 So today we are starting the second day of the open access week. On the second day, we are starting with a presentation that will focus one of the open services, the Opener Connect. The title for today's session is Aurora and Opener, Connecting Research and SDGs. So, as speakers, we have Alessio Bardi from CNR, and Isti from Italy, and Maurice from Britsch University of Amsterdam. Sorry if I pronounced wrong the name. They will talk about the service, Opener Connect service, and in practice the integration of the SDGs also in Opener Connecting and in Opener. And after lunch, just to remind that we'll have more sessions today, one more session. So this afternoon we will have the first Knowledge Cafe, the title Research Communities and Climate Action, being open to drive change. So the registrations are still open so you can register and participate also on this session. And we also have here some housekeeping rules for this session. So this event is being recorded, and the recording and the slides will be made available in the event page in the Opener portal. Your microphones are off, but during the DNA session we can open your microphone to put your questions to the speakers and we can also use the chat to put some comments or questions. We can also share this presentation in social media using the hashtags we have here on the slide at the bottom and also reference Opener. And that's it from my side. And I pass the floor to Alessio to start the presentation. Yes, thank you Andre for the introduction. So let me share my screen. Great, so I'm Alessio Bardi from the Italian National Research Council, I'm a researcher in computer science and have been involved in Opener since a lot of years and now I'm the product manager of Opener Connect, which is one of the services that Opener offers to research communities. So the presentation of today is, it's around Connect, but in fact, we will explain in more details, what are the collaboration activities that we are carrying out together with Aurora, which is a network of universities in Europe. Okay, and basically so we'll start with Maurice presentation on Aurora and the activities for open science and SDGs. Then I'll present to you the Opener Connect service. And then we'll conclude with a presentation of the Connect gateway and the monitoring dashboard of Aurora that have been set up in the context of our collaboration. Before we go into the details of this collaboration, let me briefly introduce Opener. So Opener is the, is a European scholarly communication infrastructure, and also a nonprofit organization. The organization is based in Greece but is composed of universities, search centers and libraries from all around Europe. The mission is to promote and foster open science and to do that, it offers services for policy making trainings and for the implementation of open science practices that can be adopted by research initiatives or organizations but also by the single researchers. And as you can see the services cover all phases of the research life cycle. So from publishing to the discovery and outreach services for interoperability and data management and so on. And here you can see all the services that Opener offers and you can find more information on each of them on the Opener catalog. So catalog.opener.u and based on the type of service that you need. The catalog will suggest you did the ones that Opener can offer to you. So the collaboration with Aurora. The collaboration started in September 2021 and covers different topics because both Aurora and Opener are interesting all the aspects of open science. In fact, we identified several lines of collaboration. So of course they are all related to each other, because the overall goal is that of strengthen the Aurora network, its universities, its researchers with open science tool. So the outreach of the research results of Aurora show off the impact and importance of what Aurora is doing with regards to the big societal challenges that can be represented somehow by the sustainable development goals as defined by the United Nations. So the first thing we did is to prepare a connect gateway. A connect gateway that could work as a single entry point to all research results of the Aurora universities. And to do that, we had to ensure that all repositories, all systems in the network were compliant with the Opener guidelines, so that they could be registered in Opener provide, which is the service for content providers. So by registering into provide they become part of Opener and this means that they provide content to the Opener applicator. And this metadata that Opener collects is put together with all the other repositories does it's enriched by our full text mining algorithm, and so on. So Maya provide repositories and key systems also has the possibility to, to use added value services, like the broker service for enriching the local records with suggestions from Opener, or the usage count service, which can be used for tracking the usage in terms of views and results of the records. Then, in parallel, some researchers of Athena Research Center, which is one of the members of Opener had interesting exchange with the Aurora team, and they discussed approaches, challenges and solutions for classifying digital documents based on SDG goals and targets. Then we have the monitor. So, Maurice will show you the monitor dashboard for Aurora, where, oops, sorry. Okay. Maurice will show you the monitor dashboard for Aurora, where we have open science indicators so to keep track of different aspects of open science among the research results of the Aurora network. And as a work in progress, we have, let's say, we are working on the definition and integration of SDG indicators for the monitor. And the expertise of Aurora on this topic was a great opportunity for Opener to better understand the aspects that are relevant for our research initiative and how can we support these activities in this