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Open Research

 
Read more at: Everything you need to know about Open Research (for STEM graduate students and researchers)

Everything you need to know about Open Research (for STEM graduate students and researchers)

What is Open Research, and what does it mean for you?

 

  • Would you like to share your research findings with the international academic community, without paywall restrictions?
  • Would you like to boost citations of your work?
  • Did you know that funders recognise the benefits of Open Access and most now require it as a condition of their grants?

These are questions for academics at all stages of their research.

Join us to explore:


Read more at: Repositive Seminar: Clinical Data Sharing for a 12M Population

Repositive Seminar: Clinical Data Sharing for a 12M Population

Repositive invite you to join them for a seminar in which Professor Rolando Rodrigez will share his approaches in leading his efforts to develop a nation-wide infrastructure for sharing of clinical data. He will describe Cuba’s national eHealth Infrastructure, as a reference project for the WHO for the integration of clinical, molecular information. He will also highlight the challenges ahead and the role and impact of initiatives like Repositive on eHealth. 

 


Read more at: Repositive Online Seminar: The Human Genomic Data Access Bottleneck

Repositive Online Seminar: The Human Genomic Data Access Bottleneck

The H3ABionet Seminar co-ordinating team on behalf of the H3ABioNet Research Working Group invite you to join the January 2017 H3ABioNet seminar under the theme of: “Access to personal genomes”.


Read more at: Everything you need to know about Open Research (for graduate students and researchers in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)

Everything you need to know about Open Research (for graduate students and researchers in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences)

What is Open Research, and what does it mean for you?

 

  • Would you like to share your research findings with the international academic community, without paywall restrictions?
  • Would you like to boost citations of your work?
  • Did you know that funders recognise the benefits of Open Access and most now require it as a condition of their grants?

These are questions for academics at all stages of their research.

Join us to explore:


Read more at: Webinar: Can Open Science win your Grant Proposals?

Webinar: Can Open Science win your Grant Proposals?

The YEAR Network will organise a series of webinars starting in spring 2017. The webinars will provide you with compact and clear information on issues concerning all young/early-career researchers. The two first topics will be “How to effectively implement Open Science in your dissemination plan to succeed with your project applications” and “Career opportunities for young researchers: where to start and how to find you own success path”.
 


Read more at: Helping Researchers Publish in Sciences, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics

Helping Researchers Publish in Sciences, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics


Read more at: Research software management, sharing and sustainability workshop

Research software management, sharing and sustainability workshop

The talks by Neil Chue-Hong and Stephen Eglen are available to watch on our YouTube channel:

 

Neil Chue-Hong: Is my research right? Surviving in a post-expert world

Stephen Eglen: Towards standard practice for managing and sharing code

 


Read more at: Electronic Lab Notebooks: doing paperless research

Electronic Lab Notebooks: doing paperless research


Read more at: Introduction to Programming: Workshop

Introduction to Programming: Workshop

  • Do you use data in your research, or do you provide research support to those who do?
  • Would you like to learn basic programming skills to program your own models and applications?
  • There is more to programming than simply writing lines of code. This free workshop will provide you with a basic set of skills to make the coding process more effective, less error prone and more maintainable.


    Read more at: Can social media work for me?

    Can social media work for me?

    An event for early career researchers organised by the Social Media Knowledge Exchange with the support of the AHRC Doctoral Training Partnership.
    Social media is part of everyday life for millions of people but can you make platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Storify work for you in your academic career? What are the challenges posed by using commercial social media platforms to disseminate your research or communicate with academic colleagues? How are PhD students and early career researchers in Cambridge making social media work for them?


    Open Research Newsletter sign-up

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    The Office of Scholarly Communication sends this Newsletter to its subscribers in order to disseminate information relevant to open access, research data management, scholarly communication and open research topics. For details on how the personal information you enter here is used, please see our privacy policy