Taylor & Francis Group Open Science Seminars

February 21, 2025
Open access to research results (publications, data sets, and other materials) benefits all participants in the research process: researchers, research and funding organisations, publishers, and the general public, because:

  • dissemination of research results becomes faster and more efficient;
  • the visibility of scientific publications is increased by expanding the audience of readers;
  • increased visibility, in turn, increases the number of downloads and citations of published results;
  • the copyright of published content is retained by the author;
  • with increased transparency and the ability to ensure the quality of research results, science becomes more reliable;
  • increased research efficiency by reducing duplication of studies;
  • access to the most recent global scientific knowledge enables better education, faster scientific development, and implementation of innovations;
  • more efficient allocation of funds invested in the research;
  • the latest scientific discoveries become available to the public, which in turn promotes scientific literacy and civil education.
To learn more we invite you to participate in Taylor & Francis Group online seminars:

Introduction to open research
February 26 | 13:00–
14:30 | Registration»
Lecturers: Matt Cannon, Dr Rebecca Taylor-Grant
Research funders, institutions and publishers are increasingly talking about Open Research. As a broad term which encourages accessibility, transparency and reproducibility of research and supporting information, Open Research includes the practices of sharing data, code, preprints, methods, or working in new ways such as Registered Reports. In this webinar, we will present the core tenets of open research and give relevant examples. There will be time for discussion and Q&A.

 

Building and Maintaining Trust with Open Research
March 5 | 18:00–
19:30 | Registration»
Lecturers: Matt Cannon, Dr Rebecca Taylor-Grant, Dr Coromoto Power Febres,  Dr Allyson Lister, Dr Paul Whaley
Join us for an engaging webinar on Building and Maintaining Trust with Open Research. In an era of rising misinformation, maintaining trust in scholarly literature is more important than ever. This session will show authors how they can increase the trustworthiness of their research in multiple ways, with a special focus on Open Research practices and how these correspond to making scholarly publishing more reliable and responsible. This webinar brings together expert panellists for short individual presentations, followed by a structured discussion around fostering transparency, reliability, and credibility in research. How can researchers build trust through Open Research practices? Does this kind of transparency effectively counter the integrity issues faced by researchers in today’s climate? This webinar is open to researchers and academics from all disciplines who are committed to upholding integrity in their work. The session will be recorded and everyone who registered will be sent the recording of the event.

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New doctoral dissertation
New doctoral dissertation
VILNIUS TECH Library invites you to follow the published new dissertations. The dissertation „Research and application of machine learning methods for migraine attack prediction“ prepared at VILNIUS TECH by Viroslava Kapustynska. The dissertation was prepared in 2021–2026. Scientific consultant – Prof. Dr Šarūnas Paulikas. The dissertation was defended at the public meeting of the Dissertation Defense Council of the Scientific Field of Electrical and Electronic Engineering in the Aula Doctoralis Meeting Hall of Vilnius Gediminas Technical University at 2 p.m. on 9 June 2026. Migraine is a complex neurological disorder characterized by strong inter- and intra-individual variability, which makes early forecasting difficult using only clinical observations. Wearable biosensors combined with machine learning offer new opportunities to detect subtle physiological changes that may precede migraine attacks and to develop individualized prediction models. This dissertation investigates migraine analysis and next-day prediction using physiological recordings collected under real-life monitoring conditions. Data were obtained with the Empatica Embrace Plus wearable device and include electrodermal activity, pulse rate, skin temperature, and movement-related signals. The analysis focuses on nocturnal recordings, since the night period provides a more stable physiological context with fewer external disturbances. Nights were standardized using sleep-based contextual selection and consistent night-level rules. The experimental framework is organized in two stages. In the first stage, a window-level binary classification task is used as an exploratory methodological analysis to examine how design choices influence model performance. Night recordings are segmented into analysis frames ranging from 5 to 120 minutes, statistical features are extracted, and the influence of signal preprocessing and feature representation is evaluated across several classifier families, including Random Forest, XGBoost, histogram-based gradient boosting, support vector machines, and k-nearest neighbors. In the second stage, the research evaluates next-day migraine prediction based on whole-night recordings. This stage refines the experimental methodology to obtain more reliable estimates of predictive performance under a stricter validation framework. The analysis focuses on the effect of temporal aggregation while comparing the same classifier families under consistent evaluation conditions. The results demonstrate considerable variability across participants in achievable prediction performance and optimal modeling configurations. Shorter analysis frames generally preserve informative short-term physiological changes, whereas longer windows tend to smooth these variations. Signal preprocessing shows a window-dependent effect and does not consistently improve performance. Overall, the results highlight the importance of temporal resolution, rigorous validation, and individualized modeling for wearable-based migraine prediction systems. Doctoral dissertation readers can search via VILNIUS TECH Virtual Library.
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Expert Evaluation: VILNIUS TECH’s Progress Exceeded Expectations
VILNIUS TECH has received a highly positive assessment from international experts. In their recently published conclusions, it is noted that since the 2022 institutional evaluation, the university has achieved significant, evidence-based progress across all four evaluation areas: governance, quality assurance, studies and research activities, and impact on regional and national development. In 2022, VILNIUS TECH was granted a seven-year accreditation. At that time, the expert panel provided the university with 19 recommendations for further improvement. The latest progress review concludes that the university responded to these recommendations responsibly, systematically, and constructively, and that the implemented changes have become part of long-term institutional development. „We are pleased that external experts have highly evaluated the progress achieved by VILNIUS TECH across all four assessment areas. It was noted that the university demonstrates a mature quality culture, a strategic vision, and the ability to consistently sustain growth and increase its impact on society. This ensures that we are entering the next institutional evaluation period with a strong position,“ says Nora Skaburskienė, Director of the Studies Directorate. International experts particularly highlighted the consistently strengthened system of strategic management, the quality culture, active collaboration with business and alumni, leadership within the ATHENA European Universities Alliance, the development of new interdisciplinary study programmes, and significant progress in innovation and technology transfer. The rapid expansion of lifelong learning activities was also noted — VILNIUS TECH has broadened its micro-credential offerings, strengthened partnerships with social and business partners, and is creating favourable conditions for knowledge commercialization and startup development. According to the expert panel, the university has already moved beyond the stage of merely responding to recommendations and is now ready to purposefully leverage its accumulated potential to achieve even higher performance results. In summarizing the evaluation, the experts concluded that VILNIUS TECH is entering the next phase of institutional assessment with a solid foundation for continued successful development.
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