…– Cornell Data Services Skip to content Cornell Data Services Overview Research funders increasingly require that the results (publications, data and other products) of the research they fund be made publicly accessible. In 2013, the White House Office of Science Technology and P…
…– Cornell Data Services Skip to content Cornell Data Services Overview Research funders increasingly require that the results (publications, data and other products) of the research they fund be made publicly accessible. In 2013, the White House Office of Science Technology and P…
Washington University in St. Louis Washington University Open Scholarship Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Arts & Sciences Dissertations Spring 5-15-2020 The Effects of Monitoring Expression and Outgroup Familiarity on Judgments of Other-Race Interaction Partners Katlin Bent…
… a broader ecosystem that connects researchers, institutions, repositories, and funders. The idea that DMPs should be interoperable, reusable, and able to support downstream workflows is now more widely accepted than ever. At the same time, recent developments from the National S…
…is a rich source of contextual information that is key to ensuring researchers, funders, and institutions follow the best possible and most appropriate research data management (RDM) practices. Unfortunately, the current practice is to transmit this information to the funder as a…
…: We collect funding information from our authors and match this information to funders listed in the Open Funder registry. This funding data is made publicly available through Crossref's search interfaces for funders and other interested parties to analyse. Enable us to deposit …
…six months. Policies should allow no embargoes at all for uncopyrightable work. Funders should treat publication costs as research costs, and should help grantees pay reasonable publication fees at fee-based OA journals. When possible, funder policies should require libre OA, pre…
Post-Publication Policies - IEEE Author Center Journals Skip to main content IEEE Publishing Portal Submit to TechRxiv Join IEEE Home » Become an IEEE Journal Author » Publishing Ethics » Guidelines and Policies » Post-Publication Policies Post-Publication Policies After your art…
…six months. Policies should allow no embargoes at all for uncopyrightable work. Funders should treat publication costs as research costs, and should help grantees pay reasonable publication fees at fee-based OA journals. When possible, funder policies should require libre OA, pre…
…ry License Fee, which was specifically developed in response to the demand from funders and institutions to enable mandate compliance. The Repository License Fee option was specially developed for authors who have employer or funder mandates to post the AM in a repository with a …
… a broader ecosystem that connects researchers, institutions, repositories, and funders. The idea that DMPs should be interoperable, reusable, and able to support downstream workflows is now more widely accepted than ever. At the same time, recent developments from the National S…
…six months. Policies should allow no embargoes at all for uncopyrightable work. Funders should treat publication costs as research costs, and should help grantees pay reasonable publication fees at fee-based OA journals. When possible, funder policies should require libre OA, pre…
Frontiers | Policies and publication ethics Editorial policies and publication ethics Authorship policies In this section: information for authors, including how to make sure all contributors, their institutions, and their precise contributions are listed correctly on your articl…
…mat and structure that best facilitates long-term access, discovery, and reuse. Funders are increasingly emphasizing the importance of curation and quality assurance when choosing a repository, and included “expert curation and quality assurance to improve the accuracy and integr…
… the public — not to our bank accounts, our political agendas, our friends, our funders or any other cause or purpose. Public service should be the goal of any journalist, but it has special meaning for us, because we call ourselves “public media.” We are here to inform the publi…