 So I will give you a brief introduction of OpenAir Connect, OpenAir and what is this service that we are testing together with you. And then our colleague Argyro from Athena Research Center will show you the user interface and will explain a bit. Because I know that many of you were already involved in the first phases of the testing, but a lot of things has changed. So OpenAir, you may already know that OpenAir is the European infrastructure for open science, but in fact we have collaboration all around the world. And we support the implementation and the take of open science principles in research. And we do this from two sides. So we have the networking infrastructure. So we have one national open access desk in each European country, which advocates and support implementation of open access and open science in general. We have task forces that work for the fairness of data on for the global alignment and interoperability established. Let's say common understanding and best best practices all around the world in support of open science. And we also have a technical infrastructure that provides services for for many stakeholders so we have services for funders for institutional repositories for content providers for research communities. And also for researchers. So if you go to the OpenAir portal, you can see these connect, provide, explore, develop a monitor and these are the labels for for the services that we offer. So today we're you're going to see you're going to participate to the test of the research community dashboard, which is a service that OpenAir created in order to be able to build community gateways to open science. So what does it mean? It means that you can have a discipline specific gateway, a portal where you can find everything that you need to implement and monitor open science in your own research communities. And why, because we think that researchers still have to face a lot of barriers in order to adopt open science publishing practices. It's very difficult because it's very difficult to find and to reuse the research outputs that are relevant for you as a researcher. So there is this literature and data deluge. And the there is a need of a place where you can find everything that is related to your discipline to your search topic. And we also need ways to allow you to help grow and create the space so that also other researchers of your community will find a complete set of products that are easier to reuse and open science publishing tools. So what does it mean for a researcher to publish? How can I publish all types of research outputs? How can I publish the packages of research outputs? So I don't, for example, as a researcher, you may want, you may have a scientific article, you may have a data sets, you may have software and all this together from a sort of package that actually represents everything that you have done during a research activity. And this must be published because this supports omnicomprehensive evaluation and allows you to be rewarded for everything that you have done, so not only for the article. And finally, there is the need to keep all the information about the research outputs up to date. Because the data that you have published can be reused by other, so new relationship to your product, new links to your product can be created over time. And this is something that we must keep track of it. So here we have the motivation about monitoring, because maybe you want to know which are the open science publishing practices in your research community. You want to know who is actually publishing packages of artifacts, for example, who is publishing data sets in open access and who is not. So we can offer, let's say some graphs that explain you the trend of the uptake of open science publishing practices in your community. And we offer all this functionality via what we call a community gateway, so a community gateway for open science. And this is done thanks to one of the main service that OpenAir offers, which is the OpenAir research graph. So OpenAir collects from institutional repositories, thematic repositories, founder databases, and many, many, many other types of data sources, content providers. We collect metadata about the publications, research data, software, other types of research products, and these can be protocols, methods, workflows, for example. So we collect this metadata. We link it to projects, to research communities, to organizations, and we enrich this graph. By the duplicating, because we can collect metadata records about the same products from different sources. So we merge together the duplicates, and we also apply full text mining algorithm to the open access publications in order to enrich the graph with additional information that we can extract from the full text itself. So for example, subjects, sorry, the list of projects, the relevance for research infrastructure or research community, affiliation information, these kind of things. Then we need a way not to offer you a view of this graph that is relevant for you and for your community. So each gateway, so each gateway has a set of managers that basically configure the gateway by providing a list of relevant projects, acknowledgement statements, data sources that are relevant for your community. This is another communities where, you know, researchers used to publish their data sets and workflows and so on. A list of subjects, keywords that are relevant for the community. And this is the way how we start to populate what you can see in your, in your gateway. And of course, you can contribute to it. And you can do this by manually adding the research products that are missing. And we have a dedicated functionality for it. And you can use it to manually add one single item. So for example, one publication. You can add it, let's say in bulk batch. So you can upload a list of your eyes and all the publications and data sets with those the eyes will be added to the gateway, or you can provide an orchid ID. And, and then you can select all the research products related with that orchid ID in order to add them to the dash. So this was the introduction I wanted to make. And we have a new version of a beta connect dot open air dot you and all the gateways that we, we have already deployed for different communities. So if you have any questions or otherwise, I will leave the floor to Argyro who can proceed with the showcase of the new functionality. I guess I can start. Do you see my screen? Do you see my screen? Yes, yes. Okay, good. This is the beta connect open air you that Alessia told you about. This is the, the foreshadow is the site that you can reach to find information about the open air connect project. To see what gateways we have already created and are part of this project. We have the list of the, of the gateways that we have is in here, you can see a community about our cultural and food sciences about the humanities and cultural heritage about marine science. And if you click on browser, there is a page where you can search for these