Open Research
Scope
Open research — making the entire research process more transparent, and results more accessible, in the interest of reproducibility and verification — continues to gain momentum globally. This event will look at the current state of open research around the world, examine needs across different communities, and identify next steps that might be useful in helping to meet those needs. The agenda will cover a broad range of topics, including open peer review and data-sharing, reproducibility, and metrics for open access outputs, as well as the current and future role of publication in preserving the scholarly record.
Confirmed Speakers: Toby Green, Co-founder, Coherent Digital; Glenn Hampson, Program Director, Open Scholarship Initiative; Gabriela Mejias, Engagement Manager, Global Consortia, ORCID; Alison Mudditt, CEO, PLOS; Jason Priem, Co-Founder, OurResearch.org; and Jennifer Regala, Director of Publications/Executive Editor, American Urological Association.
Event Sessions
12:00 Noon - 12:15 Welcome
Speaker
12:15pm - 12:45pm The Current Landscape for Open Research
Speaker
Defining the foundational landscape of open research is a bit like defining the foundational landscape of “architecture.” There is a tremendous amount of diversity of form and purpose, but also some common elements. This presentation will focus on three main pillars of this foundation: (1) Understanding the definition of “open.” This word is everywhere in the scholarly communication landscape but what does it mean and how is it used by different groups? (2) Understanding the status, needs and challenges of the open universe. Where are we making progress? What needs are we meeting and what are the unmet needs and challenges? And finally, (3) Understanding the priorities for improving our open future. What should we focus on and why?
12:45pm - 1:15pm Building and Launching The Commons
Speaker
Confirmed Speaker: Toby Green, Co-founder, Coherent Digital;
1:15pm - 1:45pm Making It Work Globally
Speaker
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are the building blocks of research infrastructure. This presentation will provide an overview on how ORCID (and other PIDs) can help improve trust and transparency in research information as well as current challenges to adoption. We'll also discuss how PIDs can help enable recognition for collaborative research across borders and Indigenous Knowledge.
CARE Principles for Indigenous Data Governance
1:45pm - 2:30pm Comfort Break (45 minutes)
2:30 - 3:00 Adapting to New Practices: A Case Study
Speaker
What does the road to open science look like? How can an organization take a step back to move in the direction of open science? This case study will allow you to learn about how the American Urological Association is examining their scholarly publications program to make their research accessible and open. By starting small and meaningfully, this program is not “checking the box” on “open”; instead, they are thinking about short- and long-term changes to meet the needs of the urological community and global scientific readership at large.
3:00 - 3:30 Build It and They Will Come
Speaker
At the end of this year, Microsoft Academic Graph (MAG) will be discontinued. A free scholarly bibliographic and citation database (like Scopus or Google Scholar), MAG has quietly become an essential component of many scholarly infrastructure projects--and so its departure is a real problem for our community. OurResearch is working to solve this problem. On January 1, we're launching OpenAlex: a free, open, and comprehensive catalog of scholarly papers, authors, institutions, and more. As well as providing a drop-in replacement for MAG, OpenAlex will also add support for ORCID and ROR, a full-featured REST API, and be built on completely open-source code. I'll dig into some of the details of our approach, compare and contrast our approach to MAG's, and share our roadmap for the future.
Shared by speaker Gabriela Mejias - Posse (Principles of Open Scholarly Infrastructure): Who has committed to the POSI principles?
3:30pm - 4:00pm Vision Interview with Todd Carpenter
Speaker
Confirmed Speaker: Alison Mudditt, CEO, PLOS (Public Library of Science)
Additional Information
NISO assumes organizations register as a group. The fee includes access to an archived recording of the event for those who may have timing conflicts.
NISO understands that, during the current pandemic, staff at a number of organizations may be practicing safe social distancing or working remotely. To accommodate those workers, we are allowing registrants to share the sign-on instructions with all colleagues so that they may join the broadcast directly.
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Links to the archived recording of the broadcast are distributed to registrants 24-48 hours following the close of the live event. Access to that recording is intended for internal use of fellow staff at the registrant’s organization or institution. Speaker presentations are posted to the NISO event page.
Broadcast Platform
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Event Dates
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Fees
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Location
Timing shown for this event is Eastern Daylight Time. All NISO events follow the practices of the Eastern Time Zone (US & Canada).