european perspectives on open science policy/jc burgelman
TRANSCRIPT
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SA-EU OPEN SCIENCE WORKSHOP PROGRAMME
Johannesburg 30 November – 1 December 2017
JC Burgelman,
DG RTD
European Perspectives on Open Science Policy
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1. Why Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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Open Science = Systemic transition of science system which affects the way
• research is performed• knowledge is shared/diffused/preserved• research projects/results are evaluated• research is funded• researchers are rewarded• future researchers are trained
Affecting the whole research cycle and all its stakeholders
A typical techno-economic paradigm shift a la Perez (technology, market and institutional change go hand in hand)
or to put it different: disruptive and hence disturbing….
1. Well accepted
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A general model for open science in early stage drug discovery
Public-Private
PartnershipPublic Domain Commercial
Tools & Basic KnowledgeNOVEL Proteins only!
• Structure
• Chemistry• Antibodies• Screening• Cell Assays
Discovery and Exploration
• No patent• No restriction on use• Open access to tools and data.• Target identification & validation
Drug Discovery and Development
Facilitated by access to increased amount of information in the public domain
- (re)Screening- Lead Optimisation- Pharmacology- Metabolism- Pharmacokinetics- Toxicology- Chemical development- Clinical development
CREATIVE COMMONS PROPRIETARY
Weigelt J. EMBO Reports 10:941-5 (2009)
1. Because we see the benefits
Structural gnomics consortium
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1. Benefits for ALL sciences
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1. And we need more
Rise of interdisciplinary, highly collaborative international big science projects – open by design
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1. 90% OF ALL SCIENTIFIC ARTICLES (2 MILLION PER YEAR) ARE BEHIND PAYWALLS! (AND 1 MILLION PAPERS ARE NEVER READ);
UNIVERSITIES WORLDWIDE WOULD SAVE 6 BILLION DOLLARS IF ALL PAPERS WOULD BE PUBLISHED IN OA (MAX PLANCK REPORT)
2. ONE MILLION VALID SCIENCE PAPERS ARE BOUNCED BACK (REJECTING, RESUBMISSION ETC)
TO DEAL WITH THAT: 100 MILLION HOURS (OF SCIENTIST!) ARE LOST ANNUALLY IN THE ACTUAL PROCESS OF PAPER REJECTING, RESUBMITTING, WAITING ETC.;
SO: MORE OPEN ACCESS, LESS LOSS
3. BIG PRIVATE RESEARCH TRUSTS GO FOR RADICAL OPEN ACCESS: WELLCOME TRUST, GATES, ZUCKERBERG , ETC
4. EVERY 3 DOWNLOADS OF A FRONTIERS ARTICLE LEADS TO 1 CITATION:
IN OTHER WORDS: NUMBER OF DOWNLOADS IS GOOD FOR YOUR IMPACT FACTOR IN OTHER WORDS: OPEN ACCESS IS GOOD FOR YOUR CAREER
1. Plus - it pays off
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• Better ROI of the R&I investments: self evident: if
all the results of our public research are made reusable, it will follow that better use is made
• Faster circulation of new ideas: we have 22 million EU
SME's that will have access to top notch research without having to significantly pay for it!
• More transparency of the science system as such: the public taxpayer has this right
• Fit for 21st century science purpose: all grand societal
challenges NEED cross disciplinary research
For researchers:
• Wider dissemination and sharing of the results
• More visibility and credit for those collecting and sharing underlying research data
• New career paths e.g. data scientists, start-ups, science diplomacy
1. Open Science offers great challenges & opportunities 4 science, scientists & society
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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" As I see it, European success now lies in sharing as soon as possible, (…). The days of open science have arrived."
Speech at "Presidency ConferenceOpen Science", 04 of April, 2016,Amsterdam
2. Top level policy
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2. Top level policy at national level too
• The Netherlands, first country to make the goal of default OS part of a new (Rutte III) government declaration
"Open science and open access will become the norm in academic research"
• Finland: created a cross cutting OS policy approach
• Several Lander having dedicated platforms or approaches
• VRWI in Flanders comes up with consolidated advice
• G7
• RSA!
• Etc..
