On November 21st 2014 at the Tufts University Medford campus and November 25th 2014 at the campus of the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, the BLC and Digital Science hosted a workshop focused on better understanding the research information management landscape.
Mark Hahnel, CEO of Figshare discussed more specific aspects of the research data management landscape and various approaches to address the growing suite of mandates.
Funding agencies are instituting requirements for data management and sharing as a condition of receiving research funds. This presentation addresses why researchers should care about research data management, what libraries have to do with it, and a case study of what one research specialist at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus is doing in this area.
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
On November 21st 2014 at the Tufts University Medford campus and November 25th 2014 at the campus of the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, the BLC and Digital Science hosted a workshop focused on better understanding the research information management landscape.
Mark Hahnel, CEO of Figshare discussed more specific aspects of the research data management landscape and various approaches to address the growing suite of mandates.
Funding agencies are instituting requirements for data management and sharing as a condition of receiving research funds. This presentation addresses why researchers should care about research data management, what libraries have to do with it, and a case study of what one research specialist at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus is doing in this area.
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
A presentation offering an introduction to managing and sharing research data given at the Czech Open Science days as part of the EC-funded FOSTER project.
Presentation given by Sarah Jones and Joy Davidson to a group of South African librarians at a webinar organised by LIASA HELIG. http://www.liasa.org.za/node/977
Presentation given at the European Research Council workshop on research data management and sharing in Brussels on 18th-19th September 2014. The presentation covers the benefits and drivers for RDM, points to relevant tools and resources and closes with some open questions for discussion.
An introduction to Research Data Management and Data Management Planning for research managers and administrators. The presentation was given at the Open University on 18th July 2013.
Poster RDAP13: A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Cas...ASIS&T
Betsy Gunia, David Fearon, Benjamin Brosius, Tim DiLauro
JHU Data Management Services
Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries
A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Case Study for Archiving Publication Data
Research Data Access & Preservation Summit 2013
Baltimore, MD April 4, 2013 #rdap13
This presentation was provided by Dr. Christine Borgman of UCLA during the NISO Symposium, Privacy Implications of Research Data, held on September 11, 2016, as part of the International Data Week event in Denver, Colorado.
Data sharing promotes many goals of the NIH research endeavor. It is particularly important for unique data that cannot be readily replicated. Data sharing allows scientists to expedite the translation of research results into knowledge, products, and procedures to improve human health. Do you know what a data sharing plan should include? Are you aware of common practices and standards for data sharing? Do you know what services are available to help share your data responsibly? This workshop will begin to address these questions. Q&A will follow the presentation. Anyone interested in or planning to apply for NIH funding should attend. Note: The NIH data-sharing policy applies to applicants seeking $500,000 or more in direct costs in any year of the proposed research.
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.
This slide deck provides an overview and resources to respond to the OSTP memo with the subject: Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research issued by John P. Holdren in February 2013. It provides resources and information agencies, foundations, and research projects can use to assemble achieve public access to scientific data in digital formats.
RDAP 16: DMPs and Public Access: An NIH Perspective (Panel 5, DMPs and Public...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Part of Panel 5, "DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service Experiences"
Presenter:
Lisa Federer, National Institutes of Health
Panel Lead:
Margaret Henderson, Virginia Commonwealth University
Compliance: Data Management Plans and Public Access to DataMargaret Henderson
Presented at The 8th Annual University of Massachusetts and New England Area Librarian e-Science Symposium, Wednesday, April 6, 2016
University of Massachusetts Medical School
RDAP 16: Perspective on DMPs, Funders and Public Access (Panel 5: DMPs and Pu...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Part of Panel 5, "DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service Experiences"
Presenter:
Jonathan Petters, Johns Hopkins University
Panel Lead:
Margaret Henderson, Virginia Commonwealth University
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.
BBC Dynamic Semantic Publishing.
