Supporting Repository Interoperability through Guidelines
Principe, Pedro; Rettberg, Najla; Elbæk, Mikael Karstensen; Rodrigues, Eloy (2014-06-10)
Principe, Pedro
Rettberg, Najla
Elbæk, Mikael Karstensen
Rodrigues, Eloy
10.06.2014
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2014070432173
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2014070432173
Kuvaus
Presentation at Open Repositories 2014, Helsinki, Finland, June 9-13, 2014
General Track, 24x7 Presentations
The session was recorded and is available for watching (this presentation starts at 0:51:18)
Principe, Pedro (University of Minho, Portugal)
Rettberg, Najla (University of Goettingen, Germany)
Elbæk, Mikael Karstensen (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark)
Rodrigues, Eloy (University of Minho, Portugal)
General Track, 24x7 Presentations
The session was recorded and is available for watching (this presentation starts at 0:51:18)
Principe, Pedro (University of Minho, Portugal)
Rettberg, Najla (University of Goettingen, Germany)
Elbæk, Mikael Karstensen (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark)
Rodrigues, Eloy (University of Minho, Portugal)
Tiivistelmä
Exposure and visibility of content from a range of European repositories will be significantly increased when a common and interoperable approach is taken and care to adhere to existing guidelines. This compatibility will lead to future interoperability between research infrastructures, and structured metadata is of benefit to individual data repositories and the knowledge community at large.
OpenAIRE is starting to move from a publication infrastructure to a more comprehensive infrastructure that covers all types of scientific output: publications and research data. To put this into practice, the infrastructure will rely heavily on implementing its guidelines, and it has recently developed an integrated suite of guidelines.
This session will briefly outline the three OpenAIRE sets of guidelines: who they are targeted at, the benefits of guidelines, and how to implement them. By implementing the OpenAIRE Guidelines, repository managers will be able to enable authors to fulfill the European Commission Open Access requirements, as well as the requirements of other (national or international) funders with whom OpenAIRE cooperates. In addition, it will allow the OpenAIRE infrastructure to add value-added services such as discoverability and linking, and creation of enhanced publications. In short, building the stepping-stones for a linked data infrastructure for research.
OpenAIRE is starting to move from a publication infrastructure to a more comprehensive infrastructure that covers all types of scientific output: publications and research data. To put this into practice, the infrastructure will rely heavily on implementing its guidelines, and it has recently developed an integrated suite of guidelines.
This session will briefly outline the three OpenAIRE sets of guidelines: who they are targeted at, the benefits of guidelines, and how to implement them. By implementing the OpenAIRE Guidelines, repository managers will be able to enable authors to fulfill the European Commission Open Access requirements, as well as the requirements of other (national or international) funders with whom OpenAIRE cooperates. In addition, it will allow the OpenAIRE infrastructure to add value-added services such as discoverability and linking, and creation of enhanced publications. In short, building the stepping-stones for a linked data infrastructure for research.
Kokoelmat
- Open Repositories 2014 [218]