227 research outputs found
Citizen Science Masterclass. Session 2: Citizen Science: Strategy, Policy, and How to Get Started! [video]
Esta sesión explora las tendencias políticas clave del programa Horizonte Europa y el proyecto BESPOC (Broad Engagement in Science, Point of Contact), comparte estrategias institucionales para fomentar el cambio cultural y analiza cómo las bibliotecas de investigación pueden apoyar en la práctica la ciencia abierta impulsada por los ciudadanos. BESPOC es un modelo para desarrollar servicios de apoyo a la participación pública en la ciencia, incluida la ciencia participativa. Actualmente, cinco universidades bálticas han implementado completamente el modelo durante el Proyecto LibOCS, mientras que otras seis universidades europeas lo han implementado parcialmente o con una variante del mismo.Speakers
✅ Tiberius Ignat, Director of Scientific Knowledge Services
✅ Paul Ayris, Pro-Vice-Provost, University College London, Library Services
✅ Thomas Kaarsted, Deputy Library Director, the University of Southern Denmark
Estrategia y práctica: perspectivas clave sobre ciencia ciudadana, políticas y tendencias. Notas del Programa Marco de Investigación Europeo («Horizonte Europa») y de la implementación de BESPOC en cinco universidades bálticas (proyecto LibOCS). (Tiberius Ignat)
Estrategia institucional: cómo trabajar con el cambio cultural y alinear esfuerzos en las instituciones de investigación. Construir sobre la Ciencia Abierta de la UCL el vínculo con la gestión de nivel superior (Paul Ayris).
Estrategia, liderazgo y cómo empezar. ¿Cómo pueden las bibliotecas de investigación apoyar la Ciencia Abierta potenciada por los ciudadanos? Centrándose en el panorama de las bibliotecas de investigación europeas, se anima a las bibliotecas a cerrar la brecha, utilizar las habilidades y superar las barreras (Thomas Kaarsted)
Entrevista als presidents del LIBER Citizen Science Working Group, Thomas Kaarsted i Tiberius Ignat
A treatise on the nature and properties of air, and other permanently elastic fluids : to which is prefixed an introduction to chymistry
by Tiberius Cavall
LIBER 2021 - Workshop: Citizen Science: Defining a role for my library
These are the slides from the LIBER 2021 Workshop: Citizen Science: Defining a role for my library
Description:
Citizen Science gets momentum as universities and libraries are opening centers, units and hubs in order to build infrastrucure, services and facilitate the work of researchers. While every university is unique and no one size fits all, nonetheless, there are a number of roles in citizen science activities for which libraries are particularly well positioned.
This future-oriented, innovative and dialogue-oriented workshop will try to identify roles, services and how to get started. Buidling on the LIBER Open Science Roadmap and activities of the LIBER Citizen Science Working Group, this event outlines WHAT roles can be defined, WHERE to find inspiration, and HOW research libraries can move to implementation mode.
The workshop contain of two parts.
1. Roles and services: feedback and discussion (09.15-10.10)
The Power of Many. Advocacy, engagement and the UN SDG’s. (Anne Kathrine Overgaard & Thomas Kaarsted)
Research Librarians Guide to Citizen Science. Drawing inspiration from SciStarter’s groundbreaking ‘Librarians Guide to Citizen Science’ (2019) the Working Group will publish a similar guide for research libraries. (Simon Worthington)
Templates for Single Point of Contact. Building on the BESPOC-model (Ignat & Ayris 2020), the Working Group aims to deliver a series of digital templates for all libraries. (Dirk van Gorp & Tiberius Ignat)
2. How to get started: a facilitated discussion in groups (10.00-11.00)
Building on the presentations in Part One, participants get the opportunity to outline roles for themselves. Part Two consists of three themes:
How to get started: Advocacy, barriers and no one size fits all
How to get going: Tips & tricks from the research librarians guide to citizen science
How to consolidate: The library as single point on contac
The history and practice of aerostation
Tiberius CavalloHandschriftliches Exlibris: "John Naylor" 003863632_0001 Exemplar der ETH-BI
Tiberius on Caligula the snake and other contextual problems
It is my suggestion that Tiberius fled Rome because he interpreted the death of his pet snake as the warning of a threat to the life of one of his current favourites and intended successors, Caligula, rather than to his own life. Yet Suetonius, or perhaps the author of his immediate source, has torn Tiberius’ words from their original context so that they appear to depict Caligula as the threat rather than the victim. The similarities between the accounts by Tacitus and Suetonius of the last days of Tiberius encourage the belief that they relied on the same main source for this period, or some edition of the same source at least
DIE TRANSFORMATIVE ROLLE VON UNIVERSITÄTSBIBLIOTHEKEN UND ANDEREN GEDÄCHTNISINSTITUTIONEN FÜR BÜRGERWISSENSCHAFT UND OFFENE WISSENSCHAFT IN DEN BALTISCHEN LÄNDERN
Der Artikel enthält eine Zusammenfassung des Studienberichts "The Transformative Role of University Libraries and other Memory Institutions for Citizen Science and Open Science in the Baltics" (Die transformative Rolle von Universitätsbibliotheken und anderen Gedächtnisinstitutionen für Bürgerwissenschaft und offene Wissenschaft im Baltikum), der im Rahmen des zweiten strategischen Partnerschaftsprojekts des Erasmus+ Programms "University libraries strengthening the academia-society connection through citizen science in the Baltics - LibOCS" durchgeführt wurde. Der vollständige Bericht und Zusammenfassungen dieses Berichts in den Landessprachen der Projektpartner sind in der Sammlung der Projektmaterialien auf Zenodo HIER verfügbar.
