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speakers

Janet Remmington

SHORT CV

Janet Remmington is Editorial Director for the global Arts & Humanities journals under the Routledge imprint at Taylor & Francis. She also works as Regional Director for Taylor & Francis’ Africa programme and has long been involved with access and author initiatives in the global South. She has worked in academic publishing for nearly 20 years and keeps active as a humanities researcher herself.

ABOUT PRESENTATION 
TITLE

Research lifecycles in the humanities and social sciences

ABSTRACT

A host of initiatives have moved the open agenda beyond simply open access to journal articles or monographs to a consideration of the entire research lifecycle and points at which this can be opened up. Further, we are entering a second phase of open scholarship whereby the community is now seeking to link together the many scattered solutions for different pieces of the research lifecycle. Open Scholarship offers an important opportunity for scholars in the social sciences and humanities. Although open access has gained traction more recently, it is well-known that widespread adoption of and transition to open access to journals and monographs has lagged behind many other subject areas for a host of reasons. Engaging scholars in these subject areas in open scholarship more broadly offers and opportunity to approach open from a multitude of angles. However, the research lifecycle that is presented and visualized by those engaged in open science typically visualises that of a scientist working within STEM fields. This follows an expected pattern (e.g. planning, implementation, publishing, discovery and impact, preservation, re-use) or sets of patterns in the form of sub-cycles (e.g. planning cycle, project cycle, publication cycle, preservation cycle, impact). These visualisations do not align with the process of scholarly inquiry that many humanities scholars and qualitative social scientists are engaged in and risks marginalising some communities. Imagine a professor of music, who creates bits of initially unrelated compositions and harmonies, which arose out of inspiration derived from listening to a gentle brook. These might give rise to new understandings of former theories of music or push forward techniques. The aim of this workshop is to work together with scholars to identify a series of research workflows that better reflect the processes of scholarship in the humanities and social sciences. Once lifecycles are drafted, participants will identify points of potential sharing and open opportunities. These points will then be associated with current solutions and gaps will be identified.

WHEN
DAY 1 - 12:30 PARALLEL SESSION 1

Research lifecycles in the humanities and social sciences

See full programme here.

Thanasis Vergoulis

SHORT CV

Thanasis Vergoulis is a postdoctoral fellow at "Athena” Research Center. He received his diploma from the Computer Engineering and Informatics Department of the University of Patras and his PhD from School of Electrical and Computer Engineering of NTUA, under the supervision of Prof. Timos Sellis. Moreover, he has academic experience teaching as an adjunct lecturer at University of Patras and University of Peloponnese. His research interests consist of data management, bioinformatics, cloud computing and research analytics.

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TITLE

The ELIXIR view of Open Science

WHEN
DAY 2 - 11:30 PARALLEL SESSION 3

Open Science as a service

See full programme here.

Alessia Bardi

SHORT CV

Alessia Bardi received her PhD in Information Technologies at the Information Engineering Department of the University of Pisa. She is a researcher at the Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione "A. Faedo" (ISTI), Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR) of Pisa, Italy. Today she is member of the InfraScience research group, part of the Multimedia Networked Information System Laboratory (NeMIS). She is involved as researcher, WP leader, and Task leader in EC H2020 funded projects among which OpenAIRE2020, PARTHENOS, OpenUP, and OpenAIRE-Connect. Her research interests include service-oriented architecture, data infrastructures for e-science and scholarly communication in Open Science.

ABOUT PRESENTATION
Title

Open Science Publishing

WHEN

DAY 2 - 11:30 PARALLEL SESSION 3

Open Science as a service

See full programme here.

 

Chris Morris

SHORT CV

Chris Morris is a data analyst and software project manager at the Daresbury Laboratory, STFC. He is the project manager for West-Life, a Horizon 2020 project developing a Virtual Research Environment for structural biology. He is also involved in ADDoPT, an Innovate UK grant to support the design of pharmaceutical dosage forms. He has been a software developer for twenty five years. He says “Eventually I realised that the coding is not the hardest part of the job.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9533-5684
Blog: http://www.citeulike.org/blog/chrishmorris

ABOUT PRESENTATION 
TITLE

West-Life: world-wide e-infrastructure for structural biology

WHEN
DAY 2 - 11:30 PARALLEL SESSION 3

Open Science as a service

See full programme here.