context. So now it's time to leave the floor to Maurice, who will tell us about Aurora and its activities on open science and SDGs. So I'm stopping sharing the screen. Thank you, Alessia, for this wonderful introduction. And yeah, I hope I can enlighten you a little bit more about our collaboration. So, I will start with, let's me see, sharing my screen and starting the presentation then sharing my screen. That doesn't go together, but we'll get there. Start sharing. Share the screen. I think you can see my screen right. Yes, yes, yes, we can see your screen. The question is what screen, do you see a blue thing? Yes, yes, and only the desktop. Okay. So now I can open this presentation. Good. Okay. Now you see the presentation. So, I will tell you something about first about Aurora, and then about our open science project and then about our SDG project. And then I think I go back to Alessia. So Aurora is also as many member organizations, universities, so like the Freie Universität Amsterdam, University of Iceland, East Anglia, et cetera, so there are 10 of them. And we, it's a partnership of like minded and closely collaborating research intensive European universities to use their academic excellence to drive societal change and contribute to the sustainable development goals. And this is a bold statement and that's what we try to figure out how can we show that and I will come back later in the presentation, how we try to achieve that to make that more visible. Let's talk about open science. So open science there is a program that we've working on, which has several parts. So task one is to create open knowledge base on open science and what we try to do is to create this open science function to the SDG dashboard. It's pretty neatly thought out, but it's better to work together with open air to to work out that dashboard in this open science monitor. And that's where I go back into later in this presentation to show you more about that. We share a knowledge base of open science resources policies and next best practices within the community, but also with the lessons learned and services that are available from open air. The second is to set up training modules for young researchers and again, also a lot of resources are already available from within open air that that can be used and reused for that purpose. So that's that's why this collaboration is so great to see so we can strengthen each other's work and work with so we're already been done. And the last part is to create an open science starter kit for open science communities. And that's also very nice to to look into, because that's also open for the rest of the European universities to to create open science community from the bottom up with young researchers to enable starting to talk about open science and how to enable them to do that. So this is the scope, and it's been adopted from the Dutch National science program strategy program, where you have different strengths and the horizontal part is it's on working on policy, working on recognition and rewarding researchers for open science, setting up communities community engagement, so that also to learn research to how to communicate with society, getting support and training for open science and having the infrastructure to to make to enable that. And then there in vertical vertical parts that it's fair and responsible research so that's the research part. Public engagement, so to see to tell the public what our research is about. And, but also to set up startups etc doing that engagement, and of course opens open education. That's a third pillar of of, well, the business of doing universities in, at least in the Netherlands but also here in Aurora. And where we create for where we're all do these things fit so we have tasks, the knowledge base sits on the policy we have open science community building package and open science training. And citizen engagement, and all the other parts are done in other work packages of this project. I go a little bit quicker, because I'm aware of the time. So, as I said before, so the open science dashboard, we tried to work, we worked together with open open air to to monitor these open science. knowledge base and open science community started kit. So, if you go to this URL. And we'll send out the links later on I guess you, you can pick up to your starter kit as well to create a community so in the Netherlands, we've a lot of communities at each university has established open science community. So it's been exported overseas as well in Europe. And we want to create more. Where is it. Yeah, that's my presentation more in the year. In the Aurora University as well. So that was the first part. So the second part is the second program. It's called Erasmus plus funding. It's a sustainable development goals research dashboard. So, I think I want to show you a patient and I hope this works if it doesn't just let me know if you don't hear the sound etc so it gives you 30 seconds or is it 90 seconds introduction. So that saves me some time. Hi everyone, welcome to the introduction of the Aurora research dashboard where we show how our research output is related to the United Nations sustainable development goals SDGs for short. Aurora is a European University Alliance who aimed to harness their academic excellence to influence societal change through research and educational activities. The project Aurora SDG research dashboard aims to turn the SDGs into a leading narrative for research in the Aurora Alliance. The main goal is to make the interactive dashboard available for other universities, networks and stakeholders to demonstrate the societal relevance and societal impact of research of Aurora universities. This dashboard shows the research contributions in these societal challenges and how policymakers have used the research available to tackle these challenges. With this dashboard we want to answer the following questions. First, particularly