{"title":"比尔和梅琳达·盖茨基金会作为开放研究的推动者","authors":"Ashley Farley, P. P. Aspaas","doi":"10.7557/19.6945","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"An online interview with Ashley Farley, program officer of Knowledge and Research Services at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. As of 2023, the Gates Foundation earmarks some 8,000,000,000 US Dollars annually to its various philanthropic goals. Focusing on global health and global development, the Gates Foundation supports a wide range of research and development activities in fields such as child nutrition, family planning, eradication of poverty and diseases, etc. In this podcast, Farley explains why open research lies at the heart of the Gates Foundation’s strategies. \nThe Gates Foundation has been an early adopter and partner of the European Plan S initiative, which from the very start has been very well aligned to its own policies. Gates Foundation grantees are obliged to make all publications stemming from project funding available in open access, and, if possible, to archive their research datasets openly as well. The Gates Open Research Platform (a combination of a preprint-service and a megajournal) is an alternative route for grantees who do not want to publish their articles through traditional publication outlets. Accompanying datasets are stored elsewhere but with links from the platform. In addition, the non-profit organization OA.Works helps the Gates Foundation monitor that requirements are met. Among other things, OA.Works has been instrumental in setting up a Share Your Paper service to help researchers (not just grantees of the Gates Foundation) verify whether a version of their article can be legally uploaded to the Green Open Access repository Zenodo. Farley is also working directly with publishers to make sure that Gold Open Access that has been paid for is provided properly and in line with the contract. The Biden Administration recently announced a Year of Open Science in the USA. Farley sees various agencies, such as NASA, as driving forces behind this declaration. Gradually, a cultural shift is bound to take place, as prejudices towards open sharing of data, peer review reports and even grant applications will be replaced with a culture permeated by more open and transparent ways of doing research, Farley argues. She also argues strongly in favor of the Rights Retention Strategy and sees it as a way of empowering researchers by securing that they have more control of their work. \nFirst published online January 31, 2023.","PeriodicalId":264634,"journal":{"name":"Open Science Talk","volume":"121 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as promoter of Open Research\",\"authors\":\"Ashley Farley, P. P. Aspaas\",\"doi\":\"10.7557/19.6945\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"An online interview with Ashley Farley, program officer of Knowledge and Research Services at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. As of 2023, the Gates Foundation earmarks some 8,000,000,000 US Dollars annually to its various philanthropic goals. Focusing on global health and global development, the Gates Foundation supports a wide range of research and development activities in fields such as child nutrition, family planning, eradication of poverty and diseases, etc. In this podcast, Farley explains why open research lies at the heart of the Gates Foundation’s strategies. \\nThe Gates Foundation has been an early adopter and partner of the European Plan S initiative, which from the very start has been very well aligned to its own policies. Gates Foundation grantees are obliged to make all publications stemming from project funding available in open access, and, if possible, to archive their research datasets openly as well. The Gates Open Research Platform (a combination of a preprint-service and a megajournal) is an alternative route for grantees who do not want to publish their articles through traditional publication outlets. Accompanying datasets are stored elsewhere but with links from the platform. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是对比尔和梅林达·盖茨基金会知识与研究服务项目官员阿什利·法利的在线采访。截至2023年,盖茨基金会每年拨出约80亿美元用于各种慈善目标。盖茨基金会关注全球健康和全球发展,在儿童营养、计划生育、消除贫困和疾病等领域支持广泛的研究和发展活动。在本期播客中,法利解释了为什么开放研究是盖茨基金会战略的核心。盖茨基金会是欧洲S计划的早期采用者和合作伙伴,该计划从一开始就与自己的政策非常一致。盖茨基金会的受助人有义务将项目资助的所有出版物开放获取,如果可能的话,也要公开存档他们的研究数据集。盖茨开放研究平台(预印本服务和超级期刊的结合)是那些不想通过传统出版渠道发表文章的受资助者的另一种途径。附带的数据集存储在其他地方,但有来自平台的链接。此外,非营利组织OA。Works帮助盖茨基金会监督需求是否得到满足。在其他方面,OA。Works在建立“分享论文”服务方面发挥了重要作用,帮助研究人员(不仅仅是盖茨基金会的受助人)验证他们的文章的某个版本是否可以合法上传到绿色开放获取知识库Zenodo。Farley还直接与发行商合作,以确保已付费的Gold Open Access内容的提供符合合同要求。拜登政府最近在美国宣布了一个开放科学年。法利认为,美国国家航空航天局(NASA)等多个机构是这一声明背后的推动力量。Farley认为,随着对开放共享数据、同行评议报告甚至拨款申请的偏见将逐渐被一种更开放和透明的研究方式所渗透的文化所取代,一种文化转变必然会发生。她还强烈支持权利保留战略,并认为这是一种授权研究人员的方式,确保他们对自己的工作有更多的控制权。2023年1月31日首次在线发布。
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as promoter of Open Research
An online interview with Ashley Farley, program officer of Knowledge and Research Services at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. As of 2023, the Gates Foundation earmarks some 8,000,000,000 US Dollars annually to its various philanthropic goals. Focusing on global health and global development, the Gates Foundation supports a wide range of research and development activities in fields such as child nutrition, family planning, eradication of poverty and diseases, etc. In this podcast, Farley explains why open research lies at the heart of the Gates Foundation’s strategies.
The Gates Foundation has been an early adopter and partner of the European Plan S initiative, which from the very start has been very well aligned to its own policies. Gates Foundation grantees are obliged to make all publications stemming from project funding available in open access, and, if possible, to archive their research datasets openly as well. The Gates Open Research Platform (a combination of a preprint-service and a megajournal) is an alternative route for grantees who do not want to publish their articles through traditional publication outlets. Accompanying datasets are stored elsewhere but with links from the platform. In addition, the non-profit organization OA.Works helps the Gates Foundation monitor that requirements are met. Among other things, OA.Works has been instrumental in setting up a Share Your Paper service to help researchers (not just grantees of the Gates Foundation) verify whether a version of their article can be legally uploaded to the Green Open Access repository Zenodo. Farley is also working directly with publishers to make sure that Gold Open Access that has been paid for is provided properly and in line with the contract. The Biden Administration recently announced a Year of Open Science in the USA. Farley sees various agencies, such as NASA, as driving forces behind this declaration. Gradually, a cultural shift is bound to take place, as prejudices towards open sharing of data, peer review reports and even grant applications will be replaced with a culture permeated by more open and transparent ways of doing research, Farley argues. She also argues strongly in favor of the Rights Retention Strategy and sees it as a way of empowering researchers by securing that they have more control of their work.
First published online January 31, 2023.