Transformational technology strategy the BBC Future Media & Technology department is using to evolve from a relational content model and static publishing framework to a fully dynamic semantic publishing (DSP) architecture. Supporting BBC World Cup 2010, BBC Sport and BBC Olympics 2012 online.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldcup/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/2012/
A-Frame is a WebVR framework for developers to make their VR content rapidly. It is based on Entity-Component system. So, it could bring us flexibility and usability for developing.
A presentation offering an introduction to managing and sharing research data given at the Czech Open Science days as part of the EC-funded FOSTER project.
Presentation given by Sarah Jones and Joy Davidson to a group of South African librarians at a webinar organised by LIASA HELIG. http://www.liasa.org.za/node/977
Presentation given at the European Research Council workshop on research data management and sharing in Brussels on 18th-19th September 2014. The presentation covers the benefits and drivers for RDM, points to relevant tools and resources and closes with some open questions for discussion.
An introduction to Research Data Management and Data Management Planning for research managers and administrators. The presentation was given at the Open University on 18th July 2013.
Poster RDAP13: A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Cas...ASIS&T
Betsy Gunia, David Fearon, Benjamin Brosius, Tim DiLauro
JHU Data Management Services
Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries
A Workflow for Depositing to a Research Data Repository: A Case Study for Archiving Publication Data
Research Data Access & Preservation Summit 2013
Baltimore, MD April 4, 2013 #rdap13
This presentation was provided by Dr. Christine Borgman of UCLA during the NISO Symposium, Privacy Implications of Research Data, held on September 11, 2016, as part of the International Data Week event in Denver, Colorado.
Data sharing promotes many goals of the NIH research endeavor. It is particularly important for unique data that cannot be readily replicated. Data sharing allows scientists to expedite the translation of research results into knowledge, products, and procedures to improve human health. Do you know what a data sharing plan should include? Are you aware of common practices and standards for data sharing? Do you know what services are available to help share your data responsibly? This workshop will begin to address these questions. Q&A will follow the presentation. Anyone interested in or planning to apply for NIH funding should attend. Note: The NIH data-sharing policy applies to applicants seeking $500,000 or more in direct costs in any year of the proposed research.
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.
This slide deck provides an overview and resources to respond to the OSTP memo with the subject: Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research issued by John P. Holdren in February 2013. It provides resources and information agencies, foundations, and research projects can use to assemble achieve public access to scientific data in digital formats.
RDAP 16: DMPs and Public Access: An NIH Perspective (Panel 5, DMPs and Public...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Part of Panel 5, "DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service Experiences"
Presenter:
Lisa Federer, National Institutes of Health
Panel Lead:
Margaret Henderson, Virginia Commonwealth University
Compliance: Data Management Plans and Public Access to DataMargaret Henderson
Presented at The 8th Annual University of Massachusetts and New England Area Librarian e-Science Symposium, Wednesday, April 6, 2016
University of Massachusetts Medical School
RDAP 16: Perspective on DMPs, Funders and Public Access (Panel 5: DMPs and Pu...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2016
Atlanta, GA
May 4-7, 2016
Part of Panel 5, "DMPs and Public Access: Agency and Data Service Experiences"
Presenter:
Jonathan Petters, Johns Hopkins University
Panel Lead:
Margaret Henderson, Virginia Commonwealth University
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.
BBC Dynamic Semantic Publishing.
Transformational technology strategy the BBC Future Media & Technology department is using to evolve from a relational content model and static publishing framework to a fully dynamic semantic publishing (DSP) architecture. Supporting BBC World Cup 2010, BBC Sport and BBC Olympics 2012 online.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldcup/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/2012/
A-Frame is a WebVR framework for developers to make their VR content rapidly. It is based on Entity-Component system. So, it could bring us flexibility and usability for developing.
As service providers and primary code contributors in the Islandora Community, discoverygarden encounters customers who are ingesting, accessing, and storing high volumes of data. For example, a customer who had 150,000 objects in 2012 now has three million objects and expectations to grow to five million in the very short term. This is increasingly common.
