2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
What role can publishers play in the open data ecosystem?Varsha Khodiyar
Presentation at session 3 of the NIH workshop 'Role of Generalist Repositories to Enhance Data Discoverability and Reuse' on Feb 11th, at the NIH Main Campus.
Keynote presentation at 2020 NIH/NLM workshop on generalist repositories. Central themes include software as a richer pathway to data than articles, the development of new metrics for software (such as the CHAOSS framework), working with the technology companies through organizations like the Eclipse Foundation, and the importance of linked data. In particular, the concept of the "value line" as a means to map generalist repositories represents an important opportunity.
An update on the latest BioSharing work; including work with ELIXIR and NIH BD2K, also our survey to assess user needs (530 replies) and the work on the recommender tool
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
What role can publishers play in the open data ecosystem?Varsha Khodiyar
Presentation at session 3 of the NIH workshop 'Role of Generalist Repositories to Enhance Data Discoverability and Reuse' on Feb 11th, at the NIH Main Campus.
Keynote presentation at 2020 NIH/NLM workshop on generalist repositories. Central themes include software as a richer pathway to data than articles, the development of new metrics for software (such as the CHAOSS framework), working with the technology companies through organizations like the Eclipse Foundation, and the importance of linked data. In particular, the concept of the "value line" as a means to map generalist repositories represents an important opportunity.
An update on the latest BioSharing work; including work with ELIXIR and NIH BD2K, also our survey to assess user needs (530 replies) and the work on the recommender tool
Data Publishing and Institutional RepositoriesVarsha Khodiyar
Slides presented at the Force16 panel discussion on 18th April 2016 "Libraries united in opening new scholarly platforms" https://www.force11.org/meetings/force2016/program/agenda/concurrent-session-libraries-united-opening-new-scholarly
Presentation by Sally Rumsey, The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford at Science and Engineering South (SES) Event - Helping Researchers Manage their Data - Friday 9th May 2014 held at Imperial College London
re3data.org presented at 3rd RDA Plenary Paul Vierkant
This five minute talk was given in the Birds of Feather Session on Global Registry of Trusted Repositories and Services at the 3rd Plenary of the Research Data Alliance in Dublin
This is module 11 in the EDI Data Publishing training course. In this module, you will learn the procedure to upload a data package to the EDI Repository.
Scholarly citations from one publication to another, expressed as reference lists within academic articles, are core elements of scholarly communication. Unfortunately, they usually can be accessed en masse only by paying significant subscription fees to commercial organizations, while those few services that do made them available for free impose strict limitations on their reuse. In this paper we provide an overview of the OpenCitations Project (http://opencitations.net) undertaken to remedy this situation, and of its main product, the OpenCitations Corpus, which is an open repository of accurate bibliographic citation data harvested from the scholarly literature, made available in RDF under a Creative Commons public domain dedication.
Paper at: https://w3id.org/oc/paper/occ-lisc2016.html
Data Management in the context of Open Science.
Because open access become mandatory for publications and project-funded research data, it is the responsibility of each researcher to be informed and then trained in new practices.
Data Publishing and Institutional RepositoriesVarsha Khodiyar
Slides presented at the Force16 panel discussion on 18th April 2016 "Libraries united in opening new scholarly platforms" https://www.force11.org/meetings/force2016/program/agenda/concurrent-session-libraries-united-opening-new-scholarly
Presentation by Sally Rumsey, The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford at Science and Engineering South (SES) Event - Helping Researchers Manage their Data - Friday 9th May 2014 held at Imperial College London
re3data.org presented at 3rd RDA Plenary Paul Vierkant
This five minute talk was given in the Birds of Feather Session on Global Registry of Trusted Repositories and Services at the 3rd Plenary of the Research Data Alliance in Dublin
This is module 11 in the EDI Data Publishing training course. In this module, you will learn the procedure to upload a data package to the EDI Repository.
Scholarly citations from one publication to another, expressed as reference lists within academic articles, are core elements of scholarly communication. Unfortunately, they usually can be accessed en masse only by paying significant subscription fees to commercial organizations, while those few services that do made them available for free impose strict limitations on their reuse. In this paper we provide an overview of the OpenCitations Project (http://opencitations.net) undertaken to remedy this situation, and of its main product, the OpenCitations Corpus, which is an open repository of accurate bibliographic citation data harvested from the scholarly literature, made available in RDF under a Creative Commons public domain dedication.
Paper at: https://w3id.org/oc/paper/occ-lisc2016.html
Data Management in the context of Open Science.