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2016 - Holistic Policy Agenda: scope & ambitions
… 4 with regard to the use & management of research results and data
Open Data: FAIR data sharing is the default for funding scientific research
Science cloud: All EU researchers are able to deposit, access and analyse European scientific data through the open science cloud, without leaving their desk
Altmetrics: Alternative metrics to complement conventional indicators for research quality and impact (e.g. Journal Impact Factors and citations)
OA & Future of scholarly communication: All peer reviewed scientific publications are freely accessible
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2. EC Policy Priorities
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… 4 with regard to relations with research actors (researchers, institutions and funders)
Rewards: The European research career evaluation system fully acknowledges Open Science activities
Research Integrity: All publicly funded research in the EU adheres to commonly agreed Open Science Standards of Research Integrity
Education and skills: All young scientists in Europe have the necessary skills and support to apply Open Science research routines and practices
Citizen Science: CS significantly contribute and are recognised as valid knowledge producers of European science
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2. EC Policy Priorities
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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Then and now
FP7
OA Green orGold+GreenPilot
H2020
OA Green orGold+Greenobligation
& ORD Pilot
H2020
OA Green orGold+Greenobligation
& ORD by default
3. OA: Considerable progress in 10 years made
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3.1 OA: key issues Now
• Open Access to Publications: since 2014 mandatory
Set up of an Open Access Publications Platform: stand alone peer reviewed scientific articles resulting from H2020 projects (2017-2018)
• Open Access to research data: default from 2017 onwards. - Opt-outs possible at any stage (IPR, personal data protection and national security)- Research Data Management Plans: mandatory and FAIR
• Mainstreaming in all MS
• Set up of the European Open Science Cloud: a trusted virtual environment for enabling data driven science across boundaries and disciplines (2017-2019)
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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• May 2016 Competitiveness Council Conclusions: fullopen access to scientific publications by 2020 –commitment of the EU for all Member States!
• Amsterdam Call for Action on Open Scienceadvocates for "full open access for all scientificpublications",
• The Commission wants to lead by example inHorizon 2020:
• - Currently 60-68% of scientific publications produced are open access
further measures needed to achieve target
3.1 OA to publications: political support
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3.1 “Sharper” positioning
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3.1 Even for the “top”
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Towards a EC Horizon 2020 Open Research Europe Publishing Platform
Our proposal
(current state of thinking)
3.1 We can’t debate forever
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An online platform allowing rapid, OA publication of
(i) H 2020 related peer reviewed articles; and
(ii) H 2020 related pre-prints which meet basic criteria onauthorship, non-plagiarism and ethical conduct
• contains mechanisms for open/collaborate/public peerreview and a suit of innovative ('next generation') metrics
• is not a repository, it provides a fast, cost efficient andhigh quality service to publish in the 21st century
• is intended for Horizon 2020 beneficiaries as a free,complementary service and is thus not compulsory.
3.1 What is ORE
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• March 2017 – CssR Moedas informally discussed the idea with the Open Science Policy Platform (stakeholders)
• May 2017 - CssR Moedas introduced the idea in the Compet Council
• Ongoing - Implementation of ORE through a call for a public procurement in the WP 2018:
Call for tender open in December 2017
Applications until early 2018
Contract signature during 2018
3.1 Timeline
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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3.2 Now: Open Data
• Open Access to research data: default from 2017 onwards. - Opt-outs possible at any stage (IPR, personal data protection and national security)- Research Data Management Plans: mandatory and FAIR
• Mainstreaming in all MS
• Set up of the European Open Science Cloud: a trusted virtual environment for enabling data driven science across boundaries and disciplines (2017-2019)
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3.2 Open Data: basic principle
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities3. The Open Science policies so far3.1 Open Access to publications3.2 Open Access to Data3.3.European Open Science Cloud3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science3.6 Open Science and citizens science4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 95. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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European Open Data (and data drivenscience) supported by the European
Open Science Cloud
3.3 EOSC
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Source: RTD
The EOSC will allow for universal access to open research data and create a new level playing field for EU researchers
CERN, EMBL,
ELIXIR, etc.
Institutional
repository
Member State
Infrastructure
New provider/
service
Researcher • Easy access through a universal
access point for ALL European
researchers
• Cross-disciplinary access to data
unleashes potential of
interdisciplinary research
• Services and data are
interoperable (FAIR data)
• Data funded with public money is
in principle open (as open as
possible, as closed as necessary)
1.Access to all European research data
2.Access to world-class data services
3.Clear rules of use and service provision
4.FAIR data tools, training and standards
5.Sustainable after the grant
Seamless environment and enabling interdisciplinary research
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3.3 EOSC and the researcher
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• Vision is now as clear to external stakeholders
• Single online platform where all European researchers will be able to:
• Find, access and re-use data produced by other scientists.
• Deposit, analyse and share data they have been paid to produce.