and individually, contribute with our research output to grand societal challenges like the sustainable development goals, how freely and open accessible is our SDG related research output for the rest of society? How excellent is that SDG related research output perceived by the academic community in terms of field weighted citation impact? How is that SDG related research output used in societal debates such as news reports in technological advancements as in patents? How is our SDG related research output used in policy by governments and non-governmental organizations across the globe? How does excellent SDG related research output relate to societal impact? And finally, how do we internationally collaborate with researchers on specific SDG related research? Feel free to explore the data in the dashboard and find a narrative to answer these questions. Hi everyone, welcome. Did you see the video? Yes, yes. Okay, good, good. Because I saw a black screen. So we built this together with a team of people. And these are the people who are working on this. So I'm not doing this alone. This is a group of experts who work day and night on this project to make this happen. And so the idea is to turn SDGs into a leading narrative for the research for research in the Aurora Alliance. And what we want to have at the end of this year is to have a dashboard. And that's a robust tool that can be used by different stakeholders like communication officers, policy officers, grant officers to use this tool to see where the collaboration is and how strong we are on certain SDGs or the open science part, the open access part of that for certain SDGs. And we want to make this available for other universities. And that part is we could export this product and just like that. But what our aim was was also to, especially to collaborate with open air to find in this partnership things so that we can deliver something that everybody can later on use. In the SDGs but also on the impact pages on the monitor, for example, to work on that so to have a similar experience that we have in our custom made dashboard. So this is the timeline. We started with was to work on specific queries to find research papers, we got 1.5 million papers back and use those abstracts to train an AI that can identify text fragments and put a label on it for each of the SDGs in multiple languages and that was very important because not all our research is written in English but also in German and Italian, etc. So we want to use that AI to translate those labels also to other languages. We use that to classify our papers I made it isn't that in the dashboard, but that's basically it. So, bearing of time. Very short very brief. So, come back to the statement that we've made. So Aurora is a partnership of like minded and closely collaborating research intensive European universities use their academic excellence to drive society change and contribute to the sustainable goals that was there. It's a statement of Aurora. So I use these, we use these statements and said, okay, what are these things exactly. So what is the research intensity. So we looked at the publications, for example, for each research output. Academic excellence see the field weighted citation impact. To see how excellent research is and specifically on these SDGs. So we want to see to drive societal change you want to see how open accessible is are these publications, are they used in policy documents are they used in patents, and are they used in news reports. And, of course, we want to see to filter on on the SDGs. So this is the dashboard, for example, where you can see for each university. What their contribution is on each SDG. And you can also see that how much of the research is not related to the SDGs so that's the great gray areas. You can see how much we contribute and then you can zoom into each of these SDGs to see relationships are among each among each other. So we, we even can zoom into organizational level so what we did we put the publications on each sub organizations or faculties and departments, so you can even zoom in where that research is hitting in the organization itself. So this is a co author collaboration. Here we can filter for example on on the landlock developing countries. So we can see what kind of research, especially on the SDGs. It's been done collaboratively in these countries. So it's 3000 papers have been co authors also have co authors with with co co authors in these countries. So basically, working on high energy. And then we want to see the excellence, open access. And there are also, for example, policy impact so we use overtone to add that information in there to see what kind of in the least developing countries, what kind of research has been used by us by by the Aurora universities and on which SDG specifically are they And this is an example where you can see, for example, where you, we have a highly site field with site citation research and SG nine and has a On average, it's a high has has a lot of citations. field weighted. And, but it has a low policy uptake, lower than the average. What we can see here so this is this might be an SDG where it could be much more attention to drawn towards for policymakers to see what kind of research is there in there, and to start finding policymakers that can actually use our research so so we haven't can have a proactive engagement with policymakers, showing that excellent research from us to do that. Also, these are byproducts what I show you now, because we have made a classification system. We also want to build a service on online service where you can insert a text snippet tracks fragment and you can press classify and it classifies this text fragment to the SDGs. You can extract the data if you want. But also you can embed this as a badge on on on webpage, for example. So for example, here on the right. There's our research portal from from the University of Amsterdam, and