As repositories grow in size they can encounter poor performance, particularly during large ingests and derivative generation. To accommodate growing repositories caching mechanisms, infrastructure changes, and code updates are necessary.
The presentation will explore customer case studies that demonstrate interim solutions and the extensive, ongoing research and development to find long-term solutions.
Imperial College London - journey to open scholarshipTorsten Reimer
Talk given at the 2016 Open Repositories conference in Dublin, Ireland. This paper follows the journey of a research intensive university towards making its outputs available openly, discusses approaches outlined above and identifies problems in the global scholarly communications landscape.
ePADD and Access -- Society of American Archivists (SAA) Annual Meeting, 2015Josh Schneider
Presentation delivered at the Society of American Archivists (SAA) Annual Meeting, 2015, in a session titled "Out of the Frying Pan and into the Reading Room: Approaches to Serving Electronic Records."
ePADD is a software package developed by Stanford University's Special Collections & University Archives that supports archival processes around the appraisal, ingest, processing, discovery, and delivery of email archives. More information, including links to the software, user guide, and community forums, can be found at https://library.stanford.edu/projects/epadd.
[3.8] Archiving and Publishing in Practice Event Logs - Joos Buijs [3TU.Datac...3TU.Datacentrum
3TU.Datacentrum Symposium Research Data Management:
Funder requirements, Questions and Solutions
At this symposium the funding organisation NWO and the European Commission explained their vision, plans and requirements. Researchers from the three universities of technology shared their experiences of data management in different stages of research. And the Research Data Services team informed the audience about research data management services offered by 3TU.Datacentrum.
The 3TU.Datacentrum symposium took place at the TU Delft (26 May), University of Twente (2 June) and TU Eindhoven (11 June) for and with local researchers.
More information on: datacentrum.3tu.nl/over-3tudatacentrum/symposium-2014
The FP7 Post-Grant Open Access Pilot: An All-Encompassing Gold Open Access Fu...OpenAIRE
A year into the EC FP7 Post-Grant Open Access Pilot, this presentation delivered at the LIBER Annual Conference 2016 in Helsinki shows the current progress of this funding initiative. This Gold OA Pilot has currently two funding worklines, a main one for APC/BPC payments for post-grant manuscripts arising from finished FP7 projects and an alternative funding mechanism for supporting APC-free OA journals and platforms. Detailed figures are provided for the APC payments made so far, together with a number of findings the initiative has already come upon.
WG RDA/WDS Publishing Data Workflows - P6 meeting session - 10 minute presentation on BioSharing and how it can help researchers, journal editors, funders, standard developers and database curators make sense of the sea of standards and databases in the life sciences.
Presentation given at the Consorcio Madrono conference on Data Management Plans in Horizon 2020 http://www.consorciomadrono.es/info/web/blogs/formacion/217.php
Meeting Federal Research Requirements for Data Management Plans, Public Acces...ICPSR
These slides cover evolving federal research requirements for sharing scientific data. Provided are updates on federal agency responses to the 2013 OSTP memo, guidance on data management plans, resources for data management and curation training for staff/researchers, and tips for evaluating public data-sharing services. ICPSR's public data-sharing service, openICPSR, is also presented. Recording of this presentation is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_erMkASSv4&feature=youtu.be
dkNET Office Hours: NIH Data Management and Sharing Mandate 05/03/2024dkNET
Presenter: Jeffrey Grethe, PhD, Principal Investigator of NIDDK Information Network (dkNET), Center for Research in Biological Systems, University of California San Diego
For all proposals submitted on/after January 25 2023, NIH requires the sharing of data from all NIH funded studies. Do you have appropriate data management practices and sharing plans in place to meet these requirements? Have questions or need some help? Join the dkNET office hours to learn about NIH’s policy (NOT-OD-21-013) and resources that could help.
