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1 Introduction
Pages 1-4

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From page 1...
... The roundtable convenes critical stakeholders to discuss the effectiveness of current incentives for adopting open science practices, current barriers of all types, and ways to move forward in order to align reward structures and institutional values. The roundtable convenes two times per year and creates a venue for the exchange of ideas and joint strategic planning among key stakeholders including universities, funding 1
From page 2...
... An important focus of the roundtable's work to date has been defining resources that can help key stakeholders discuss, develop, and deploy open science incentivization plans that are both consistent with common norms and appropriate for their specific communities. Given the points of leverage that these stakeholders manage (e.g., hiring, review, tenure and promotion, and funding)
From page 3...
... As background for the discussion, several toolkit elements developed by expert authors were circulated in advance of the workshop to stimulate discussion among the community about how such a toolkit might be used, what additional materials are needed, and how such a toolkit should be disseminated for broad adoption. The toolkit is primarily intended to assist university leadership, academic department chairs, research funders, learned societies, and government agencies; revised toolkit elements are included in Appendix C
From page 4...
... Woodruff Library of the Atlanta University Center, offered introductory and welcome remarks to participants, adding that the goal of the workshop is to advance the movement to make open science the norm. Thomas Kalil, co-chair of the Roundtable on Aligning Incentives for Open Science and chief innovation officer of Schmidt Futures, discussed the goal of the breakout sessions, which is to build a coalition of stakeholders engaged and invested in creating powerful incentives for open science.


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