you can embed these kind of badges onto your repository. But though here's an example. This is a mock up from the Aurora. Gateway we made made from with open air. And we could also put those labels on there. But this is a mock up it's not reality right now that we're working on these, these kind of things. And on the on the, what is it called the details page of publication. So, now I will talk about gateway and monitor but maybe Alessia needs to take over a bit. Yes, I have a presentation for connect in general. So it will explain what is connect and what are the possibilities for creating a gateway. And then I think you can present the gateway and the and the monitor dashboard. Okay, so usually when I start talking about connect I talk about open science. Now here in this audience I think we all know what open science is we know that it's not one thing. It's a lot of things it's a lot of practices for something that is not open science just for the sake of it but it's because we want to have science research that is reproducible transparent. And we want to be give credit to researchers for everything that they do. So not only the final typical traditional publication but also for the data sets for the software for the workflows for all the steps that resulted in the final results of the research. And clearly, with openness comes the possibility to be not only be open for academics but also open to society and to the public, as Maurice explained just a few minutes ago, in a perfect way. But also open science has been recognized by UNESCO and I'm citing here a sentence from Anna Perzic. Open science has been recognized as a key factor key accelerator for achieving the sustainable development goals. And if we acknowledge that, then it means that research performing organizations and research communities need to make the best as they can in order to embrace open science in order to speed up their progress and their impact towards the SDGs. And clearly, it would be not very nice if research communities do this effort, make this effort, and then nobody knows, because that would be a pity, and you will not reach the goal of actually outreach to the public and be open to the society. So not having a dedicated portal where you that you can use to communicate what you're doing is like if you're speaking to an empty audience. So what should we do. So we need to track, we need to track the output of research, how they are interconnected to each other so that we have a record of research, which is contextualized. So it's not only about the publications and the data but it's also how they are connected to each other, which was the funding project, which are who are the organization who are the people. So having this complete record of research. It's very important also to have a narrative of your results in the end. And you also want to monitor because as a research initiative and research communities. You will have policies in place, or you want to understand how your researcher adopt open science practices, and this is where also a monitor comes into the game. But the indicators of what you're going to monitor need to be open and transparent as well. And the process should be reproducible. So we discover. So if you want to show your efforts, your results. Then you need to allow people to discover your results and not just with the standard way of searching but maybe we need more advanced smarter discovery tools to do it. Clearly, one step towards this is to classify the results with the SDGs and allow a search on on this aspect. It doesn't come for free. There are several challenges to do that due to the heterogeneity of the metadata describing the research outputs and the data sources from which this information can be collected. So repositories system thematic repositories publishers and so on. So this is something that should be taken into account when we are pulling information from different sources and the publication deluge, meaning, I mean the number of research products, publications, data sets, other types of research products is increasing month after month more than 200 millions published research is available and thousands of scholarly communication sources so discovery identification of relevant products is a challenge. And it's a challenge also due to the lack of completeness and lack of quality of some part of the data and the metadata. So these are all aspects that have to be considered when thinking about, you know, tracking everything of your research landscape. So clearly you need to have an infrastructure and it requires time it requires expertise and research and development. In the open air, we try to help community on these with connect because with connect. Basically, you can create your personalized gateway portal, where you can basically discover the research outcomes that are relevant for your community. To be clear, it's a portal that gives you a view of the open air research graph. And for those of you who don't know what the open air research graph is is big basically data set, which contains metadata about all types of research products linked to each other. And linked to other entities of the research life cycle. So affiliations, authors, funding grants, data sources. So the journals, all this kind of information is put together and linked to each other with semantic relationships. The information that compose the graph is not only what open air collects from different data sources. But we are also able to apply full text mining algorithm in order to enrich this information with what we can find in the full text and it's not available in the metadata, which is often the case for example for links to funding projects or links to data sets. The portal is not just a discovery portal. It has complete branding capabilities so you can configure it exactly with the identity of your community and the example from Aurora is perfect in this sense. As I said, it's not