Antica Culina

SHORT CV

'I am an evolutionary ecologists, and the project I lead at the Netherlands Institute of Ecology, NIOO-KNAW lies on the interface between ecology and Open Science. We look at how various components of Open Science are currently implemented in ecological research, how do they help research to become better, and what are the best venues to increase applications of Open principles in ecology.
My scientific interest revolve around animal ecology: I want to help us to better understand (and appreciate) the complexity of animal life, and to use this knowledge to protect them and teach others to do the same. I have finished undergrad degree in Ecology, worked on bird conservation projects in Croatia (NGO BIOM) for a couple of years, and then became an evolutionary ecologist, studying pair-bonds and divorce in monogamous birds at the Oxford University (PhD). Along the way, I have also became interested in Open Science. Once I have learned about this amazing initiative, I was determined to take a part in the wave of actions and research that can help other scientist (especially ecologist) to start to appreciate all the benefits that openness brings to science and to the society.'

ABOUT PRESENTATION 
TITLE

Open Science for Ecology

WHEN
DAY 2 - 11:30 PARALLEL SESSION 3

Open Science as a service

See full programme here.

Agiatis Benardou

SHORT CV

Agiatis Benardou was born in Athens, Greece. She completed her BA and MA in Ancient History at King’s College London, where she was later awarded her PhD in Archaeology. She also holds an MA on Cultural Management and Communication from Panteion University in Athens.
Her research interests lie in the fields of scholarly research practices and user requirements and she is particularly interested in the ways in which digital tools and methods can provide new gateways through which research communities gain access to, create, revisit and repurpose research data, processes and infrastructures.
Agiatis has worked for a number of public and private organizations in the Greek cultural sector and is now a Senior Research Associate in the Digital Curation Unit, ATHENA R.C., as well as a Fellow in Panteion University in Athens where she has taught Digital Curation.
Agiatis has carried out extensive research as project member, WPL or PI in the context of various EU initiatives, such as Preparing DARIAH – the Digital Research Infrastructure for the Arts and Humanities, EHRI (European Holocaust Research Infrastructure), ARIADNE, NeDiMAH, Europeana Cloud, DARIAH-EU, DARIAH-GR, ARK4, #DARIAHTeach and, more recently, Europeana Research.
Agiatis currently serves as Co-Chair of DARIAH-EU VCC2 (Research and Education Liaison).

ABOUT PRESENTATION 
TITLE

Research lifecycles in the humanities and social sciences

ABSTRACT

A host of initiatives have moved the open agenda beyond simply open access to journal articles or monographs to a consideration of the entire research lifecycle and points at which this can be opened up. Further, we are entering a second phase of open scholarship whereby the community is now seeking to link together the many scattered solutions for different pieces of the research lifecycle. Open Scholarship offers an important opportunity for scholars in the social sciences and humanities. Although open access has gained traction more recently, it is well-known that widespread adoption of and transition to open access to journals and monographs has lagged behind many other subject areas for a host of reasons. Engaging scholars in these subject areas in open scholarship more broadly offers and opportunity to approach open from a multitude of angles. However, the research lifecycle that is presented and visualized by those engaged in open science typically visualises that of a scientist working within STEM fields. This follows an expected pattern (e.g. planning, implementation, publishing, discovery and impact, preservation, re-use) or sets of patterns in the form of sub-cycles (e.g. planning cycle, project cycle, publication cycle, preservation cycle, impact). These visualisations do not align with the process of scholarly inquiry that many humanities scholars and qualitative social scientists are engaged in and risks marginalising some communities. Imagine a professor of music, who creates bits of initially unrelated compositions and harmonies, which arose out of inspiration derived from listening to a gentle brook. These might give rise to new understandings of former theories of music or push forward techniques. The aim of this workshop is to work together with scholars to identify a series of research workflows that better reflect the processes of scholarship in the humanities and social sciences. Once lifecycles are drafted, participants will identify points of potential sharing and open opportunities. These points will then be associated with current solutions and gaps will be identified.

