Ireland’s five TUs aspire to make publicly funded research accessible and reproducible

Pictured, l-r, Liam Brown Vice-President for Research, Development & Innovation, Professor Vincent Cunnane TUS President, Professor Orla Flynn ATU President, Professor David FitzPatrick, TU Dublin President, Professor Veronica Campbell SETU President, Professor Hugh McGlynn MTU Project Director, Professor Philip Nolan Director General SFI.

Pictured, l-r, Liam Brown Vice-President for Research, Development & Innovation, Professor Vincent Cunnane TUS President, Professor Orla Flynn ATU President, Professor David FitzPatrick, TU Dublin President, Professor Veronica Campbell SETU President, Professor Hugh McGlynn MTU Project Director, Professor Philip Nolan Director General SFI.

Ireland’s five technological universities (TUs ) have launched a joint initiative aiming to advance excellence in Open Research, making it reproducible and accessible without additional cost to the public.

TU-NET, launched by Professor Philip Nolan, Director General of Science Foundation Ireland, at the TUS Athlone Campus, goes towards meeting national targets of 100% of taxpayer funded research to be made available to the public by 2030.

Much of the publicly funded research is currently inaccessible to the public without an individual or institutional paid access. TU-NET, an initiative by TU Dublin, TUS, MTU, SETU and ATU’s research offices and libraries, aims to change this while also advancing excellence in Open Research.

The TU-NET initiative will increase visibility and discoverability of the diverse, applied and near-to-market research typically undertaken in TUs, as well as make it easier for other researchers nationally and globally to access and engage with their research outputs.

As much as 75% of the research outputs of the TU sector are applied, like software and datasets, which are not published through traditional channels but have a significant research impact. A first-of-its-kind joint statement signed today by all five TU presidents demonstrates a shared commitment to meeting ambitious TU and national targets for research.

Speaking at the launch of TU-NET, Prof Nolan, who is also CEO-designate of a new national research and innovation agency yet to be formally announced, stated that Ireland has demonstrated its commitment to Open Research and Open Science through its support of the National Open Research Forum.

“Initiatives such as TU-NET demonstrate how the technological universities are progressing their own transition to an Open Research environment and are identifying the skills and infrastructure to operate in this landscape,” Prof Nolan commented.

Welcoming the launch of TU-NET, TUS President Prof Vincent Cunnane noted that the initiative marked another significant step forward for the new technological university sector in Ireland which is now united by a common vision to embrace the opportunities of Open Research.

“The technological university sector embodies the diversity of research activities and outputs that are critical to engaging students, industry and the public in new knowledge for the benefit of all. I’m delighted that our shared statement on Open Research also echoes a sector-wide dedication to the transformative power of education, research and innovation,” Prof Cunnane added.

The TU-NET group has an ambitious agenda and is seeking funding to support Ireland’s five TUs in developing further Open Research capacity through shared training initiatives, resources and infrastructure.

Under new EU rules on publicly funded research, researchers must publish, not only their research output, but also the data underpinning it to make it easily reproducible, the gold standard of academic publishing.

With this in mind, in 2024, TU-NET will begin the implementation of a new data management planning solution as a national case study for the Horizon Europe OSTrails project, to house this data.

 

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