just about discovery. It's also about integration with other scholarly communication services. Clearly, some of the open air services likes and other usage counts and Explorer, but also our kid and the EOS authorization and authentication infrastructure. These are services for implementing open science practices. So the linking service, which you can use to link publications, data sets and software and so on, so that you basically know which the graph, the record of research for your community, but also services for finding the open repositories to use and therefore sharing your research project. The service is operated by open air. This means that you don't need to take care about the IT staff, installation, maintenance, bug fixing backups, it's all on open air. And the data that is discoverable via the portal is updated automatically every one, two months. Basically, according to the update schedule of the open air research graph. Because this is how it works. So we start from the open air research graph and we apply a configuration. So the criteria by which the research products are relevant for the community. So we identify these relevant products in the open air research graph. And we talk them, we talk them for the community, so that they are discoverable then in the community gateway. And we also publish the metadata as dumps in Zenodo. So in the end, what you will get if you if you have an open air connect gateway. So from the administration point of view, you get a dashboard that you can use to configure the gateway. So you tell us which are the criteria by which the products should be included. And this is fundamental. I mean, the configuration is the very heart of your gateway. And there's community creator, you can specify different criteria of inclusion. So a list of keywords, project rents, a list of thematic repositories and journals, thematic Zenodo communities or organizations that you know are working in, in a specific field. And also the users of the gateway can contribute to these, and they can add the missing products and links between the products with the link functionality. We also have the open air algorithms. So one is called the propagation algorithm, which basically propagates the fact that a product is relevant for a community from one product to another. For example, if a publication is relevant because it has a specific specific keyword, and is supplemented by a data set, then also the data set is relevant for the community, and so on. Then we have the full text mining algorithms, which looks into the abstract and the full text of open access publications to identify new information. As I said before, and this includes projects, affiliations, document classifications, related data and others. So this is all information that we can exploit to identify products of the community. Then clearly there is the public portal. So while the admin part is only for the gateway creator, then we have the public part. So you have a portal where you can search for any type of research products and you have a very nice filter on the left that helps you in the discovery, but it also helps you to keep track of the open size practices. Of the community because there are some, some of the filters are really helpful in this case. For basic thing because as you will see afterwards, we can set up a monitor dashboard in order to better track the uptake of the open science practices of the communities. And yes, then we have the possibility to find the repository to deposit research products and the linking functionality as I was saying before. So the latest development news for Connect. So if you are a manager, you may have noticed that the homepage change. So we basically had a full redesign of the user experience user interface of the Connect gateways. So we have a new menu here in the middle, a new subject page and other details that makes the gateways much nicer than they were before. And also the landing pages of publications and other research products has been updated. So basically, all the actions are now go from the bottom left so that they are more compact and they are easier to to be used. And we also have a more compact view of the different versions of our search products. Then I think very, very nice improvement is now the possibility to create a customized menu. So in addition to the default one, which is always on the top you can create your own menu here so you can link back to your community website or to your research infrastructure website to the project website, or to whatever you, you might have to link. So as you can see, Aurora is not the only organization we are working with with Connect. So there are many other communities in place. Some have already made their gateway public, other are still working on it. So you cannot access all of them, but we are covering a lot of different research topics and we are very proud of the response of the research communities in this sense. But we're still open. So if you want to apply for your community gateway, you can do it. Just go to the Connect website and fill in the form that you can find here. And thanks to the Opener Nexus projects, we can start the work and it will be for free until June 2023. And then after that we can see if we have opportunities for the sustainability of the gateways afterwards. So this concludes my presentation. So I think Maurice, you can show your wonderful gateway now. Yes, thanks. Yeah, wonderful gateway. Yeah, it is, it is actually wonderful. And, well, thank you for that explanation about what the product was more, Alessia, because I couldn't do a better job because I was thinking what else do I need to add to this and I also discovered new things like the menus I didn't know about that. So thank you for that. Thank you for the screen again. So here, where are we with my presentation? So I will, a little bit of context. So Opener and Aurora have built a partnership and it's basically