Di Donato, Francesca
Eskevich, Maria
Provost, Lottie
Kraker, Peter
Van Uytvanck, Dieter
Vignoli, Michela
König, Alexander
Thiel, Carsten
Tetteh Ocansey, Joshua
Lombardo, Tiziana
Pohle, Stefanie
Tóth-Cifra, Erzsébet
Chen, Yin
Blotière, Emilie
2022-06-30
<p>The report Open Science within the EOSC collects the findings of T6.3 EOSC guidelines training and advocacy on Open Science, whose main goal is to produce, adapt and reuse general and specific guidelines to implement Open Science practices in disciplinary contexts, as well as to provide training to the SSH community on Open Science practices, tools and EOSC related<br>
content.<br>
In T6.3 we delivered 12 training sessions and all training materials are published in open access1. In addition, we designed, developed and implemented an open workflow for the definition and management of the Open Science Training series, through the definition of a TRIPLE Training Toolkit, which reproduces the guidelines that have been designed and implemented to produce FAIR-by design training events. This set of documents constitutes section 1 of the present deliverable.<br>
Moreover, section 2 of the report presents four use-cases which address Open Science-related issues from different perspectives. The first subsection (CNR) sheds light on pathways for interdisciplinary collaboration and managing networking challenges. The second subsection (OKMAPS) addresses the need for improved discoverability of resources across research publications, research data and research projects. The third (CLARIN) shows how the connection between data, tools and publications can be implemented and made public. A model is explored to enrich the metadata about language resource data and tools from the CLARIN<br>
Resource Families with related publications, making use of the GoTriple platform. This cross-connects the CLARIN Virtual Language Observatory, the SSHOC Open Marketplace and the GoTriple platform. The last subsection (CESSDA) examines the balance between making data more accessible and aligning with legal restrictions. It explains how data is aligned internally to<br>
make them easily harvestable, and how, in turn, enrichment features from EOSC (OpenAIRE) and GoTriple systems will be used to improve data at their original sources.</p>
The TRIPLE project (https://project.gotriple.eu/), which is financed under the Horizon 2020 framework (https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/863420), under Grant Agreement No. 863420, with approx. 5.6 million Euros for a duration of 42 months (2019-2023). The content of this deliverable reflects only TRIPLE's view and the Commission is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains.
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At the heart of the project is the development of the GoTriple platform (https://www.gotriple.eu/), an innovative multilingual and multicultural discovery solution.
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7360227
oai:zenodo.org:7360227
eng
Zenodo
https://zenodo.org/communities/operaseu
https://zenodo.org/communities/eu
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7360226
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
Open Science
SSH
EOSC
Research Infrastructure
TRIPLE
OPERAS
TRIPLE Deliverable: D6.5 Report on Open Science within the EOSC
info:eu-repo/semantics/report