Skip to Main Content

Scholarly Communication

Scholarly Communication at NUS Libraries

The Scholarly Communication team at NUS Libraries is committed to partner and support NUS faculties and researchers in their scholarly communication endeavours. We support research and publishing practices across disciplines, ranging from research data management, publishing, open access and the deposit of scholarly outputs in ScholarBank@NUS, to research impact measurement.

This guide provides information on the following topics:

  • Academic Publishing
  • Open Access
  • Research Data Management
  • Copyright
  • Research Impact Measurement

Use the side navigation bar to navigate to any of the topics to learn more!

Singapore Open Research Conference 2024 and Open Research Awards 2024

The Singapore Open Research Awards 2024 aims to recognise and reward Singapore researchers who have used open research to make their scientific contents, tools, and processes open, accessible, transparent and reproducible, or integrated it in their practice.

Click here to cast your nomination - nominations close on 8 September 2024


Look out for the upcoming Singapore Open Research Conference 2024 on 11 and 12 November 2024. Find out more details here: https://libguides.ntu.edu.sg/SGORconference2024 

Catch our latest Researcher Unbound Session


Catch our Researcher Unbound session from 18 Oct 2023 where we had an insightful conversation with Prof Kan Min-Yen (NUS Computing) on his data sharing journey and the benefits of doing good Research Data Management!

 

Some RDM insights shared by Prof Kan:

[16:34] “When you share data... and you (describe) your data well, then it becomes much more discoverable for others… And that discovery is key if you want to promote impact.”

[16:03] “When we are not very experienced with data sharing, there's a little bit of an adoption curve that you have to surmount… so you have to prepare the metadata, and once your research group… gets sort of accustomed to it, (it’s) just sort of like filling out institutional review forms… which is absolutely necessary for a lot of research.”

[17:30] “When you're thinking about sharing your data, you really have to think about who is going to use it… and then try to visualise what types of tags or metadata would I be searching for… and then insert them into (a) system like ScholarBank, so that when a search engine like Google or another search engine is able to find that information, it can be reported (and retrieved).”

[34:11] “For people and groups that are not doing data sharing, it requires a little bit of forward thinking and to say, you know, is it possible that by sharing data, my group is going to create more impact overall... because the way we create impact is not (just) to create work, it's to create work that's being used by others.”