on societal impact and open science. So what Aurora could offer was users, a community of researchers and also knowledge about SED classification. So that's what we also brought in. And Opener has for us a gateway monitor and other training and services that we can use. Yeah, let's go forward. So the neat thing about this is the old picture, the old user interface, sorry about that, I need to update the picture of the Aurora gateway. And what we did with the SED project was to collect all the publications from each university and we did this using Excel and then we tried to figure out all the fields and normalize the data and do all that stuff. But this neat thing is that if you connect to the Aurora gateway or to the Open Air Research Graph effect, then you don't have to bother with all that stuff, you could just connect your repository and make sure you're here to the Open Air guidelines. And then it does all that dirty data cleaning stuff for you. And then you can extract the data. Well, it's basically put on the gateway itself, but if you want to use the data itself, then you go to the Zenodo data dump and then you collect your community data from there. And that's your starting point where you can start working on the data in many different ways. And that's the new workflow that we are trying to implement in the next months to see if we can use this as a starting point for creating our custom dashboard. And the neat thing is when these publications are in there and if they are open access, they get processed as well. And the Open Air extracts lots more information for you that you can use. So for example, we didn't know about the research projects that were involved, but in fact are in the publications itself, even though we didn't put the metadata on the records itself in the repositories. So you can use that to enrich your information. And also it gets more about it also tags automatically the SDGs, etc. This is about the monitor. So I will first let show you put this window here. This dashboard itself but the custom dashboard that we made, but I will now go to Open Air. So first, what you need to do is to add repositories or Chris systems in using provides or go to provide not open air. So I'm making a sales page now for open air. So you register your repository. And then it collects your information. So with this user interface from our university. So we have also another one and data personnel collects the data in here and then you see also it comes with enrichments. So this is this is interesting tell you which author identify fires open air found for us to add into our metadata to enrich our metadata, even better. So that's that's a neat thing also user user discount we don't use that yet. I think added to into a repository so the clicks on the views and downloads are being transferred to open air to have that on the monitor, but every university of us does this right as their repository, and then we can add it to the dashboard to the to the gateway. So, if you go to manage. I need to sign in again, sometimes signs out for security reasons. And then, if you go to data sources, you can add your repository here by finding looking up the repository. And then add this to the existing list of repositories that you use. And it's added. We have several of them here. And they are all added to do this to our list. And then I go to the homepage again. Oh yes. And also, a neat thing is that you don't have to do this yourself you see if you, you, you can have lots of other managers in there so we have a group who's maintaining this, this page. And you can just invite someone in your projects to be added. And of course customization, etc, etc, so really, really, really nice. Back to the homepage again. Then you see how many publications from repositories are in there, but also from the entities that we have to say something about the positions that are put in here. The organizations in there sort of finds the affiliation in the publications that are not in our repositories but somewhere else. Somebody else put, put some, for example, a data set in a repository on dry it or something like that. And we didn't know about it, but they are also put into the gateway as well by affiliation. So we get not only the publications, but also in here. And research software from from Aurora and other research project products. So this is pretty neat to look into. So this is just an overview. But if you go to view all, then it goes to another page. Where you can see much more in detail and filter much more in detail, your publications, data sets and research software. So you can see, for example, in these facets, how many publications are in open access or or closed access. The document types, the fields of science and this is added by open air itself by using AI to find out what kind of field of science that particular publication is referring to, but also here. The SDS as well. So here you can see for peace and justice, we can select that easily. And if here are the papers that are related to SG 16. And that's all about peace and justice. And this is how how that works. So this is this is just an overview of all that information. And, and it's it's pretty neat already. But if you had information. You also can have a have a have a dashboard. It's, it's all it goes goes in this workflow automatically because the data is already there. So we have a dashboard where where you can just see in a quick overview, how many publications data set and software there is. But if you are interested in open science. You can zoom in this for publications you can see the open access but also here the CD APC's things for for plan S and also the fairness of the data sort of about the compliancy of the metadata that we have produced for these records. Not only publications but data sets and software as well. So it's it's pretty amazing that we can see this all this with the only thing we needed to do is to add or make our