communities. If you click, okay, this is a community that I would, I chose to, to showcase the, the gateway. By taking it, it will take you to the, to the gateway of this community. In this page, you can subscribe using this pattern to this community. So, in this way, you, you become part of this community, and you are able to make the, to use the linking functionality that Alessia mentioned before. This is a quick link from the home page of the, of the connect portal. So now I am logged in. I am subscribed to the following. Community so I can click here and visit them all. Or I can see the whole list of the communities that I am subscribed to. I'm going back again to the new informatics gateway. You can see that now I'm subscribed here. In the home page of this gateway, you can see the information related to the community to know what this, what this community is about. You see statistics, the numbers, what are, what is this communities in numbers, regarding the research results related to this community. At the bottom of the page, you can see who are the managers, who are the curators of this, of this gateway. In this case, for the new informatics community, we have community as a curator. You can click on this and see and view more details about this curator. And there is a dedicated page where you can also see a short biography for this curator. And also you can see the list of organizations that are related to this community. There is also a dedicated page for, for this, for, for information about the organizations regarding the research design. Here you see an overview with the most recent results for each type, publications, research data, software and other products. And for each of these products, there is a graph analysis. You can see the numbers of open access, closed access applications that are related to this community and have an overview with the graphs. By clicking here, you can go to see all publications related to this community. And you are able to, to use search and browse functionality to find results that you want. You can use keyword search or you can use filters. The main filters that we have is funders, projects, publication date, access modes, type, language and so on. A new feature that we have is the Orchid ID. We have connected the authors with their Orchid ID. So by clicking, if an Orchid ID is available for an author, you can see here with this icon. And by clicking on this, you can see the Orchid ID of the author and you can search for publication, for results that are related to this specific author. You search with his Orchid ID. All the information that you see here is configured from the monitor. So some of those functionalities are new. So maybe your community doesn't have, doesn't so get the related organization or the information about the creators. But now the monitor are able to fill this information and make the gateway presentation to have a quick review, to have a quick overview of what this community gateway is about. And the results that you see here are here because the creators, the monitors of the community have configured this gateway to include those results. You are researchers, you can use the linking functionality to add more information in this community. And now I will proceed with the linking functionality. Until now, do you have any questions before I start saying this? Okay, so I continue. I click start linking, so this page appeared. In this page you can search for research results using keywords. I will use an author name right now to make a search. You can see that the results are from open mail. But we have also results from Crossref, Datasite, or Orchid. For those results you can use the pages and the pages similar to the search page I saw earlier. And if you find the results that you want to link, you can click the class button and add it to your basket and it appears on the right. If you don't want it, you can remove it from the basket at one, at another one. Also, you can use Crossref results instead if something is not available yet in open mail, as you know it is available through Crossref. You can search for it in Orchid and add it in your basket. Also, you can use the Datasite or Orchid. For Orchid you can search with the author name like I did here. Or you can use the Orchid ID and find the results of this specific author and add it in your basket. This is the manual way to add results by searching in those sources and add them in your basket. If you don't want to do it manually, I will clear my basket here to show you what else you can do. If you don't want to do it manually, you can use a CSV file that contains a list of DOIs. I have here a file. I will show you what it contains. It has a list with the DOIs, so instead of searching one by one in Crossref, I add them in a CSV file and upload them in the LinkedIn functionality. All those DOIs are fed from Crossref or Datasite and they are immediately added in your basket. Now that I have added those results, I will continue to the next step to find out what I can link them to. In this step, you can link the results that you have already selected with projects, research results or communities. I will choose to link them with the NI community, so I will choose communities from here. The neuroinformatics community is already selected because I am in the neuroinformatics community, but I can remove it or add another community, for example, a GIMP file. The community is added on the basket on the right. I will add again neuroinformatics and remove a GIMP file from here. One more thing is that there are communities that have some additional paths. For example, EDI community has subcategories, has specifications. For example, you can not only add EDI, link your results with EDI, but link them with a specific country of EDI. For example, LinkedIn with freeze or link it with a classification scheme. This additional path depends on the community. For example, a neuroinformatics community doesn't have a different path. So it is enough just to link it with the base community with a neuroinformatics doesn't need additional path. So now I continue to the last step. So in the last step, I have an overview of what I have already selected. Here you can see the results that I uploaded with the CSV file. For each result, it's pre-selected that the type of the result is a publication and the access mode is open access. But if you know that, for example, the first result is not a publication, but it's a dataset, you can change it in this step. There is an option that you can apply the change that you did for the first one for all the list. But now I don't want to do that, so I will click no. And for the access mode, you can change them to closed and barcode and so on. If you think that one of the results, you don't want to link one of these results, you can always remove them even from this step. So we have here the list with the result. I will close it to better solve this. And the first, the list with the result, I want to link them with the communities. From this