WHEN
DAY 1 - 12:30 PARALLEL SESSION 1

Research lifecycles in the humanities and social sciences

See full programme here.

Nektarios Tavernarakis

SHORT CV

Nektarios Tavernarakis is the Chairman of the Board of Directors at the Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas (FORTH), Research Director at the Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (IMBB), and Professor of Molecular Systems Biology at the Medical School of the University of Crete, in Heraklion, Greece. He is the Director of the Graduate Program on BioInformatics at the Medical School of the University of Crete, and is also heading the Neurogenetics and Ageing laboratory of IMBB. He is an elected member of the Scientific Council of the European Research Council (ERC), the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO), and Academia Europaea. He has also served as the Director of the Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology. He earned his Ph.D. degree at the University of Crete, and trained as a postdoctoral researcher at Rutgers University in New Jersey, USA. His research focuses on the molecular mechanisms of necrotic cell death and neurodegeneration, the interplay between cellular metabolism and ageing, the mechanisms of sensory transduction and integration by the nervous system, and the development of novel genetic tools for biomedical research. He has received several notable scientific prizes, including an innovation-supporting ERC Proof of Concept Grant and two ERC Advanced Investigator Grants. He is one of the first in Europe, and until now the only one in Greece, to have been awarded this highly competitive and prestigious grant twice. He is also the recipient of the EMBO Young Investigator award, the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel research award, the Bodossaki Foundation Scientific Prize for Medicine and Biology, the Empeirikeion Foundation Academic Excellence Prize, the Research Excellence award of the Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas, the BioMedical Research Award of the Academy of Athens, the Galien Scientific Research Award, the Helmholtz International Fellow Award, the International Human Frontier in Science Program Organization (HFSPO) long-term Postdoctoral Fellowship, the Honorary Education Business Award, and the Dr. Frederick Valergakis Post-Graduate Research Grant Program Academic Achievement Award of the Hellenic University Club of New York.

ABOUT PRESENTATION 
TITLE

Open access and data integrity: The European Research Council (ERC) initiative

ABSTRACT

To be added soon.

WHEN
DAY 1 - 10:30 HIGH LEVEL OPENING 

See full programme here.

Haralampos Karanikas

SHORT CV

Dr. Haralampos Karanikas is a lecturer at the Department of Computer Science, Technological Educational Institute of Sterea Ellada and Senior Researcher at University of Athens (Medical School). Member of the European Initiative EUnetHTA JA3 for Health Technology Assessment and he is eHealth consultant in Athens Medical Society member of the team that develops the prescription protocols integrated in the Greek national electronic prescription system. General Secretary of the Greek Society of eHealth Applications (EEMEPY) and member of the National Committee for the implementation of protocols and monitoring of pharmaceutical expenditure, under the authority of the Ministry of Health.
He is actively involved in Health Information Management as a focal research area. His work aims at advancing the ways data mining algorithms are used in order to analyze natural language text and structured data in an attempt to discover structure and implicit meanings “hidden” within. His research interests include eHealth, Patient Registries, Medical Prescription Protocols, Electronic Health Records, Ontology construction, data and text mining, and health big data.
He has been involved in many research projects. From September 2010 till March 2012 he was special IT advisor of the General Secretary, Ministry of Health, scientific responsible for the implementation of ESY.net (National health BI system), member of the Greek DRGs implementation team and member of the Central Committee of the Ministry to monitor the IT systems of the NHS. From March 2012 till April 2013 Haralampos Karanikas was board member of the Greek Health Procurement Committee (E.P.Y.), an independent agency with administrative and financial autonomy, reporting directly to the Minister of Health. E.P.Y. is responsible for strategic and operational planning of the procurement system in the Health Sector. He was a member of PARENT (Cross Border Patient Registries Initiatives) Executive Committee. Haralampos Karanikas holds a PhD in the field of Temporal Text Mining at University of Manchester on health data management.

