Computer and Information SciencesWordPress.comArchived

Project THOR

Project THOR
Technical and Human infrastructure for Open Research. Research funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654039.
Home Page
language
Published

THOR – ENVRIplus Bootcamp {.alignnone .size-full .wp-image-1205 loading=“lazy” attachment-id=“1205” permalink=“http://project-thor.eu/2017/04/13/envrid-integrating-orcid-ids-in-environmental-research-infrastructures/logos/” orig-file=“https://thorproject2014.files.wordpress.com/2017/04/logos.png” orig-size=“437,247” comments-opened=“0”

Published

Crossref/THOR Outreach Meeting, Warsaw, Poland Monday, 24 April 2017 Digital Humanities Centre at the Institute of Literary Research, Polish Academy of Sciences This outreach meeting aims to explore how the research community can work together to help connect research and improve discoverability of content – publications, data and more.

Published

A THOR-ENVRIplus Bootcamp Are you working in a technical or leading role within an Environmental Research Infrastructure? Join us at Aalto University in Finland on March 28-29, 2017 to learn more about ORCID integrations and discuss best practices with colleagues from other Environmental Research Infrastructures. Project THOR supports seamless integration between articles, data and researchers across the research lifecycle.

Published

With local support from THOR ambassador Eva Mendez, the first edition of the THOR Bootcamp was successfully carried out in Madrid, at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid on November 16-18. The Bootcamp is part of THOR’s outreach effort to engage and train local scholarly communication communities to further adoption of PID services. The full set of slides used can be found on the THOR Knowledge Hub.

Published

Scientific research infrastructures collect large quantities of values. Values are typically numbers that result from observation, experiment, or computing activities. For instance, plant scientists collect values that result from observing fluxes of carbon dioxide on the leaf-atmosphere boundary; high-energy physicists collect values that result from observing collisions of atomic particles;

Published

Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are increasingly embedded in the services that researchers use every day, enabling unambiguous attribution of the full range of scholarly outputs. This makes it easier for data producers and researchers to get credit for their contributions; for data centres, universities and funders to track the impact of the research they facilitate; for publishers to incorporate data into scholarly writing;

Published

In November 2015 the “eInfrastructure” Unit at the European Commission Directorate General for Communication Networks, Content and Technology asked several e-Infrastructure providers to develop a framework for a service portfolio to describe services developed with funding from the directorate. The THOR project participated in the definition of the concepts underlying such a portfolio. The resulting framework can be found here.