Welcome, please introduce yourself!

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Create a personal profile in our course group page:

Introduce yourself to your peers and tell us something about yourself. During this course you will be asked to come back and edit your profile and add more information in small practical assignments.

This is how it works:
  1. Add a new entry to this course group page to create a profile. Type your name in the 'concept' field.
  2. Add some information about yourself in the description field. Let us know who  you are, what you like and what brought you here!
  3. If you like you can add a profile picture or a short videoclip.
  4. And don't forget to tell us what open science animal you are!
  5. If you want, you can add comments to your peers' profiles. Or say 'hello!'

Let's create a word cloud together!

Tell us your discipline and see how many different disciplines are represented in this course!





Browse the glossary using this index

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | ALL

J

Jennie Leggat

Hi, my name is Jennie and I am a Cardiovascular Research PhD student at the University of Cambridge. I'm interested in open science because I believe that our research should be making a real impact on society, and the public deserves to be involved in that. My open science animal is a meerkat.

My ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1040-6827

Jessie Davis

Hi all, I am currently in my final year of my PhD in Pharmacology in University College Dublin. My project has focused on generating kidney organoids to study epigenetic processes in diabetic kidney disease. I first learned about open science/data during my masters course where one of my lecturers was a huge advocator of open science within the microscopy field. I am taking this course to learn how I can apply those ideals to my own work. 


My open science animal is the meerkat.


https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1548-6114

J Martinez-Gonzalez

I am a Postdoctoral Researcher in Physical-Chemistry trying to understand how water dances in contact with (bio)materials.

And also, I am an 

Open Science Meerkat


https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5262-6732

Joanne Bakker

Hi all,

I am a bit late to the party, but better late than never!

I am usually working in the lab as a PhD student in Neuroscience, but currently I am pursuing a short internship at an organization aiming to help bridge the gap between science and the public (V&A, in Stockholm).

I am looking forward to learn more about open science and implement my findings when I am back at my lab bench.

Cheers, 

Joanne (aka open science mole) https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5434-8262



Jonathan O'Keeffe Ahern

Hello everyone,

I'm Jonathan O'Keeffe Ahern from Dublin, Ireland. I've just completed a PhD in Medicine focussed in gene therapy for rare skin diseases. I've just started as a Postdoctoral Researcher at UCD in the same area. I'm very much interested in building communication with patient stakeholders to bring about public and patient engagement with research. 

According to the test, I am a Meerkat!



Jose Hermes Lopez

I am a professor from a Venezuelan university. I like bioinformatics as a way to connect biology/medicine fields with computer science. I am here to learn how to openly share my work with the world. I am a teamplayer. :-).

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1973-308X

José R. Díaz

Hey there! I work at the National Institute of Health Carlos III (Spain), at the international projects office. My centre is part of the ORION network, and that's how I arrived here.

Part of the job is to promote collaborations between different stakeholders; and through the Open Science philosophy, we'd have better chances of engaging the people into a project.

Ah, and my Open Science animal is the Squirrel : )