• Initially (until 2020), the EOSC will build on existing investments, no/little fresh money is needed
• The Commission provides top-up money to set up and organise the federation and to start creating common European resources.
• EOSC will provide 1.7m EU researchers an environment with free, open services for data storage, management, analysis and re-use across disciplines.
• EOSC will JOIN existing and emerging horizontal and thematic data infrastructures, bridging todays fragmentation and ad-hoc solutions.
• EOSC will add value (scale, data-driven science, inter-disciplinarity, faster innovation) and leverage past infrastructure investment (10b per year by MS, two decades EU investment).
From Vision …. … to Action
After the EOSC Vision has been adopted and embraced by the relevant stakeholders, it is now time for action
Source: RTD
Vision endorsed by the EP, by the EESC and the CoR, by the G7 and “copied” by a host of nations globally: Japan, Canada and China.
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3.3 Open Data and EOSC
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o 110 key participants
o 80 from all scientific fields
o 15 national scientific infrastructures
o 13 research funders
o 19 officials from Member States and
Associated Countries
o Overall, 23 Member States and Associated
Countries represented
o 1800 via web stream and extensive coverage
via Twitter
3.3 EOSC summit
So far:
Stakeholder endorsements: 69
Stakeholder commitments: 61
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• The Summit provided strong support for the implementation of the EOSC and marked a step change in the initiative
• Ground European science in a common culture of data stewardship & sharing throughout research data lifecycle. Only a considerable cultural change will enable long-term reuse of research data
• Develop the EOSC as a commons of research data, knowledge and infrastructure with different roles and responsibilities by actors at EU and MS level
• Stimulate compliance through incentives and rewards
3.3 EOSC Summit Highlights 1
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● Make FAIR principles pragmatic, equally encompassing all four dimensions: findability, accessibility, interoperability and reusability
● Apply FAIR principles to all digital research objects, incl. data-related algorithms, tools, workflows, protocols & services
● Disciplines must develop their notion of FAIR in a coordinated fashion. Standards are fundamental but a one-size-fits-all approach must be avoided
3.3 EOSC Summit Highlights 2
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● Build trust between all stakeholders, e.g. scientific communities, e-infrastructures, research infrastructures, funders - “look outside the organisational boxes and work together”
● Set out both the science case and the financial case to raise commitments for the EOSC, in particular of MS – “whatever we do needs to be integrated with the national systems”
● Some of the actions identified will require more times than others to implement due to e.g. budget commitments, division of labour, building of trust. Implementation will need to fast-track some actions over others, depending on the level of priority, support and maturity
● Develop a formal framework for governing the EOSC (open, dynamic, trial-and-error process) to sustain and strengthen related policies & programmes and secure commitment of funders and users -“what needs to be governed and how?”
3.3 EOSC Summit Highlights 3
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• Hundreds of stakeholders involved (unlike when the
internet was created)
• Billions of investment touched: overall annual investment
of 10 billion euros in the EU (mainly by MS) on Research
Infrastructures and e-Infras
• And much more to come: If all public funders would agree
to commit 1% of the overall spending to open
data…(approx 2 billion per year)
3.3 EOSC implementation process: complex but
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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Working Group on ‘Skills and competences’
Objective
• Ensure that researchers have the appropriate skills to practice Open Science
• Open Science skills shall become an integral and streamlined component of education, training and career development
Report: published in July 2017, discussed at OSPP on 13.10.17
https://ec.europa.eu/research/openscience/index.cfm?pg=home
EU Skills & qualification matrix for OS could be used for this purpose, taking intoconsideration:
• what are the necessary training and competences requirements for aresearcher
• The relevant supporting structures to engage researchers in Open Science
3.4 Rewards & skills
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Working Group on 'Evaluation of research careers fully
acknowledging Open Science practices'
Objective :
• Modernisation of the current researchers' career evaluation system
• Creation of incentives and rewards for researchers engaged in Open Science
Report: published in July 2017, discussed at OSPP on 13.10.17
https://ec.europa.eu/research/openscience/index.cfm?pg=home
An OS Career Assessment Matrix (OS-CAM) : could be used for this purpose, taking into consideration - cf. abstract report :
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3.4 Rewards and skills
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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Council Conclusions on Research integrity (01/12/2015)
The Conclusions stress the relationship between research integrity and OpenScience.