ABOUT PRESENTATION 

A health datathon in Greece? Summary and round-up

WHEN

DAY 2 - 11:30  PARALLEL SESSION 3

DATATHONS IN EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE: APPLYING OPEN SCIENCE PRINCIPLES TO SUPPORT CROSS-DISCIPLINARY EDUCATION AND RESEARCH

See full programme here.

Tony Ross-Hellauer

SHORT CV

Dr. Tony Ross-Hellauer is an open scholarship researcher who currently works as OpenAIRE Scientific Manager, University of Göttingen, and will shortly join the Social Computing Research Group at Know-Center (know-center.tugraz.at) as a senior postdoctoral researcher. His main research interests are Open Science models and infrastructures, science policy, alternative models for peer review, and philosophy of technology. Tony has a PhD in Information Studies from the University of Glasgow, 2012) in addition to an MA (Philosophy) and MSc (Information and Library Studies). Tony has worked in a number of EU-funded projects and is actively involved in Open Science advocacy and community-building. As Scientific Manager for OpenAIRE at the University of Goettingen, Tony has been responsible for OpenAIRE’s outreach strategy, scientific direction and coordination of its pan-European network of National Open Access Desks (NOADs). Tony has published widely on Open Science, Open Access, peer review and library science in both peer-reviewed and popular science outlets, and regularly acts as PC member, co-organizer or co-chair of a number of workshops and conferences on topics related to Open Science.

ABOUT PRESENTATION 

TITLE

Peer review at the crossroads  

ABSTRACT

The workshop builds on the results of the OpenUp landscape scan and the OpenAIRE report on open peer review. The workshop has multiple purposes including (1) assessing existing and evolving methods and functions of alternative peer review mechanisms, (2) breaking down peer review into the basic processes to identify the benefits and challenges, and (3) identifying questions and issues that need further investigation. 

Group discussions will also touch upon issues such as the sustainability, long-term availability of alternative review tools, and their uptake by researchers, and the incorporation of these methods into institutional, national, funders’ and publishers’ policies. 

OpenUP and OpenAIRE are dedicated to engage with different (disciplinary, inter-disciplinary) research communities from the social sciences, life sciences, energy, arts and humanities to identify the requirements from the emerging trends as posed by Open Science and e-infrastructural interconnected environments. Both projects aim at developing a sustainable framework that is relevant for and responsive to the Open Science needs.

WHEN

DAY 3 - 09:00 PARALLEL SESSION 6

Peer review at the crossroads

See full programme here.

Eloy Rodrigues

SHORT CV

Eloy Rodrigues is the Director of the University of Minho Documentation Services
Eloy has been working on repositories, Open Access and Open Science since 2003, having established University of Minho institutional repository in 2003, and being the scientific and technical coordinator of RCAAP (Portugal Open Access Science Repository) since 2008. 
At international level he has being working on various EU funded projects (like OpenAIREPASTEUR4OA and FOSTER), related with Open Access, and is member of the European University Association Expert Group on Science 2.0/Open Science.
Eloy is currently the Chair of the Executive Board of COAR, the Confederation of Open Access Repositories.

ABOUT PRESENTATION 
TITLE | sessions 4 & 5

Designing & implementing open access, open data & open science policies

Title | session 6

Building a global knowledge commons - ramping up repositories to support widespread change in the ecosystem

WHEN
DAY 2 - PARALLEL SESSION 4 & 5

Fostering the practical implementation of Open Science in Horizon 2020 and beyond

DAY 3 - PARALLEL SESSION 6 & 7

Building a global knowledge commons - ramping up repositories to support widespread change in the ecosystem

See full programme here.