Elicit uses language models to help you automate research workflows, like parts of literature review.
Elicit can find relevant papers without perfect keyword match, summarize takeaways from the paper specific to your question, and extract key information from the papers.
The Journal of Open Research Software (JORS) features peer reviewed Software Metapapers describing research software with high reuse potential. We are working with a number of specialist and institutional repositories to ensure that the associated software is professionally archived, preserved, and is openly available. Equally importantly, the software and the papers will be citable, and reuse will be tracked.
JORS also publishes full-length research papers that cover different aspects of creating, maintaining and evaluating open source research software. The aim of the section is to promote the dissemination of best practice and experience related to the development and maintenance of reusable, sustainable research software.
The Journal of Open Source Software (JOSS) is an academic journal with a formal peer review process that is designed to improve the quality of the software submitted. Upon acceptance into JOSS, a CrossRef DOI is minted and we list your paper on the JOSS website.
Die Universitätsbibliothek Stuttgart ist eine zentrale Einrichtung der Universität Stuttgart. Sie bildet den Mittelpunkt des Bibliothekssystems der Universität Stuttgart und gewährleistet, dass Forschung, Lehre und Studium mit Literatur und anderen Informationsmitteln versorgt werden.
We remember our history through objects. We see the Gutenberg Bible and recall the revolution of the printing press, we see the hand-scrawled lyrics of "Strawberry Fields Forever" and appreciate the Beatles sensation. But more and more our cultural artifacts are now digital, and they are built on top of obsolete software, websites, and operating...
CyVerse is funded by the National Science Foundation’s Directorate for Biological Sciences. We are a dynamic virtual organization led by the University of Arizona to fulfill a broad mission that spans our partner institutions: Texas Advanced Computing Center, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. CyVerse provides life scientists with powerful computational infrastructure to handle huge datasets and complex analyses, thus enabling data-driven discovery. Our extensible platforms provide data storage, bioinformatics tools, image analyses, cloud services, APIs, and more.
HydroShare is a system operated by The Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrologic Science Inc. (CUAHSI) that enables users to share and publish data and models in a variety of flexible formats, and to make this information available in a citable, shareable and discoverable manner. HydroShare includes a repository for data and models, and tools (web apps) that can act on content in HydroShare providing users with a gateway to high performance computing and computing in the cloud.
With HydroShare you can: share data and models with colleagues; manage access to shared content; share, access, visualize, and manipulate a broad set of hydrologic data types and models; publish data and models and obtain a citable digital object identifier (DOI); aggregate resources into collections; discover and access data and models published by others; use the web services application programming interface (API) to programmatically access resources; and use integrated web applications to visualize, analyze and run models with data in HydroShare.
Die Open Science AG ist eine offene Initiative, welche die Idee freier und offener Wissenschaft und Forschung in Wirtschaft, Gesellschaft und Politik unterstützt.
Calcyte is (will be) a toolkit for managing metadata for collections of content
via automatically generated spreadsheets and for creating static HTML repositories.
Calcyte targets the Draft DataCrate Packaging format v0.2.
At this stage Calcyte does not Bag content, it jsut creates Working DataCrates.
Open Science aims at transforming science through ICT tools, networks and media, to make research more open, global, collaborative, creative and closer to society.
J. Elming, A. Johannsen, S. Klerke, E. Lapponi, H. Martinez Alonso, and A. Søgaard. Proceedings of the 2013 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, page 617–626. Atlanta, Georgia, Association for Computational Linguistics, (June 2013)
B. Fecher, and S. Friesike. Opening Science: The Evolving Guide on How the Internet Is Changing Research, Collaboration and Scholarly Publishing, Springer International Publishing, Cham, (2014)