"Recognises the importance of open science as a mechanism for reinforcing research integrity, while, at the same time, research integrity contributes to open science"
Responding to the Conclusions the Commission :
• Initiated the revision of the European Code of Conduct of Research Integrity.ALLEA adopted the new Code on 24 March 2017.The new code supports open science by promoting open access to researchpublication and data as well as the FAIR principles
• The Horizon 2020 legal basis will be adapted (article 34 of the Model GrantAgreement) to be aligned with the revised Code (end 2017).
3.5 Research Integrity
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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• An EC citizen science strategy being developed: aiming at supporting citizen science in FP9; working towards a citizen-friendly R&I governance framework; and ensuring optimum coordination within EC services.
• A (substantial) EC funding made available:
SwafS-15-2018-2019: Exploring and supporting citizen science (CSA/RIAs, EUR 16m)SwafS-17-2019: Consolidating and expanding the knowledge base on citizen science (RIA, EUR 2.5m)
3.6 Citizen science
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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4. As a funder: OS in H2020
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4. As a funder: OS in FP9beyond OA, ''do'' OS
FP9 goes beyond OA (publications and data) to embrace & incentivise Open Science as real life modus operandi
• FP9 clarifies and strengthens the OA obligations
• FP9 empowers authors of scientific publications
• FP9 is home of FAIR data sharing while complying with IPR rules and exploitation obligations set in the GA
• FP9 broadens OA (with opting out options) to other research output
• FP9 promotes compliance with 'Open Science principles' through a combination of obligations and incentives
• FP9 further implements sanctions for those beneficiaries thatrepeatedly and consistently fail to provide the required open access, requiring institutions to assume responsibility for their intellectualoutput
• FP9 introduces the use of new innovative ('new generation') metricsfor better assessing the impact of research output and the engagement in Open Science
Note: where the case, individual opt-out options remain.
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1. The genesis and context of Open Science Policy
2. The 8 Open Science policy priorities
3. The Open Science policies so far
3.1 Open Access to publications
3.2 Open Access to Data
3.3.European Open Science Cloud
3.4 Rewards and Skills for Open Science
3.5 Research Integrity in Open Science
3.6 Open Science and citizens science
4. Mainstreaming Open Science: H2020 & FP 9
5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
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5. Conclusion: no way back but much more needed
The EC is delivering what it promised:
Substantial progress on the 8 priorities (next generation metrics foreseen for 2018 – advice OSPP ready)
Rigorously in co-design and co-creation with the key stakeholders
ExternallyOS Policy Platform - Mobilising the most important external stakeholders
InternallyOS Policy Task Force – mainstreaming inside the house
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OS is here to stay:
It has often been said that 'data is the new oil'. This has been helpful in stressing the value of data in our economy, but it is the wrong analogy. Contrary to oil, open research data is non-exclusive and non-rival and so it makes sense to have publicly funded research data openly available. Open data is more like a renewable energy source: it can be reused without diminishing its original value, and reuse creates new value. The EC’s policies on open research data simply guarantee as many scientists and innovators as possible make, under equal conditions, the best use of this renewable source.
Digital Science Report.The State of Open Data 2017
Stefaan G. Verhulst and Andrew Young (2017)
Open Data in Developing Economies. Cape town: African Minds
1.
5. Much more needs to be done
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OS is here to stay:
1.If you want to go fast, go alone.If you want to go far, go together
(African saying)
But also
Such a long journey ahead of us
(South African writer, A. Brink)
5. Much more needs to be done
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5. Indeed – the journey only started
User-centered Publishing delivers Precision Information
The Machine is the New Reader
Science as a Social Machine
Data Privacy requires a Web of Trust
Big Data meets Artificial Intelligence
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• Due to the power of cyber science tools, it is quite realistic to assume that we will evolve from peer reviewed open access publications
to peer reviewed open access research workflows
• Implying that scientific publishers become open science platforms in which an article is 1 of the many products (and not even per se)
• And where the whole process is open and peer reviewed(see the Jacobson controversy --- NAS)
5. e.g. OA of articles the final frontier?
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5. No one foresaw this exponential growth either
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5. Independent QUALITY assurance will always beat the core of science
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More information at
http://ec.europa.eu/research/openscience
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Open Science Monitor
http://ec.europa.eu/research/openscience/monitor/
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Open science represents an approach to research that is collaborative, transparent and accessible. Open science occurs acrossthe research process and there are many different activities that can be considered part of this evolution in science. The open science monitor tracks trends in areas that have consistent and reliable data.
Open science monitor
Explore open science characteristics and indicators.
Home About Open access Open research dataOpen scholarly communication
Citizen scienceDrivers and
barriers
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* These indicators are for both open access and open scholarly communication.
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