INTRODUCTION
Leaders, policymakers and politicians in the research and innovation field are currently intensely discussing how to further improve the sharing and re-use of research results. The issue as such is not new; similar discussions have been critical to the evolution of modern research since the Renaissance. However, the rapid development of information and communication technology (ICT) has now made it possible for research results to be shared in fundamentally new ways and to an extent which is already having a profound effect on research.
The Impact of Improved Sharing and Re-Use of Research Results
The ORGANIZATION also requires that applications include a data management plan, describing how the research data in the project will be used and re-used, how the rights of ownership to and usage of the data used and generated by the project will be distributed, and how the data produced will be stored and subsequently made available within and outside the project both during the project and after the project has ended. Finally, the Academy recommends that research projects also make their research data available through major national or international archives or storage services that are of relevance within their own fields.
AIMS
Exchange of information and experience:
The ORGANIZATION IS a small actor in an international perspective, and the amount of resources that can be allocated to efforts on Open Access to research results and Open Science is limited. An extended exchange of information and experiences can improve the efficiency of some efforts. Such efforts might be pursued at several levels, including policymakers, research funders, research organisations and providers of data infrastructure. Such exchange could potentially result in more harmonised policies and guidelines.
Facilitating progress on specific issues: cooperative efforts might prove to be more efficient, allow for more rapid progress and improved international impact.
Implementing pilots: from the planning and evaluation of calls for proposals, through evaluation of proposals and contracts, to reporting and final evaluations.
FULLTEXT here
Leaders, policymakers and politicians in the research and innovation field are currently intensely discussing how to further improve the sharing and re-use of research results. The issue as such is not new; similar discussions have been critical to the evolution of modern research since the Renaissance. However, the rapid development of information and communication technology (ICT) has now made it possible for research results to be shared in fundamentally new ways and to an extent which is already having a profound effect on research.
The Impact of Improved Sharing and Re-Use of Research Results
The ORGANIZATION also requires that applications include a data management plan, describing how the research data in the project will be used and re-used, how the rights of ownership to and usage of the data used and generated by the project will be distributed, and how the data produced will be stored and subsequently made available within and outside the project both during the project and after the project has ended. Finally, the Academy recommends that research projects also make their research data available through major national or international archives or storage services that are of relevance within their own fields.
AIMS
Exchange of information and experience:
The ORGANIZATION IS a small actor in an international perspective, and the amount of resources that can be allocated to efforts on Open Access to research results and Open Science is limited. An extended exchange of information and experiences can improve the efficiency of some efforts. Such efforts might be pursued at several levels, including policymakers, research funders, research organisations and providers of data infrastructure. Such exchange could potentially result in more harmonised policies and guidelines.
Facilitating progress on specific issues: cooperative efforts might prove to be more efficient, allow for more rapid progress and improved international impact.
Implementing pilots: from the planning and evaluation of calls for proposals, through evaluation of proposals and contracts, to reporting and final evaluations.
FULLTEXT here
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