repositories compliant to open air and add it to the to the gateway. So, in, in, from our perspective it's easy. I mean, for open air it's been done a fantastic job in the in the past years to, to, to go this far, but now you can read the the the fruits from, from what they've shown in those years and this it's, it's, I'm pretty much amazed by this. And we can use these diagrams in kinds of reports, you can download this as an Excel or download this as a picture and make reports in this you can see the collaboration in organizations and you can see the impact and on this in terms of the downloads that have been produced now in in open air. But if we connect with usage counters from each of our repositories we can add that information as well. Here you see that the sg's coming soon. And that's what we are also working with with open air to see what what kind of information do you want to put on on this kind of these pages. And then we have here the dashboard that we have so we can give them advice on on how you want to filter particular things or to see collaboration on particular sg for example. We've done here as well on live on land for example. And we can see on a heat map where the collaboration is on on that particular sg and also on the topics. And which with all which authors are working mostly on this. So, I think that's, that's pretty much what I have to say about this. And what, what's the time. So we have that say eight minutes left. Yes, we still have some time yes. Thank you. So this is my team who waves at you and say thank you for my very much for for having us and working together. Thank you Maurice. Thank you very much. Thank you. Let's hand Maurice for your presentation. I think it was very explanatory and you were you have presented in detail. The, the service and the value functionalities. And now we have some time for questions or comments from the participants. We have two questions in the chat. This is from Amar. That is, what is the, what are the difficulties and limitations faces the sdgs program to be all well well to other universities and increase the networks. So I think this is a question for me, I guess. The difficulties and limitations faced the sdg program to be allowable for other universities and increase the networks. I try to understand the question but if I interpreted like. So what, what we want to do in Aurora is to connect the researchers together with a certain sdg. So, if I show again, my, my board I try to show how we try to answer that question. So show you now you see the dashboard right. So what we, what we try to do now is to find collaboration current existing collaborations on on the sdg so here we want to filter for example on life on land. We want to see here which research which researchers produce the more locations on that sdg. And here are the, are the institutions who are the working the most on on those, those sdgs for example, I am from the university that Amsterdam. We have produced 213 publications on on that. These are the authors, but we want to, for example, if we want to see what what we what our current collaboration is from the view with Innsbruck. I'm not sure if this, if this example works because and then. So we don't have any collaboration with Innsbruck. That's what it says, basically. And, but what was it, he sangly perhaps has. So we can see. So we can see which authors are collaborating with Innsbruck together so this is current collaboration but if you want to look into new collaborations. And so you, you clear all the filters as these 15, and you want to find out collaboration on certain topic, for example on bird nests. And where you're interested in filter them. And then here you see the authors who are working on that particular topic so this could be an example. For example, the fields of science that we're producing in the in open air. Because we use now cycle, but we want to move to open infrastructure as much as possible. So we would love to work with the new data coming in. And to to filter on on that particular part and find out new collaborations, specifically, regarding to 15 regarding to see birds and birds nests. Does that answer the question a bit. I hope so. Yes, and if you okay. Yes, I'm a reply is that yes. Okay, we have another question from Maria Jose. I think this question is, is to Alessia, if not wrong, you said that the repository must be compliant with open air, but open air guidelines three or four. Any of those would work. So, in order to be harvested you have to be compliant and clearly we would like more and more repositories to be compliant with the latest version of the guidelines so guidelines for and the guidelines for the system. But also a compliance with three dot zero is is fine. And it's enough in order to be included in the graph and to be counted for the statistics that you see monitor. We still have some repositories that are compliant to the old driver guidelines so clearly. Newer the guideline richer is the metadata that you offer, and we can do more with what you give us. Okay, thank you very much. Okay, thank you. We have another question from 10 die. Is it possible to import the data into our other platform, or it's about link as a repository is first. The open air gateway. In general, I mean the research products, the metadata about the research products should be included in the open air research graph so this means that open air must harvest this information from somewhere. Either it comes from a repository, or, for example, as a user you can add missing publications by using the link functionality. But basically these allows you only to add metadata of research products that are already available from crossref data site or orchid. So you cannot actually upload something. Yes, and send additional time for questions so please feel free to add your questions, you can also open the microphone. Some questions or comments. If not, I think we can call this session that