step, again, I can remove any community that I may be at by mistake. And then when I am happy with what I have selected in public, what I can do is click confirm linking and finish and create those links in open-end. When I click here, you will find that some of the links are not immediately published in open-end, but they will be published. So you have to confirm that those links are valid, it's not done by mistake or for testing. Do you have any questions? For the results that I selected to link, I wanted to link them with the neuroinformatics community. So when the link is published to open-end, the results that I selected to link will be available in this page. For example, I was leaving if I search, in search publication page. As soon as they are published to open-end, they will be available in this page and visible for all the research. In the user manual, there is a link, there is a page, my links, where you can see the full list of the links that you have created and see the status of them if they are published to open-end or not. And you have the option to delete a link if you think it's not correct, it's not valid. I think that this is all I have to show you, so you can have any questions. Or Alessia and Andrea, do you have to add something? Yes, we have a question on the chat. So do you plan to embed Viper, the visual project explorer within the Connect portal? So we are not planning to integrate it in the OpenAir Connect portal. I think we are starting a conversation to include it in the OpenAir Explorer somehow. In fact, Viper is a service of open-knowledge maps, so you are able to have a nice way to browse and to search for publications in a visual way, not only as a list of publications that we currently do. The idea, yes, is that we are going to do an integration of this tool in our portals. And this is under, let's say, in our to-do list, yes. Of course we can think about integrating this also in the Connect portal, but this will come, I think, at a second step, at a second stage. So if there are no other questions, I can ask you a question. And basically so we have created a survey, a questionnaire for you, for you to fill in and give us your feedback on the usability of the gateways and on its functionality. Because as you can see, all the gateways are under beta.openair.connect.u. And we would like instead to promote this service into production, so in order also to involve more researchers. So having your feedback by filling the questionnaire that Andrea just sent on the chat, it would be very helpful for us to complete the deployment of the service and to make it available to a wider audience, not only to invited researchers like you. Okay, so we have another question. Does OpenAir have any impact on the peer review and the journal publication? Not sure that I understand the question. Because you, okay, you should consider OpenAir as an overlay on what is available out there. So you never deposit something in OpenAir. You deposit something in a repository, for example, Zenodo, or you publish something on a journal. For example, an open access journal that is registered in the DOAJ, which is the directory of open access journals. The metadata about your publication or datasets will end up in OpenAir. We are not providing services for peer review, not even post-publication peer review. And so what we can do is to give you support in finding the right repository, the right journal where you can publish and be compliant to the open science, open access mandates of the founders. So I don't know if this, if this replies to the question. So who can open a community portal? Okay, so you can request a community portal going to beta.connect.openair.tu. What we request is that there should be, it should be somehow representative for your research community. So if you come and you ask to have a gateway for your research project, for example, this is not really, this is not really a community in this sense. But if you instead are in a research association working on, I don't know, bioinformatics, then we can of course provide a gateway for you. And you can find all the information about this in the BetaConnect portal. If you go to their own page, you can click on, learn how to build the gateway and you will find all the information you need. Why? Next question, sorry. Why did you choose Crossref? Instead, for instance core or base collections, we didn't choose Crossref in favor of core or base. In fact, OpenAir collects from core and currently collects a subset of base, but we are going to have everything that is in base also in OpenAir. And the thing that we have in this linking functionality Crossref data site in our kid is because we are not collecting everything from these three sources. So it could be the case that you cannot find the publication in OpenAir, but you can find it in Crossref. So this is why we are using the Crossref APIs in this in this linking functionality. The last question asks, are there any databases included that have journals with high impact? Okay, so we collect from, as I said in my presentation, we collect from a lot of data sources. We have institutional repositories that are registered on OpenDoor. We have all the journals that are registered in the directory of Open Access Journals. We have part of Springer, the Open Access part of Springer, and we have also other publisher, for example PLOS. So we don't have in our research graph information about the impact because this is commonly used as a metric to evaluate researchers, which shouldn't be the case. So we're not keeping information about the impact of journals. We are instead, we have instead information about the Open Access policies and copyrights of the journals when they come from, sorry, when they are available on the Sherpa Romeo service. So Sherpa Romeo service is a service managed by Gisk and they keep an up-to-date database of the Open Access policies and copyright options of all the journals. So when this information is available on this Sherpa Romeo service, we link to it so that you can better understand which are the policies that apply to the journal and to the publications that have been published in it. Yes, I really hope that Dora will change this. Yes, I agree. Andrea, Jiro, do you want to add anything? For me, it's all. I would like to say only to the researchers that we are here to help them in any issue. I have, when using these community gateways, any questions or any doubts, we are here available to help. And I would like to highlight again the importance to answer the questioner, which is very important for us and thank you all to attend this webinar. And Argyro, do you want to say something? No, I'm okay. Thank you all for participating. So I think we can finish this webinar. Many thanks to Argyro and Alessia who attend this webinar. I will send the presentation and the recording to you. Yeah, so if you want to see again and to share with your colleagues, you are free to do it and the link to the questioner. Okay. Thank you very much. Goodbye. Goodbye. Goodbye.