Training Workshop:
EURO-BASIN will make all resulting peer-reviewed publications freely available via open access. The initiative will boost visibility of the authors, use of the project`s research, and provide free access to stakeholders across all sectors (in collaboration with IFREMER, Fred Merceur & Morgane Le Gall).
Open Access for Global Climate Change Scientists 2011
Endorsed by:
 
- Programme - Webcasts - Giveaway - And the winners are ... -
Date: 26th October 2011
Venue: Online or at DTU-Aqua, Copenhagen
Organisers: Ivo Grigorov, Mikael Elbaek, Jeannette Ekstroem
Programme: details
Webcast: details
Fee-waiver giveaway: details
FACTSHEET on OA for Climate: download
DESCRIPTION: Should Global Climate Change-related, peer-reviewed research be published freely available to anyone? Can you, as an author, boost your citations impact by doing so?
Global Climate Change (GCC) research spans across a range of disciplines and can have profound implications for policy formulation and socio-economics. Despite that, only a fraction of the peer-reviewed research is freely available to stakeholders outside academia.
GCC scientists across disciplines are invited to learn how to make their peer reviewed research accessible to all stakeholders & society, by boosting their own visibility, use of their research, and gaining citations.
PROGRAMME:
13:00 - 14:30 SESSION: OPEN PEER-REVIEW
Denis-Didier Rousseau, CNRS
Co-editor of Climate of the Past, European Geoscience Union Journal
(cancelled, presentation given by Ivo Grigorov)
Funders position on OA & Funding for 'gold' OA publishing
Ivo Grigorov, DTU-Aqua
& EURO-BASIN Project Officer

Publish with 'green' Open Access for free, NOW
Mikael Elbæk, DTU Library & FP7 OpenAIRE
15:00 - 16:30 SESSION: OPEN DATA
How to turn spreadsheets into citable Data Publications
Hans Pfeiffenberger, AWI
Co-editor of the Earth System Science Data Journal
Sharing data = more citations
Heather Piwowar, DataONE Postdoc,
National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent, Uni. British Columbia)
IMBER Data Management Cookbook (video recording to be broadcast post-event)
Gwen Moncoiffé, British Oceanographic Data Center & IMBER Data Management
WEBCASTS:
Webcasts of the training will be published soon!
GIVEAWAY:
Registered participants can win a fee-waiver worth 700-1500 euros for either any Inter-Research journal (e.g. Marine Ecology Progress Series) or any European Geoscience Union journal (e.g. Biogeosciences). The fee-waiver would allow the owner to publish their next manuscript in those journals via open access for FREE (subject to standard peer-review procedure).

To enter the draw, just register to attend at the offical training website.
And the WINNERS are ...
Ana Sofia Ferreira
PhD Student at DTU Aqua
wins a fee-waiver for Marine Ecology Progress Series (or any Inter-Research journal).
Ana Sofia is studing the links between phytoplankton blooms and north-east Atlantic fish recruitment, cascading effect and trophic interactions between phytoplankton, zooplankton, and fish larvae.
Yongjin Xiao
PhD Student at Virginia Institute for Marine Science, USA
wins a fee-waiver for Marine Ecology Progress Series (or any Inter-Research journal)
for best student presentation at the MEECE Summer School in Ankara
Tosca Ballerini
Post-Doc at Old Dominion University, USA
wins a fee-waiver for Biogeosciences (or any European Geosciences Union journal)
CONGRATULATIONS !!!
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And the WINNERS are ...
winners of the Open Access fee-waivers giveaway are:
Ana Sofia Ferreira
PhD Student at DTU Aqua
wins a fee-waiver for Marine Ecology Progress Series (or any Inter-Research journal)
Yongjin Xiao
PhD Student at Virginia Institute for Marine Science, USA, and
Tosca Ballerini
Post-Doc at Old Dominion University, USA
win each a fee-waiver for Biogeosciences (or any European Geosciences Union journal)
To participate in future Open Access trainings or keep in touch with developments, send an email to oa(at)euro-basin.eu or follow the Twitter stream on open access.
Download the FactSheet
How to measure H-index using Google Scholar: 
1. Quadsearch (i.e. the ‘Science’ search)
2. Scholar H-index Calculator
(add-on for the Mozilla Firefox browser, adds metrics to the standard Google Scholar site, easy to use
but only calculates for the articles on the current page, a maximum of 100)
3. Scholarometer
(add-on for the Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome browsers – appears as a sidebar when installed)
4. Publish or Perish
(application that calculates a wide variety of metrics)
How to measure H-index using Web of Science: 
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