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*Register Now for Next Week's NISO Virtual Conference!*


The Preprint: Integrating the Form into the Scholarly Ecosystem
<http://www.niso.org/events/2018/02/preprint-integrating-form-scholarly-ecosystem>

*Wednesday,* *February 14, 11:00am - 5:00pm*



*Confirmed speakers include:*



·      *Gregg Gordon, *SSRN

·      *Mark Seeley, *SciPubLaw

·      *Neil Thakur, *NIH

·      *John Inglis*, Cold Spring Harbor Press

·      *Darla Henderson, *American Chemical Society (ACS)

·      *Matthew Spitzer, *Center for Open Science

·      *Oya Rieger*, Cornell University

·      *Jamie Wittenberg*, Indiana University Bloomington



Here’s a sampling of what three of those speakers will address:



*Interim Research Products at NIH*

Interim research products are complete research products that are made
public before they are final. They are created in order to increase the
impact and rigor of a research study. They might be in draft form, like a
preprint, or they may be a step in an ongoing study made public, like a
preregistered study protocol.  This presentation will describe NIH’s
current interim research product policy, including standards for citing
interim research products in NIH applications and reports, and guidance for
selecting repositories. It will also provide results from the 2016 request
for information that helped drive this policy.



*Preprints in Biology and Medicine*

The public release of research papers before peer review (“preprint
posting”) has become more frequent in the biological sciences in the past 5
years and the value of the practice for clinically related research is
beginning to be discussed.  bioRxiv is Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory’s
preprint server for the biological sciences, and the soon-to-be-launched
medRxiv will be its equivalent in the health sciences.  This presentation
will describe the development and current status of these initiatives and
their evolving roles in the ecosystem of scholarly communication.



*arXiv: Principles, Sustainability, and Future*

arXiv.org is acknowledged as one of the most successful OA preprint
repositories. It has transformed scientific communication in multiple
fields of physics and plays an increasingly prominent role in mathematics,
computer science, quantitative biology, quantitative finance, and
statistics. The presentation will describe the role of arXiv, its
organizational and governance model, and the current challenges and
opportunities involved in its operation.  Also, it will discuss the main
goals of the next-gen arXiv (arXiv-NG) initiative, which aims to strengthen
the 26-year old service's technical infrastructure and business model.
arXiv, as a socio-technical system, consists of technical infrastructures,
scholarly workflows, curatorial policies, and the social arrangements and
organizations that provide it with a structural framework. Therefore, the
arXiv-NG initiative involves a range of issues extending from architectural
choices to sustainability requirements, and from policy issues to
governance matters.



For more speaker abstracts, to review the day's agenda and links to
registration, please visit the NISO event page
<http://www.niso.org/events/2018/02/preprint-integrating-form-scholarly-ecosystem>
.



Have questions? Get in touch:



NISO

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Suite 302

Baltimore, MD 21211-1948

Phone: (301) 654-2512

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