Open Science Clause Samples
The Open Science clause establishes the parties' commitment to making research outputs, data, and methodologies openly accessible to the public. In practice, this clause may require that publications, datasets, and software developed under the agreement are shared in public repositories or made available under open licenses, subject to certain exceptions such as confidentiality or intellectual property rights. Its core function is to promote transparency, collaboration, and the broad dissemination of scientific knowledge, thereby accelerating innovation and ensuring that research benefits are widely shared.
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Open Science. The Parties shall mutually promote and encourage open science practices in their programmes and projects in accordance with the rules of the Horizon Europe Programme and the national applicable legislation in the Republic of Moldova.
Open Science. The Parties shall mutually promote and encourage open science practices in their programmes, projects, actions or activities, or parts thereof, in accordance with the rules of the Horizon Europe Programme and the applicable laws and regulations of the Faroe Islands.
Open Science. 2.2.2.1. Open science: open access to scientific publications The Recipient must ensure open access to peer-reviewed scientific publications relating to its results. In particular, it must ensure that: - at the latest at the time of publication, a machine-readable electronic copy of the published version, or the final peer-reviewed manuscript accepted for publication, is deposited in a trusted repository for scientific publications; - immediate open access is provided to the deposited publication via the repository, under the latest available version of the Creative Commons Attribution International Public Licence (CC BY) or a licence with equivalent rights; for monographs and other long-text formats, the licence may exclude commercial uses and derivative works (e.g. CC BY-NC, CC BY-ND); and - information is given via the repository about any research output or any other tools and instruments needed to validate the conclusions of the scientific publication. The Recipient must retain sufficient intellectual property rights to comply with the open access requirements. Metadata of deposited publications must be open under a Creative Common Public Domain Dedication (CC 0) or equivalent, in line with the FAIR principles (in particular machine actionable) and provide information at least about the following: publication (author(s), title, date of publication, publication venue); Horizon Europe or Euratom funding; grant project name, acronym and number; licensing terms; persistent identifiers for the publication, the authors involved in the action and, if possible, for their organisations and the grant. Where applicable, the metadata must include persistent identifiers for any research output or any other tools and instruments needed to validate the conclusions of the publication. Only publication fees in full open access venues for peer-reviewed scientific publications are eligible for reimbursement.
2.2.2.2. Open science: research data management The Recipient must manage the digital research data generated in the Project (‘data’) responsibly, in line with the FAIR principles and by taking all of the following actions: - establish a data management plan (‘DMP’) (and regularly update it); - as soon as possible and within the deadlines set out in the DMP, deposit the data in a trusted repository; if required in the call conditions, this repository must be federated in the EOSC in compliance with EOSC requirements; - as soon as possible and within the deadlines se...
Open Science. The Parties shall mutually promote and encourage open science practices in their programmes, projects and activities in accordance with the rules of the Horizon Europe Programme and New Zealand laws, regulations and open research policy, and with due regard to New Zealand's obligations under Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
Open Science. Open science is a way of doing science. One of the main goals of open science is to open up the entire scientific process including but not limited to initial hypotheses, planed research endeavours, peer reviews, data, publications etc. as much as possible and to as many as possible. What is open science? For further information on open science, see section Definition of open science.
Open Science five schools of thought
1. The democratic aim of this school of thought is to make knowledge accessible to as many people as possible.
2. The pragmatic goal of this school of thought is to open up the process of knowledge production.
3. The infrastructural goal of this school of thought is to develop platforms, tools and services that are freely available.
4. Public Aim of this school of thought is to make science freely available to citizens.
5. Measurement The aim of this school of thought is to develop freely available metrics.
Open Science. CEREGE fully supports to the Open Science approach and the recruited researcher will be fully involved in this approach and will be supported in the implementation of open science tools (referencing and access to full texts on the HAL database, strong incentives to publish in open access journals, incentives to develop open access codes, incentives to share data on community databases, implementation of a data management plan) The recruited person will actively participate in the outreach actions of CEREGE and Aix-Marseille University (Fête de la Science, conferences for the general public, participatory sciences). The person recruited will be encouraged to give lectures to secondary schools in the PACA region and will participate in the "cordées de la réussite" that CEREGE coordinates. - Number and quality of publications - Number of research projects submitted - Number of teaching units set up and/or in charge. - Number of dissemination actions towards the general public and/or society - hold a doctorate degree or a diploma whose equivalence is recognized, and to demonstrate significant research and teaching experiences in the topic of the chair of junior professor. Application must be sent exclusively on line GALAXIE (module FIDIS) : ▇▇▇▇▇://▇▇▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇- ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇.▇▇/▇▇▇▇▇▇▇/▇▇▇/▇▇▇▇▇▇/▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇ Opening of application: May 9, 2022, 10h AM, Paris time Deadline for submitting application: June 8, 2022, 4 PM, Paris time The list of mandatory documents to be provided is defined by the decree of 22 February 2022. It is available on the GALAXIE portal.
1. Application form entered online
2. Identity document with photograph 3. A document attesting to the possession of a doctorate, as provided for in article L.612-7 of the Education Code, or a diploma whose equivalence is recognized according to the procedure set out in article 5 of the Decree of December 17, 2021
Open Science. Grantee and Principal Investigator, as the case may be under Grantee’s intellectual property policy, will not (a) seek patent protection for any patentable inventions conceived or reduced to practice in the course of a Research Project that were made using or resulted from having access to Confidential Information provided by Facebook, and (b) assert any patents resulting from a Research Project against Facebook or its affiliates or their respective products and services. Grantee and Principal Investigator will (i) notify Facebook of any funding provided by third parties (other than the funding provided through SSRC) for a Research Project before receiving such funding, and (ii) ensure that receipt and use of such funding does not result in any obligations or requirements inconsistent with those under this Agreement. To the extent that any copyrightable works are created in the course of a Research Project under the Sponsored Research Agreement, Grantee and Principal Investigator will either (i) dedicate such works to the public domain under the Creative Commons CC0
Open Science promotion of Open Science initiatives, in collaboration with UNESCO, from creating a research data platform to research on digital humanities.
Open Science research data management The Recipient must manage the digital research data generated in the Project (‘data’) responsibly, in line with the FAIR principles and by taking all of the following actions: - establish a data management plan (‘DMP’) (and regularly update it); - as soon as possible and within the deadlines set out in the DMP, deposit the data in a trusted repository; if required in the call conditions, this repository must be federated in the EOSC in compliance with EOSC requirements; - as soon as possible and within the deadlines set out in the DMP, ensure open access — via the repository — to the deposited data, under the latest available version of the Creative Commons Attribution International Public License (CC BY) or Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication (CC 0) or a licence with equivalent rights, following the principle ‘as open as possible as closed as necessary’, unless providing open access would in particular: o be against the Recipient’s legitimate interests, including regarding commercial exploitation, or o be contrary to any other constraints, in particular the EU competitive interests or the Recipient’s obligations under this Agreement; if open access is not provided (to some or all data), this must be justified in the DMP - provide information via the repository about any research output or any other tools and instruments needed to re-use or validate the data. Metadata of deposited data must be open under a Creative Common Public Domain Dedication (CC 0) or equivalent (to the extent legitimate interests or constraints are safeguarded), in line with the FAIR principles (in particular machine-actionable) and provide information at least about the following: datasets (description, date of deposit, author(s), venue and embargo); Horizon Europe or Euratom funding; and number; licensing terms; persistent identifiers for the dataset, the authors involved in the action, and, if possible, for their organisations and the grant. Where applicable, the metadata must include persistent identifiers for related publications and other research outputs.