This page presents an overview of posters that will be displayed during the conference. The names listed are of those who will be physically present at the conference. For a complete view of a poster’s contributors, follow the link to a poster’s abstract.
Posters that will be pitched on November 18
- “Accelerating scholar-led Diamond Open Access through community support services“, Juliane Finger (ZBW – Leibniz-Information Centre Economics)
- “Changing the Record: How Author Contribution Statements Shift from Preprint to Publication“, Ewa Zegler-Poleska (University of Warsaw)
- “Cultural periodicals: research marginality, gaps and importance“, Asta Urbanavičiūtė-Globienė (Vilnius University)
- “Diamond Discovery Hub: Where Community-Owned Research Shines“, Kelly Achenbach (Max Weber Stiftung)
- “The European Rights Retention Community of Practice: Building institutional capacity for Rights Retention across Europe“, Iva Melinščak Zlodi (University of Zagreb) & Vanessa Proudman (SPARC Europe)
- “The little mart squirrel or the push for artificial intelligence in Lithuanian book publishin“, Vincas Grigas & Arūnas Gudinavičius (Vilnius University)
- “Making Space for Indigenous Knowledge: Weaving Indigenous Knowledge and Geospatial Technology for Sustainable Environmental Monitoring“, Arlynn Martha Valembrun Sinclair (UiT The Arctic University of Norway & University of Saskatchewan)
- “Meeting the challenges of reproducibility and transparency in analyses of cohort and registry data with open source software: examples from the PsychGen Centre for Genetic Epidemiology and Mental Health“, Alejandra Martinez Sanchez & Laurie J. Hannigan (Norwegian Institute of Public Health)
- “Systemic Research on Open Science in Europe: Insights from the SCIROS Network“, Maciej Maryl (Institute of Literary Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences)
- “Transparency in epidemiological analyses of cohort data: A case study of the Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child cohort study (MoBa)“, Laurie Hannigan & Bernt Glaser (Norwegian Institute of Public Health)
- “Who gets to decide what counts? Analysing public responses to Croatia’s national criteria for academic promotion“, Iva Melinščak Zlodi (University of Zagreb)
10 minute presentations with posters
The following four presentations will be presented as short talks without Q&A during the parallel presentation sessions. To ask your questions, please visit the associated posters.
- “Monitoring Open Science: it takes a village! Sharing common Principles with the Open Science Monitoring Initiative (OSMI)“, Vanessa Proudman (SPARC Europe)
- “Moving beyond closed silos: liberating workflows based on open metadata to bring about an interoperable and open not-for-profit ecosystem for open access books and chapters“, Toby Steiner (Thoth Open Metadata) & Zoe Wake Hyde (Public Knowledge Project)
- “URGE – the easiest way to create a great ReadMe file“, Dag-Even Martinsen Torsøe, Ali Abdurhman Kelil (University of South-Eastern Norway)
- “Issues of Scientific Transparency in Small-Language Countries“, Milda Baltrimienė (Vilnius University Press)