« Since 2013, the Open Access Team has been helping Cambridge researchers, funded by Research Councils UK (RCUK) and the consortium of biomedical funders which make up the Charity Open Access Fund (COAF), to meet their Open Access obligations. Both RCUK (now part of UKRI) and COAF have Open Access policies…
« Does your work involve supporting researchers who are interested in Text and Data Mining (TDM)? Do you have an interest in the topic, but no coding or computer skills? Then this course may be interesting to you: OpenMinTeD and the University of Cambridge developed a
« Le physicien Stephen Hawking a décidé de rendre sa thèse accessible à tous, en donnant son accord pour l’intégrer dans la bibliothèque numérique de l’Université de Cambridge. Plus de 50 ans après sa publication, le document traitant de l’expansion de l’univers est consultable gratuitement. (…) »
« We at ContentMine are a non-profit NGO from Cambridge UK, who are practitioners on the forefront of text data mining – the free and open way. Here we summarize our insights and how you can to TDM in practice. (…) »
« Sometimes the best way to find a solution is to just get the different stakeholders talking to each other – and this what happened at a recent Text and Data Mining symposium held in the Engineering Department at Cambridge.
The attendees were primarily postgraduate students and early career researchers,…
« Today is the deadline for those universities in receipt of an RCUK grant to submit their reports on the spend. We have just submitted the Cambridge University 2015-2016 report to the RCUK and have also made it available as a dataset in our repository.
Compliance
…« Last year, ethnographic research into the experience and behaviour of students at Cambridge University led the Futurelib Programme to pilot a new web-based service to assist in the location of study spaces: Spacefinder.
The pilot service, which has now been running for…
« New mobile app helps a Cambridge press offer free digital monographs even to those without computers (…)
In the summer of 2010, Amartya Sen, the Nobel prizewinning Indian economist, wanted to publish a book he had edited that explores why ethnic or religious violence erupts –…