotiable and they must be built into the foundation of what we are all trying to achieve in the ongoing efforts of democratizing knowledge.

 

 

This webinar is organised in collaboration with Open Science MOOC OpenScienceMOOC logo

Four Good Practices for Software Development in Open Science (in Greek)

Four Good Practices for Software Development in Open Science (in Greek)

  • Thursday, 06 June 2019

Athena Research Center (ARC), the Hellenic Academic Libraries Link (HEAL-Link) and the University of Cyprus Library, being the National Open Access Desks for Greece and Cyprus respectively, are organising a webinar on Open Software in Research as part of their “Open Science webinar series”.

OpenAIRE webinar:

Four Good Practices for Software Development in Open Science


When: Thursday 6 June 2019

Time: 11.00-12.00 EEST

Language of the presentation: Greek


The OpenAIRE team is pleased to welcome guest speaker, Dr Fotis Psomopoulos, bioinformatician and Principal Investigator C' at the Institute of Applied Biosciences (INAB), Center for Research and Technology Hellas (CERTH) to present ELIXIR’s set of principles for software development in open research environments.


The webinar will be about good practices for developing Open Software, which has gained particular attention along with Big Data, and is now an integral part of Science, with a distinctive example of Life Sciences. Recognizing this important role, ELIXIR as the Pan-European Network of Excellence in Bioinformatics, created a working group aiming at specifying good practices for software development, in line with the Open Science principles. During the presentation, the four key practices and their implementation will be presented in a realistic scenario, followed by a discussion about next steps planned in that direction.

 

For any questions you may have or for more information, do not hesitate to contact us!

OpenAIRE-GR 

OpenAIRE-CY 

FOSTER/OpenAIRE Moderated Course on Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020

FOSTER/OpenAIRE Moderated Course on Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020

A moderated course organised by FOSTER and OpenAIRE

  • Thursday, 07 February 2019

Are you participating in a H2020 funded project? Would you like to know more on how to comply with the H2020 Open Access mandate?

Join in this moderated FOSTER/OpenAIRE Course on Open Access to Publications in Horizon 2020 from February 4th to 8th, and attend a Webinar on Thursday, February 7th at 12:00 CET.

Target audience: researchers, project managers, librarians and repository managers.

Learn about:

  • The context of the H2020 mandate
  • Compliance with the H2020 OA Mandate by depositing publications into repositories
  • Reporting of deposited publications in Horizon2020

On February 7th at 12:00 CET a 1 hour webinar was organized, providing the course participants the opportunity to get a deeper understanding of the compliance issues, and get direct replies to their questions and doubts.

FAIR DATA e Action Plan

FAIR DATA e Action Plan

  • Tuesday, 20 November 2018

For the Open Access Week Italy, in collaboration with the OpenAIRE NOADs, IOSSG, and the RDA Italian Node, offers webinars series!

More Information about the webinar series
FAIR data and trusted repositories.

FAIR data and trusted repositories.

  • Thursday, 18 October 2018

This video illustrates how certified digital repositories contribute to making and keeping research data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR). Trustworthy repositories support Open Access to data, as well as Restricted Access when necessary, and they offer support for metadata, sustainable and interoperable file formats, and persistent identifiers for future citation. Presented by Marjan Grootveld (DANS, OpenAIRE).

More Information:
- Core Trust Seal for trustworthy digital repositories: https://www.coretrustseal.org/
- EUDAT FAIR checklist: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1065991
- European Commission’s Guidelines on FAIR data management: http://ec.europa.eu/research/particip...
- FAIR data principles: www.force11.org/group/fairgroup/fairprinciples
- Overview of metadata standards and tools: https://rdamsc.dcc.ac.uk/
Flip the classroom: bring your questions about RDM and DMPs

Flip the classroom: bring your questions about RDM and DMPs

Open Access Week 2017

  • Tuesday, 24 October 2017

A computational linguist by training, Marjan Grootveld (DANS) on data management policy and practice
FAIR Data in Trustworthy Data Repositories Webinar

FAIR Data in Trustworthy Data Repositories Webinar

(DANS/EUDAT/OpenAIRE Webinar - Dec. 2016

  • Sunday, 11 December 2016

    Monday, 12 December 2016

Everybody wants to play FAIR, but how do we put the principles into practice? In this webinar the FAIR Guiding Principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) and the DSA (Data Seal of Approval were discussed and compared and a tangible operationalization was presented. The Webinar was co-organised by DANS, EUDAT &OpenAIRE, on 12 and 13 December, 2016. There is a growing demand for quality criteria for research datasets. In this webinar we will argue that the DSA (Data Seal of Approval for data repositories) and FAIR principles get as close as possible to giving quality criteria for research data. They do not do this by trying to make value judgements about the content of datasets, but rather by qualifying the fitness for data reuse in an impartial and measurable way. By bringing the ideas of the DSA and FAIR together, we will be able to offer an operationalization that can be implemented in any certified Trustworthy Digital Repository. 

In 2014 the FAIR Guiding Principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) were formulated. The well-chosen FAIR acronym is highly attractive: it is one of these ideas that almost automatically get stuck in your mind once you have heard it. In a relatively short term, the FAIR data principles have been adopted by many stakeholder groups, including research funders.

The FAIR principles are remarkably similar to the underlying principles of DSA (2005): the data can be found on the Internet, are accessible (clear rights and licenses), in a usable format, reliable and are identified in a unique and persistent way so that they can be referred to. Essentially, the DSA presents quality criteria for digital repositories, whereas the FAIR principles target individual datasets.
Funding Available for APC-Free Open Access Journals and Platforms

Funding Available for APC-Free Open Access Journals and Platforms

  • Wednesday, 11 May 2016

OpenAIRE webinar led by Pablo de Castro, from LIBER, about FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot with a special focus on the alternative funding mechanism being launched to support Open Access journals and platforms which do not charge any Article Processing Charges to their authors.
FP7 post-grant OA publishing funds pilot webinar: Eastern Europe

FP7 post-grant OA publishing funds pilot webinar: Eastern Europe

  • Tuesday, 05 April 2016

OpenAIRE webinar led by Pablo de Castro, from LIBER, about FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot with a special focus on Eastern Europe.
FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot webinar

FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot webinar

  • Sunday, 18 October 2015

OpenAIRE webinar by Pablo de Castro about FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot.
FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot webinar

FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot webinar

  • Tuesday, 17 March 2015

OpenAIRE webinar led by Pablo de Castro, from LIBER, about FP7 post-grant Open Access publishing funds pilot (an update).