Because open access become mandatory for publications and project-funded research data, it is the responsibility of each researcher to be informed and then trained in new practices.
Today libraries face more and new challenges when enabling access to information. The growing amount of information in combination with new non-textual media-types demands a constant changing of grown workflows and standard definitions. Knowledge, as published through scientific literature, is the last step in a process originating from primary scientific data. These data are analysed, synthesised, interpreted, and the outcome of this process is published as a scientific article. Access to the original data as the foundation of knowledge has become an important issue throughout the world and different projects have started to find solutions.
Nevertheless science itself is international; scientists are involved in global unions and projects, they share their scientific information with colleagues all over the world, they use national as well as foreign information providers.
When facing the challenge of increasing access to research data, a possible approach should be global cooperation for data access via national representatives:
* a global cooperation, because scientists work globally, scientific data are created and accessed globally.
* with national representatives, because most scientists are embedded in their national funding structures and research organisations.
DataCite was officially launched on December 1st 2009 in London and has 12 information institutions and libraries from nine countries as members. By assigning DOI names to data sets, data becomes citable and can easily be linked to from scientific publications.
Data integration with text is an important aspect of scientific collaboration. DataCite takes global leadership for promoting the use of persistent identifiers for datasets, to satisfy the needs of scientists. Through its members, it establishs and promotes common methods, best practices, and guidance. The member organisations work independently with data centres and other holders of research data sets in their own domains. Based on the work of the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB) as the first DOI-Registration Agency for data, DataCite has registered over 850,000 research objects with DOI names, thus starting to bridge the gap between data centers, publishers and libraries.
This presentation will introduce the work of DataCite and give examples how scientific data can be included in library catalogues and linked to from scholarly publications.
This presentation sets out some of the challenges around citing and identifying datasets and introduces DataCite, the international data citation initiative. DataCite was founded on 1-December 2009 to support researchers by
providing methods for them to locate, identify, and cite
research datasets with confidence.
This presentation was given by Adam Farquhar at the STM Publishers Association Innovation Conference on 4-Dec-2009.
This presentation sets out some of the challenges around citing and identifying datasets and introduces DataCite, the international data citation initiative. DataCite was founded on 1-December 2009 to support researchers by
providing methods for them to locate, identify, and cite
research datasets with confidence.
This presentation was given by Adam Farquhar at the STM Publishers Association Innovation Conference on 4-Dec-2009.
I gave this presentation to the STM Publishers Association Innovation Conference in London, 4-December-2009. It frames the data citation problem and introduces DataCite - the international data citation initiative.
This presentation sets out some of the challenges around citing and identifying datasets and introduces DataCite, the international data citation initiative. DataCite was founded on 1-December 2009 to support researchers by
providing methods for them to locate, identify, and cite
research datasets with confidence.
This presentation was given by Adam Farquhar at the STM Publishers Association Innovation Conference on 4-Dec-2009.
ODIN Final Event - The Care and Feeding of Scientific Datadatacite
Mercè Crosas @mercecrosas
Director of Data Science, IQSS, Harvard University
Presentation delivered at the ODIN Final Event in Amsterdam (Netherlands) on Wednesday, September 24, 2014: ORCID and DataCite: Towards Holistic Open Research.
More info: www.odin-project.eu
DataCite – Bridging the gap and helping to find, access and reuse data – Herb...OpenAIRE
OpenAIRE Interoperability Workshop (8 Feb. 2013).
DataCite – Bridging the gap and helping to find, access and reuse data – Herbert Gruttemeier, INIST-CNRS
British Library Datasets Programme
John Kaye - Lead Content Specialist datasets, British Library spoke on the British Library's Datasets programme and the DataCite project
ODIN Final Event - Publishing and citing, and the role of persistent identifiersdatacite
Sünje Dallmeier-Tiessen
CERN
Presentation delivered at the ODIN Final Event in Amsterdam (Netherlands) on Wednesday, September 24, 2014: ORCID and DataCite: Towards Holistic Open Research.
More info: www.odin-project.eu
ODIN Final Event - Submission to datacentresdatacite
Sergio Ruiz
DataCite
Presentation delivered at the ODIN Final Event in Amsterdam (Netherlands) on Wednesday, September 24, 2014: ORCID and DataCite: Towards Holistic Open Research.
