The requirement of FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) data is an important aspect of current project proposals. But what does opening up your data yield for the individual researcher? And how can we better value researchers for making their data open (where allowed)? 

In this workshop organized by the Open Science Committee of our university, researchers from various disciplines provide insights into how they strive to make their data open and the advantages and disadvantages they experience. RIVA provides an overview of the policy of the University of Antwerp, and Nick Schryvers explains the conclusions on open data from the Open Science Research Assessment (OSRA) project group of the Flemish Open Science Board (FOSB).

Program:

9:00
9:10
Welkom
Esther Van Zimmeren










9:10
9:30

Jonas Lefevere
FSW
Dept. Political Sciences
Open Data in Political Science
9:30
9:50

Johan Verbeeck
FWET
Dept. Physics
Open data requirements in experimental physics: threat or opportunity?
9:50
10:10

Winnok Devos
FFBD
Dept. Biomedical Sciences
Open strategies for data-driven microscopy
10:10
10:30

Kenneth Sörensen
FBE
Dept. Engineering Management
Lack of openness in Operations Research - a cautionary tale
10:30
10:40
coffee break




10:40
11:00

Kris Laukens
FWET
Dept. Computer Science

Data sharing and reuse in bioinformatics: fundamental and disruptive

11:00
11:20

Thomas De Kerf
FTI
Dept. Elektromechanics
Open Datasets in Computer Vision - Is it really worth the trouble?
11:20
11:40

Tine van Daal
FSW
Dept. Educational Sciences
Open data and moRe in the educational sciences
11:40
11:55

Jef Peeters & Pieter Spooren

RIVA
Making sensitive data as open as possible and as closed as needed: the FAIR Vault project
11:55
12:10

Nick Schryvers

chair project group OSRA FOSB
Conclusions from the FOSB project group on Open Data Research Assessment
12:10
12:30
roundup











12:30
13:30
lunch




Register here :

https://forms.office.com/e/Pbz4CwAVvg