Categories
Open Access Research UBedu UBrss

Earth and Space Science Open Archive.

American Geophysical Union (AGU) and Atypon (software development company) have announced that the Earth and Space Science Open Archive (ESSOAr) is fully functioning in a beta version.

Researchers can submit their preprints and posters that will be archived, discoverable and citable (with DOI).

ESSOAr offers researchers to sign in with their ORCID credentials and an user friendly drag and drop functionality.

We have previously described how to create a research profile with ORCID in this blog https://www.ntnu.no/blogger/ub-teknologi/en/2017/04/25/create-your-researcher-profile-and-make-your-research-more-visible/.

ESSOAr will give researchers the possibility to receive peer feedback and be able to improve the final output of their publications.

All content in ESSOAr will be freely available.

ESSOAr

Categories
Events Open Access Research

2017 International Open Access Week

Open Access Week is an annual, community-driven event focusing on open access and related topics. It takes place globally during the last full week of October. The event is celebrated by individuals, institutions and organizations across the world. Typical activities include talks, seminars, symposia, or the announcement of open access mandates or other milestones in open access. This year it will be the 10th International Open Access Week, and it will be held  23 – 29 October 2017.  Since 2012, an ‘official’ theme was established, and this year it is called “Open in order to…”.

This theme is an invitation to answer the question of what concrete benefits can be realised by making scholarly outputs openly available. “Open in order to…” serves as a prompt to move beyond talking about openness in itself and focus on what openness enables—in an individual discipline, at a particular institution, or in a specific context; then to take action to realise these benefits. A few examples how to answer this question: Open in order to increase the impact of my scholarship. Open in order to enable more equitable participation in research. Open in order to improve public health. For more information about International Open Access Week, please visit www.openaccessweek.org.

At NTNU, there will be a number of talks on the importance of Open Access to science and research during this week. Researchers talk about their own experiences with publishing Open Access, others focus on NTNUs policy and goals for Open Access, and what the status is today. NTNU University Library offers an “Open Office” in a number of their locations. You can drop in to discuss what you yourself need to do to meet requirements from NTNU or your funders for making your publications openly available.

Programme for the Open Access Week at NTNU