CRIS 2012 - 11th International Conference on Current Research Information Systems (CRIS 2012)
Topics/Call fo Papers
A Current Research Information System, commonly known as “CRIS”, is any informational tool dedicated to provide access to and disseminate research information. A CRIS consists of a data model describing objects of interest to R&D and a tool or set of tools to manage the data.
A CRIS aims at assisting the users in their recording, reporting and decision-making concerning the research process, whether they are developing programmes, allocating funding, assessing projects, executing projects, generating results, assessing results or transferring technology.
At institutional level it is a tool for policy making, evaluation of research based on outputs, documenting research activities and output and assistance in project planning and constitutes a formal log of research in progress. For the individual end users a CRIS is essential to evaluate opportunities for research funding, avoid duplication of research activity, analyse trends, have references/links to full text or multimedia scholarly publications, locate new contacts/networks and identify new markets for products of research. Typical forms of output are researcher CV, management information, reports to funders, research bibliography and commercial output reports.
A CRIS aims at assisting the users in their recording, reporting and decision-making concerning the research process, whether they are developing programmes, allocating funding, assessing projects, executing projects, generating results, assessing results or transferring technology.
At institutional level it is a tool for policy making, evaluation of research based on outputs, documenting research activities and output and assistance in project planning and constitutes a formal log of research in progress. For the individual end users a CRIS is essential to evaluate opportunities for research funding, avoid duplication of research activity, analyse trends, have references/links to full text or multimedia scholarly publications, locate new contacts/networks and identify new markets for products of research. Typical forms of output are researcher CV, management information, reports to funders, research bibliography and commercial output reports.
Other CFPs
Last modified: 2011-11-15 20:37:58