The article provides a summary of the study report on “The Transformative Role of University Libraries and other Memory Institutions for Citizen Science and Open Science in the Baltics”, which was conducted during Erasmus+ program second framework strategic partnering project “University libraries strengthening the academia-society connection through citizen science in the Baltics – LibOCS”. The full report and summaries of this report in project partners' national languages are available under project materials collection on Zenodo.https://zenodo.org/communities/libocs/Erasmus+ KA2 Strategic Partnerships program Project number: 2021-1-EE01-KA220-HED-000031125. Project name: University libraries strengthening the academia-society connection through citizen science in the Baltics (LibOCS), https://www.libocs.ut.ee
Research - a Public Culture in 2065
This presentation envisions an event from 2065, discussing the research environment around the year 2025 and how we enjoy research being a popular culture 40 years later. This short presentation draws parallels between Gastronomy and Research, originally two unpopular cultures that eventually spread to the masses in the 19ths and 21st centuries, respectively.
Notes (for 2065): This event is not optimized for Meta environments. The organisers are compensating for the environmental impact.This presentation was recorded and first delivered in October 25th 2022 at a multiplier event organised by the LibOCS project, financed by the EU through the Erasmus+ programme (2021-1-EE01-KA220-HED-000031125
Two pillars of open science: the future of scholarly communication and research integrity
CSI-COP Project is an EU-funded Project that investigates GDPR compliance to better understand how far we are being tracked by default as we use the Internet to visit websites and apps on our mobile devices. CSI-COP engages citizen scientists to address the growing concerns in society around privacy issues and the methods that are supposed to ensure integrity in the collection and use of data.This workshop will highlight the fundament rights we all have to digital privacy, explores how much institutions comply with the GDPR, introduces tools and solution to protect your digital privacy and introduces you to a massive open online course on the topic. The workshop will pose questions and concerns about the system scholars use to communicate between themselves (e.g. academic journals and monographs) and with the broader public.An interested observer will notice that the current digital content industry is heavily oriented towards building platforms that track users’ behaviour and seek to convince them to stay longer and come back sooner onto the platform. Similarly, authors are incentivised to publish more and to become champions of dissemination. Generally, the digital content industry is permeable to non-human contributors (algorithms that are able to generate content and reactions), anonymity and identity fraud.It is pertinent to organise a series of workshops about the early signs of track and persuasion in scholarly communication. The CSI-COP project inspired an independent pilot study that tried to determine the opportunity for conducting research about the use of “track and persuade” technologies in scholarly communication. We collected observations on a sample of 148 relevant websites and we interviewed 15 experts related to the field. Through this work, we tried to identify 1) the essential questions that could inspire proper research, 2) good practices to be recommended for future research, and 3) whether citizen science is a suitable approach to further research in this field. The findings could contribute to determining a broader solution for building trust and infrastructure in scholarly communication. The principles of Open Science were used as a framework to see if they offer insights into this work.The CSI-COP project offers an international discussion forum to exchange experiences on the matter of digital tracking and remains open to engaging with the larger public in order to raise awareness and refine results about the use of cookies and other digital trackers.You are all welcome to join this workshop and explore together the depth of digital tracking in the scholarly communication field and beyond it.CSI-COP project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 873169
- …
