Studies on Subject-Specific Requirements for Open Access Infrastructure. 2011
Inhalt
- Executive Summary
- Introduction
- Agricultural Research
- Introduction
- Case study: socioeconomic surveys: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
- Case study: ongoing agricultural research and development capacity survey
- Case study: multisite agricultural trial database for climate change analysis
- Case study: plant genetics resources: the Singer system and further
- Current status of research infrastructure workflows and research life cycle
- Introduction to the research infrastructure
- Scientists, centres and system-wide programmes
- Knowledge sharing
- Current status of Open Access in agriculture
- Coverage of agricultural Open Access journals in scientific journal metrics indexes
- Open Access repositories in the CGIAR
- Open Access mandates
- Open Access to data: overview of CGIAR data sets
- Introduction
- Outside the star system
- Data available online in publications
- Structured data sets
- Data portals
- Challenges and opportunities
- Future directions and summary
- Provision of data sets with publications
- More work on interactive data visualisations
- Publishing data in more interactive formats
- Application programming interfaces
- Knowledge sharing
- Promotion
- Collaborative efforts
- Ubiquitous telecommunications infrastructure
- Cloud computing
- Increased use of spatial analysis and GIS
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Bibliography
- Further reading
- Glossary
- Information and Communication Technology
- History, structure and mission
- Methodology
- Introductory interview
- Observation
- Questionnaire
- Semi-structured interview
- Website analysis of publication behaviour
- Case narratives
- Behavioural sciences, natural sciences and neuroscience (BehNatNeur)
- Social sciences and humanities (SocHum)
- Theoretical and applied computer science (CompSci)
- Robotics and engineering (RobEng)
- Representativeness of this case study
- Current status of research infrastructure
- Current status of Open Access to literature
- Current status of Open Access to research data
- Challenges
- Future developments
- Implications for Open Access infrastructure
- Acknowledgements
- List of figures
- List of tables
- e-Infrastructures Area
- Introduction
- Methodology and representativeness of the study
- Case narratives
- D-Lib research group
- Agro-Know
- National Documentation Center (EKT)
- Greek Research & Technology Network (GRNET)
- MADGIK research group
- Engineering R&D Unit on Clouds and distributed computing infrastructures
- Current status
- Desiderata and future directions
- Research data
- Literature
- Linking literature and research data
- Open Access
- A research infrastructure for e-Infrastructureresearchers
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Bibliography
- Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences
- Introduction
- Workflows in social sciences and humanities research
- Case studies
- Archaeology
- Political science
- History
- Law
- Economics, social science
- Linguistics
- E-Science
- Important general issues
- Current status of Open Access
- Current research infrastructure projects
- AlfaLab
- Connecting ARchaeology and ARchitecture to Europeana (CARARE)
- Council of European Social Science Data Archives(CESSDA)
- Common Language Resources and Technology Infrastructure (CLARIN)
- CLIO-INFRA
- Digital Collaboratory for Cultural Dendrochronology(DCCD)
- Digital Research Infrastructure for the Arts and Humanities (DARIAH)
- European Social Survey (ESS)
- European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI)
- PersID
- Verteld Verleden, spoken testimonies online
- DANS data research infrastructure
- EASY
- e-Depot Dutch Archaeology (EDNA)
- Persistent identifier services
- Migration to Intermediate XML for Electronic Data(MIXED)
- National Academic Research and Collaborations Information System (NARCIS)
- DANS EASY online analysis tool
- Netherlands' Geographical Information System (NLGis)
- DANS data support services and policies, standards and guidelines
- Data seal of approval
- Repository audit and certification(trustworthy digital repository)
- DANS literature publishing infrastructure
- Lifecycles and scholarly primitives in the humanities and social sciences
- Challenges, opportunities and trends
- E-research
- DANS as a research organization
- Grid
- Software for data access
- Enhanced publications
- Scientometrics
- Linking of datasets
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Climate Research
- Climate science
- Current status of climate modelling research infrastructure
- Data management and WDCC at the German Climate Computing Centre (DM/DKRZ and WDCC/DKRZ)
- The Climate and Environmental Retrieval and Archive (CERA) database
- The Coupled Model Intercomparison Projects (CMIP)
- The Earth System Grid data infrastructure
- Quality control of CMIP5 model output data
- Long-term archiving at WDCC
- Publication and citation of scientific primary data
- Current status of the research infrastructure of observationalclimate science programmes in Germany
- German Weather Service(DWD, Deutscher Wetterdienst), Offenbach
- The German Remote Sensing Data Center (DFD, Deutsches Fernerkundungsdatenzentrum), Oberpfaffenhofen
- World Data Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (WDC-MARE, Biogeochemistry, Circulation, and Life of Present and Past Oceans), Bremen
- National Oceanographic Data Centre for Germany(NODC), Hamburg
- National Bathymetric Data Centre, Rostock
- World Data Center for Climate (WDCC)
- Results of a survey concerning climate research practices in six German institutions
- Max Planck Institute for Meteorology (MPI-M), Hamburg
- Climate Service Center(CSC, Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht), Hamburg
- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology/Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research, Atmospheric Environmental Research (KIT/IMK-IFU), Garmisch-Partenkirchen
- Collaborative Climate Community Data and Processing Grid (C3-Grid), AWI, Bremerhaven
- Coastal Research of the Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht (HZG), Geesthacht
- Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency (BSH), Hamburg
- Current status of Open Access in climate research literature
- Library management in Germany
- Libraries, literature databases and search tools
- Climate science literature management
- Current status of Open Access in climate research data
- German Weather Service (DWD Deutscher Wetterdienst), Offenbach
- World Data Center for Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere (WDC-RSAT), Oberpfaffenhofen
- World Data Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (WDC-MARE), Bremen
- The Bremen Core Repository (BCR)
- National Oceanographic Datacentre for Germany(NODC), Hamburg
- World Data Center for Climate (WDCC), Hamburg
- Challenges for Open Access e-Infrastructures in climateresearch
- Future directions and summary
- Implications for OpenAIRE
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Bibliography
- Appendices
- Health Sciences
- Introduction and methodology
- The European Bioinformatics Institute: an overview
- The health sciences
- The scope of research activities in health sciences
- Types of research activity and the main experimental and theoretical methodologies used
- Types of research output and the way they are used
- Workflows in life science research
- Case studies: short description of typical use cases inhealth science research
- Current status of research infrastructure, workflows andlife cycles
- The experimental infrastructure: approaches andprotocols
- The community infrastructure: collaborative research
- The temporal infrastructure: research life cycles
- The skills and training infrastructure
- Current status of Open Access to the research literature
- The policy foundation for Open Access to the biomedical literature
- Open Access to the research literature
- New developments in dissemination in health sciences
- Open notebooks
- Current status of Open Access to research data
- The policy foundation for Open Access to biomedical data
- Formal infrastructure for sharing research data
- Informal infrastructure for sharing research data
- Challenges and opportunities
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Bibliography
- Subject-Specific Requirements for Open Access Infrastructure –Attempt at a Synthesis
- Introduction
- Methodological reflections
- Localising the study in the world of research
- The process of writing the chapters
- Observations during the writing process
- Initial observations summarised
- General assumptions throughout the chapters: the benefits and obstacles of OA infrastructure
- Comparative analysis
- Conclusions