More info: www.odin-project.eu
ODIN Final Event - Supporting the research lifecycle: Discovery and Analysisdatacite
Rachael Kotarski
The British Library
Presentation delivered at the ODIN Final Event in Amsterdam (Netherlands) on Wednesday, September 24, 2014: ORCID and DataCite: Towards Holistic Open Research.
More info: www.odin-project.eu
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Thomson Reuters Data citation index cooperatio...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Closing Keynote: Building Community Engagement...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Elsevier's program to support research data (H...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Out of Cite, Out of Mind: Report of the CODATA...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Update on Force 11 and the Amsterdam manifesto...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Purdue University Research Repository (PURR) (...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - DOIs and Supercomputing (Terry Jones - Oak Rid...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - California Digital Library (Joan Starr - Calif...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Opening Keynote: A short history of the Higgs ...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
2. Digital Object Identifiers (DOI
names) offer a solution
Mostly widely used identifier for
scientific articles
Researchers, authors, publishers
know how to use them
Put datasets on the same playing
field as articles
Dataset
Yancheva et al (2007). Analyses
on sediment of Lake Maar.
PANGAEA.
doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.587840
URLs are not persistent
(e.g. Wren JD: URL decay in
MEDLINE- a 4-year follow-up
study. Bioinformatics. 2008, Jun
1;24(11):1381-5).
DOI names for citations
3. 1. Technische Informationsbibliothek (TIB)
2. Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information (CISTI),
3. California Digital Library, USA
4. Purdue University, USA
5. Office of Scientific and Technical
Information (OSTI), USA
6. Library of TU Delft,
The Netherlands
7. Technical Information
Center of Denmark
8. The British Library
9. ZB Med, Germany
10. ZBW, Germany
11. Gesis, Germany
12. Library of ETH Zürich
13. L’Institut de l’Information Scientifique
et Technique (INIST), France
14. Swedish National Data Service (SND)
15. Australian National Data Service (ANDS)
16. Conferenza dei Rettori delle Università Italiane (CRUI)
17. National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT)
18. The Hungarian Academy of Sciences
19. University of Tartu, Estonia
20. Japan Link Center (JaLC)
21. South African Environmental Observation Network (SAEON)
22. European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN)
DataCite members
Affiliated members:
1. Digital Curation Center (UK)
2. Microsoft Research
3. Interuniversity Consortium for
Political and Social Research (ICPS
1. Korea Institute of Science and
Technology Information (KISTI)
5. Bejiing Genomic Institute (BGI)
6. IEEE
7. Harvard University Library
8. World Data System (WDS)
9. GWDG
5. Over 3,200,000 DOI names registered so far.
290 data centers.
8,000,000 resolutions in 2013.
DataCite Metadata schema published (in cooperation with
all members) http://schema.datacite.org
DataCite MetadataStore
http://search.datacite.org
DataCite in 2014
6. OAI and Statistics
OAI Harvester
http://oai.datacite.org
DataCite statistics (resolution and registration)
http://stats.datacite.org
7. ODIN project
ORCID and DataCite interoperability
network. Funded under FP7
http://www.odin-project.eu
Claim your DataCite DOI with your ORCID
profile:
http://datacite.labs.orcid-eu.org/
8. 2012: STM, CrossRef and DataCite Joint
Statement
1. To improve the availability and findability of research data,
the signers encourage authors of research papers to
deposit researcher validated data in trustworthy
and reliable Data Archives.
2. The Signers encourage Data Archives to enable bi-
directional linking between datasets and
publications by using established and community endorsed
unique persistent identifiers such as database accession
codes and DOI's.
3. The Signers encourage publishers and data archives to make
visible or increase visibility of these links from
publications to datasets and vice versa
8
9. Example
The dataset:
Storz, D et al. (2009):
Planktic foraminiferal flux and faunal composition of sediment trap
L1_K276 in the northeastern Atlantic.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.724325
Is supplement to the article:
Storz, David; Schulz, Hartmut; Waniek, Joanna J; Schulz-Bull, Detlef;
Kucera, Michal (2009): Seasonal and interannual variability of the
planktic foraminiferal flux in the vicinity of the Azores Current.
Deep-Sea Research Part I-Oceanographic Research Papers, 56(1),
107-124,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2008.08.009
10. Cooperation
MoU with ORCID
Agreement with Re3Data and DataBib to
include their service in 2016
MoU with RDA to become organisational
affiliate
Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles
https://www.force11.org/datacitation
The approach that DataCite is taking – using DOIs - has some important social benefits.
Researchers, authors, publishers are comfortable, understand, and know how to use them.
They put datasets on a level playing field with articles.