探花视频

News in brief - 4 April 2013

Published on
April 4, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Research facilities
See and share

to allow equipment and facilities to be shared across the sector has been launched. Led by the University of Southampton and funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, the database is designed to allow institutions to contribute to and access data from a selection of UK universities. Launched on 20 March, it is designed to provide a national 鈥渟hop window鈥 for research equipment, supporting the need for greater accessibility and efficiency in the sector in light of funding restrictions on equipment introduced by Research Councils UK in 2011. The service builds on regional portals established by university consortia N8, M5 and GW4, and is part of the initiative.

Anglo-Indian collaboration
Attack of the cybercriminals

Research Councils UK and India鈥檚 Department of Science and Technology brought together researchers from both countries for a four-day workshop in New Delhi on cybersecurity. The event, which ran from 24 to March, discussed a range of topics including the potential consequences of cybercrime and the implications of privacy and security breaches in social media. Helen Bailey, deputy director of RCUK India, said: 鈥淲e need a clearer understanding of our current and future vulnerabilities and the inadequacies of current approaches, along with innovative solutions to tackle the important challenges.鈥 The workshop forms part of a growing research relationship between the UK and India, with the value of co- funded projects increasing from just under 拢1 million in 2008 to more than 拢100 million today.

Open access
1994 Group: extend the embargo

Research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Economic and Social Research Council should not be made freely available on institutional open-access repositories until three years after publication, according to the 1994 Group. The mission group for small research-intensive universities made the recommendation in its submission to the Higher Education Funding Council for England鈥檚 consultation on open access. Research Councils UK鈥檚 open-access policy, which came into force on 1 April, requires ESRC- and AHRC-funded research to be made available after 12 months if researchers choose the 鈥済reen鈥 repository-based route. The submission adds that funders鈥 鈥渦nquestioning鈥 preference for the journal-provided 鈥済old鈥 model 鈥渓eaves institutions to bear all the costs of publication while publishers, frequently commercial鈥rofit from publicly funded research鈥.

Institutional review
BPP moves fast to please QAA

For-profit-owned BPP University College has passed all parts of its institutional review by the Quality Assurance Agency after correcting potentially misleading information in its literature. The changes were made after the watchdog said that 鈥渋nformation about learning opportunities鈥equires improvement to meet UK expectations鈥. Some information contained on the college鈥檚 website and in its printed literature was a source of 鈥減otential confusion鈥 because of its 鈥渓ack of clarity鈥, said the college鈥檚 first institutional review, published on 11 February. 鈥淲e reacted quickly to the original report鈥nd a month later we鈥檙e fully compliant with the QAA鈥檚 rigorous requirements,鈥 said Carl Lygo, BPP鈥檚 principal.

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