Importance and Benefits of OPEN SCIENCE for Ubiquitous Sharing, Dissemination and Impact


Autoria(s): Grigorov, Ivo; Knoth, Petr; Kuchma, Iryna; Schmidt, Birgit; Rettberg, Najla; Rodrigues, Eloy
Data(s)

13/10/2014

13/10/2014

2014

Resumo

While openness is well applied to software development and exploitation (open sources), and successfully applied to new business models (open innovation), fundamental and applied research seems to lag behind. Even after decades of advocacy, in 2011 only 50% of the public-funded research was freely available and accessible (Archambault et al., 2013). The current research workflows, stemming from a pre-internet age, result in loss of opportunity not only for the researchers themselves (cf. extensive literature on topic at Open Access citation project, http://opcit.eprints.org/), but also slows down innovation and application of research results (Houghton & Swan, 2011). Recent studies continue to suggest that lack of awareness among researchers, rather than lack of e-infrastructure and methodology, is a key reason for this loss of opportunity (Graziotin 2014). The session will focus on why Open Science is ideally suited to achieving tenure-relevant researcher impact in a “Publish or Perish” reality. Open Science encapsulates tools and approaches for each step along the research cycle: from Open Notebook Science to Open Data, Open Access, all setting up researchers for capitalising on social media in order to promote and discuss, and establish unexpected collaborations. Incorporating these new approaches into a updated personal research workflow is of strategic beneficial for young researchers, and will prepare them for expected long term funder trends towards greater openness and demand for greater return on investment (ROI) for public funds.

The autumn training school Development and Promotion of Open Access to Scientific Information and Research is organized in the frame of the Fourth International Conference on Digital Presentation and Preservation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage—DiPP2014 (September 18–21, 2014, Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, http://dipp2014.math.bas.bg/), organized under the UNESCO patronage. The main organiser is the Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences with the support of EU project FOSTER (http://www.fosteropenscience.eu/) and the P. R. Slaveykov Regional Public Library in Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria.

Identificador

Digital Presentation and Preservation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage, Vol. 4, No 1, (2014), 322p-323p

1314-4006

http://hdl.handle.net/10525/2399

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Institute of Mathematics and Informatics Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Open Science #Impact #Research Excellence Framework #REF #open notebook science #open data #open access #Responsible Research & Innovation
Tipo

Article