Helmholtz Open Science Online-Seminare
In regelmäßigen Abständen organisiert das Helmholtz Open Science Office Online-Seminare mit Open-Science-Expert:innen aus Helmholtz und dem nationalen und internationalen Umfeld. Die Online-Seminare dienen dem Wissenstransfer und bieten eine Plattform zum Austausch zu aktuellen Entwicklungen von Open Science. Mehr hier: https://os.helmholtz.de/veranstaltungen/online-seminare
DOI (Serie): 10.5446/s_1394
5
2022–2025
215
3 Stunden 29 Minuten
5 Ergebnisse
37:07
52Waltman, LudoThe 65th Helmholtz Open Science Online Seminar took place on Friday, October 21, 2022 from 11:00 am to 12:00 pm (CEST). Our speaker Ludo Waltman explained why openness of research information is a crucial prerequisite for more responsible approaches to research assessment. He discussed various initiatives promoting openness of research information, both in the Netherlands and globally, with a special focus on the metadata of scientific publications. He also discussed how organizations can support these initiatives and participate in them. Ludo Waltmann's presentation was followed by a question and discussion slot. The 60-minute event was held in English via the video conferencing tool Zoom. Ludo Waltmann's presentation was recorded.
2022Helmholtz Open Science Office
57:28
56Bertelmann, Roland et al.The 66th Helmholtz Open Science Online Seminar was dedicated to the topic of the creation, design, and implementation of Open Science Policies with contributions from CERN and the Helmholtz Open Science Office, and was opened with a welcome address by Lutz Möller, Deputy Secretary-General of the German Commission for UNESCO.
2023Helmholtz Open Science Office
38:59
84Lorenz, Anna-Lena et al.The 67th Helmholtz Open Science Online Seminar took place on Tuesday, November 7, 2023 from 3:30 to 4:30pm (CET). Our speakers Anna-Lena Lorenz and Oliver Karras presented the Open Research Knowledge Graph (ORKG) developed by TIB - Leibniz Information Centre for Science and Technology and other project-partners. Science is facing a challenge: With the increasing number of publications, it is hard to keep an overview over relevant contributions. With the Open Research Knowledge Graph (ORKG), we aim to solve this problem. Semantic descriptions of research contributions make knowledge human- and machine-readable and enable completely new forms of machine assistance for scientists. With this, ORKG provides the basis for modern scholarly communication. The talk has given a brief overview over the initiative, presented use cases and discussed possible applications for research groups and institutes. After the presentation there was room for questions and discussion. The discussion slot was not recorded.
2023Helmholtz Open Science Office
35:00
16Arancio, Julieta C.The 69th Helmholtz Open Science Online Seminar took place on Thursday, May 23, 2024 from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. (CEST). Our speaker Julieta Arancio talked on how changes in science policy in the last decade turned advocacy for open science into institutional strategies, new role descriptions and more infrastructure for enabling broader access to scientific knowledge. Most of these open science strategies at research institutions focus on open access to publications, open research data and, exceptionally, research software. This seminar focused on open hardware, an emerging area of open science which was included in the global 2021 UNESCO Recommendation. After introducing the concept, main initiatives and latest news in the field, the potential and limitations of open hardware to make open science more reproducible, efficient and equitable were discussed.
2024Helmholtz Open Science Office
40:29
7Linåker, Johan et al.In his talk "Public Sector Open Source Program Offices - Archetypes for how to Grow (Common) Institutional Capabilities", Johan Linåker presented a study, commissioned by the European Commission, which delves into the structural configurations and strategic utilisation of Open Source Programme Offices (OSPOs) within the public sector domain, with a specific focus on OSPOs within European Union (EU) member states, Norway, Liechtenstein, and Iceland. The investigation is based on interviews conducted with 18 OSPO representatives across 16 cases. The study classifies OSPOs into six distinct archetypes, providing insights into their organisational structures, responsibilities, and contributions to the adoption of Open Source Software (OSS). It also highlights the challenges encountered by OSPOs and provides recommendations for both policymakers and practitioners.
2025Helmholtz Open Science Office