Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T04:20:24.731Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

EU-funded projects go public www.openaire.eu

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 August 2012

Abstract

Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2012

The European Commission (EC) wants results from European Union’s (EU) Seventh Framework Program (FP7) (2007–2013) and Horizon 2020 (2014–2020) projects to produce fully “open access” publications. In this effort, the EC is funding, through FP7, the project “Open access infrastructure for research in Europe” (OpenAIRE). This project will provide a single access point to all the open access publications produced by FP7 projects during the course of the Seventh Framework Program.

“To try and push more open access publishing, the European Commission has made open access publishing mandatory for around 20% of FP7 projects,” said Natalia Manola, the project’s manager. “This is written into the contract, but it is still a soft target—hard to enforce and monitor or really measure the impact. The idea of online open access is still quite new and one of the biggest problems is that projects will publish some results in traditional journals and some in open access publications. Knowledge is fragmented and it is difficult to see the output of a project because it is spread around so much. We want everything to be accessible by everyone.”

The project’s website, www.openaire.eu, contains links to FP7 open access guidelines and a FAQs page to address questions such as how researchers are to follow the guidelines if their publishers do not allow authors to archive their articles.

OpenAIRE is a repository network and is based on technology developed in an earlier project called Driver. The Driver engine trawled through existing open access repositories of universities, research institutions, and a growing number of open access publishers. It would index all these publications and provide a single point of entry for individuals, businesses, or other scientists to search a comprehensive collection of open access resources.

OpenAIRE uses the same underlying technology to index FP7 publications and results. FP7 project participants are encouraged to publish their papers, reports, and conference presentations to their institutional open access repositor-ies. The OpenAIRE engine constantly trawls these repositories to identify and index any publications related to FP7-funded projects. Working closely with the EC’s own databases, OpenAIRE matches publications to their respective FP7 grants and projects providing a seamless link between these previously separate data sets.

OpenAIRE is also linked to CERN’s open access repository for “orphan” publications. Any FP7 participants who do not have access to their own institutional repository can still submit open access publications by placing them in the CERN repository.

The project is collecting usage statistics of the portal and the volume of open access publications. It will provide this information to the Commission and use these data to inform European policy in this domain.

OpenAIRE is working closely to integrate its information with the CORDA database, the master database of all EU-funded research projects.

Aiming to build the “knowledge infrastructure” of the European Research Area, an extension project, OpenAIREplus, is now working in parallel to Open-AIRE to add open access data sets to the mix and create a so-called “information space” where publications, data sets, and funding information (EC and national) are interlinked. Researchers can make their raw data, benchmark data, or data objects associated to publications available for others to analyze or use.