U bent hier: Home > Events > Webinar - Project FREYA: How persistent identifiers can connect research together

Webinar - Project FREYA: How persistent identifiers can connect research together

This webinar will showcase the latest developments from the EC-funded FREYA project, including the PID Graph which provides a method to discover the relationships between different researchers and their organisations and find out the full impact of research outputs. It will also describe upcoming developments planned in the final year of the project such as a Common DOI Search
  • Webinar - Project FREYA: How persistent identifiers can connect research together
  • 2020-05-28T15:30:00+02:00
  • 2020-05-29T16:30:00+02:00
  • This webinar will showcase the latest developments from the EC-funded FREYA project, including the PID Graph which provides a method to discover the relationships between different researchers and their organisations and find out the full impact of research outputs. It will also describe upcoming developments planned in the final year of the project such as a Common DOI Search
When
May 28, 2020 03:30 PM to May 29, 2020 04:30 PM (Europe/Amsterdam / UTC200)
Where
online
Web
Visit external website
Add event to calendar
iCal

This webinar will showcase the latest developments from the EC-funded FREYA project, including the PID Graph which provides a method to discover the relationships between different researchers and their organisations and find out the full impact of research outputs. It will also describe upcoming developments planned in the final year of the project such as a Common DOI Search. The webinar is expected to last approximately 25 minutes, with some time for questions at the end.

This webinar is presented by Frances Madden. Frances is Research Identifiers Lead at The British Library, overseeing the Library's contribution to the FREYA project, Connected Open Identifiers for Discovery, Access and Use of Research Resources.

More info and registration here. Please note, the webinar starts at 15:30 CEST.
Navigation