597 private links
Utforska den biologiska mångfalden!
Här samlar och presenterar vi vår och andras kunskap om djur och natur. Vi arbetar på att beskriva de cirka 60 000 arterna som finns i Norden och Baltikum.
Presentationen på denna sajt är dock ganska torr. Många sidor saknar beskrivning. Länkar för all del till Wikipedia och andra sajter.
En mycket mer visuell presentation av "livets träd" är den på OneZoom.
En annan (sidindelad som Naturforskaren men med mer visuella element) är Tree of Life web project.
- Vetenskapsrådets kriterier för FAIR forskningsdata
- Vetenskapsrådet vägledning för implementering av kriterier för FAIR forskningsdata
Via Svensk nationell datatjänst (SND).
Also on FAIR:
- https://www.fairsfair.eu - Fostering Fair Data Practices in Europe
The website is a collaboration between two Dutch data science centers.
Should in my opinion also mention Gitea or Codeberg under suggested version control repositories, but otherwise good advice all around!
Bilder G, Lin J, Neylon C (2020), The Principles of Open Scholarly Infrastructure, https://doi.org/10.24343/C34W2H
First author is Geoffrey Bilder, of Crossref.
The Swedish Research Council’s view is that everybody should be given access to research data that are financed via public funds. The recommendation below is part of our work of promoting a transition to open access to research data. The goal is to complete the transition no later than 2026.
With the increasing focus on open science and FAIR data, IUPAC is focusing effort toward the development of digital standards for chemistry. Its Committee on Publications and Cheminformatics Data Standards (CPCDS) has compiled this page with IUPAC resources.
A commendable effort!
Refractive index database
Via The power of computational materials theory
This preprint "All Topological Bands of All Stoichiometric Materials" by the same authors.
The Materials Project's mission is to accelerate the the discovery of new technological materials through advanced scientific computing and innovative design tools.
To use Materials Project's API, pymatgen may be easiest.
I am not aware of a similar API wrapper for R.
Taylor Sparks has produced a number of videos related to the Materials Project, such as Materials Project API example using pymatgen and Materials data repositories.
- Space-group symmetry
- Magnetic Symmetry and Applications
- Group-Subgroup Relations of Space Groups
- Representations and Applications
- Solid State Theory Applications
- Structure Utilities
- Topological Quantum Chemistry
- Subperiodic Groups: Layer, Rod and Frieze Groups
- Structure Databases
- Raman and Hyper-Raman scattering
- Point-group symmetry
- Plane-group symmetry
- Double point and space groups
How to cite the BCS. Related papers are tagged "Bilbao Crystallographic Server" in Zotero.
Ok, so this video is a few years old, but it does not have anywhere near the views it deserves. It's never too late to do reproducible science! (Video 1m 44s)
Reproducible science not only reduce errors, but speeds up the process of re-running your analysis and auto-generate updated documents with the results.
A Javascript tool to model tandem photocatalytic devices, by Brian Seger, assoc. prof. at DTU.
I first heard about it in a talk by Ib Chorkendorff (PECSYS, 201105).
These are such valuable guides (macOS, Windows, and Ubuntu), for @ubcmds and beyond. Installing a whole data science stack IS HARD. Enjoy and provide feedback!
https://nitter.net/JennyBryan/status/1293728561661005831
@joelostblom & I just finished our install guide for the @UBCMDS #datascience software stack across Ubuntu, Mac & Window. Got a new machine that you need to install the #datascience software stack on? Test drive our guide & report any issues!
https://nitter.net/TiffanyTimbers/status/1293680873431158786
For macOS, Ubuntu and Windows.
This guide consists of written instructions. Could easily be turned into an Ansible playbook, I think.
Nature has launched a Platform for Responsible Editorial Policies. This facilitates transparent review and research into peer-review procedures, thereby contributing to open science and optimal journal management (see P. Wouters et al. Nature 569, 621–623 (2019) and F. Squazzoni et al. Nature 578, 512–514; 2020).
Funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development, and created with the Leiden Centre for Science.
A cloud for research data in Europe.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Open_Science_Cloud
- https://snd.gu.se/sv/nyheter/aktivt-svenskt-deltagande-i-eosc-men-mer-kan-goras
- https://snd.gu.se/sv/eosc-vad-hander-och-hur-bidrar-svenska-aktorer (inspelade presentationer från webbinarium 2022-02-11)
EOSC ska göra öppen vetenskap till det nya normala.
EOSC Association
Unclear if the following sites are official:
https://www.eosc-hub.eu
https://www.eosc-portal.eu
https://wallabag.chepec.se/share/5e76e150d26128.44547100
A list based off of the above article, with some more I have learnt of from different sources:
- Stencila: An open source office suite for reproducible research.
- Dat project: A protocol for researcher-centric data sharing.
- JOSS: The Journal of Open Source Software (paper review as Github issues!).
- Open Citations: Open bibliographic and citation data.
- Plaudit: A browser extension that enables verified (via ORCID) endorsements of publications. A way to let other researchers know what you think is good science.
- PubPub: Collaborative writing and publishing.
- ReScience: A journal for replicated computational research.
- FlashPub: Fast micropublications.
- ReimagineReview: A whole database of peer review innovations!
- Dokieli: Decentralized articles and annotations, using linked data.
- Scite.ai: Machine learning for determining research quality.
- Scholarcy: Automatic summarisation of papers.
- BMJ Labs' mega list: Projects in scientific publishing, all of them!
- unpaywall integrations (unpaywall is one of several projects run by OurResearch).