*Previous Office Hours Slides and Recording: https://dknet.org/rin/research-data-management
Upcoming Webinars Schedule: https://dknet.org/about/webinar
This presentation was provided by Lisa Johnston, University of Minnesota, for a NISO Virtual Conference on data curation held on Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Agencies such as the NSF and NIH require data management plans as part of research proposals and the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) is requiring federal agencies to develop plans to increase public access to results of federally funded scientific research. These slides explore sustainable data sharing models, including models for sharing restricted-use data. Demos of these models and tips for accessing public data access services are provided as well as resources for creating data management plans for grant applications.
dkNET Webinar: Creating and Sustaining a FAIR Biomedical Data Ecosystem 10/09...dkNET
Abstract
In this presentation, Susan Gregurick, Ph.D., Associate Director of Data Science and Director, Office of Data Science Strategy at the National Institutes of Health, will share the NIH’s vision for a modernized, integrated FAIR biomedical data ecosystem and the strategic roadmap that NIH is following to achieve this vision. Dr. Gregurick will highlight projects being implemented by team members across the NIH’s 27 institutes and centers and will ways that industry, academia, and other communities can help NIH enable a FAIR data ecosystem. Finally, she will weave in how this strategy is being leveraged to address the COVID-19 pandemic.
Presenter: Susan Gregurick, Ph.D., Associate Director of Data Science and Director, Office of Data Science Strategy at the National Institutes of Health
dkNET Webinar Information: https://dknet.org/about/webinar
Connectivity breakout session - Swets Belgium customer day 2014Swetsbelgie
The "Connectivity" breakout session, presented by Swets Solution Expert Kathleen D'hanis at the Swets Belgium customer day 2014 in hotel Bloom, Brussels.
Sourcing digital content - breakout session Swets Belgium customer day 2014Swetsbelgie
The eBook part of the breakout session "Sourcing digital content", given by Swets Sales Manager Stephen Van de Wiele at the Swets Belgium customer day 2014 in hotel Bloom, Brussels.
The new product portfolio presentation - Swets Belgium customer day 2014Swetsbelgie
The presentation on the new Swets product portfolio that was given by Swets EMEA Commercial Manager Michael Leuschner at the Swets Belgium customer day 2014 on 18 September 2014 at Hotel Bloom, Brussels.
The eResource monitor breakout session that was given in the afternoon at the Swets Belgium customer day 2014 by Michael Leuschner (Commercial Director EMEA at Swets) on 18 September 2014 at Hotel Bloom, Brussels.
Figshare for institutions presentation swets customer day 2014
1. 32
It is not just about open or closed,
it is about control
Research Outputs Management
&
Research Outputs Dissemination
2. “But taxpayers who are paying for that
research will want to see something
back. Directly – through open access
to results and data. And indirectly –
through making science work better
for all of us.
That’s why we will require open
access to all publications stemming
from EU-funded research. That’s why
we will progressively open access to
the research data, too. And why we’re
asking national funding bodies to do
the same.”
Neelie Kroes.
Vice President for the Eurpoean Commission
3. 3
“The Obama Administration is committed to the proposition that citizens deserve
easy access to the results of scientific research their tax dollars have paid for.
That’s why, in a policy memorandum released today, OSTP Director John
Holdren has directed Federal agencies with more than $100M in R&D
expenditures to develop plans to make the published results of federally funded
research freely available to the public within one year of publication and
requiring researchers to better account for and manage the digital data
resulting from federally funded scientific research.”
February 22nd 2013
4. “Investigators are expected to share with other researchers, at no more than
incremental cost and within a reasonable time, the primary data, samples, physical
collections and other supporting materials created or gathered in the course of
work under NSF grants”
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/policydocs/pappguide/nsf11001/aag_6.jsp#VID4
“NIH expects the timely release and sharing of data to be no later than the
acceptance for publication of the main findings from the final dataset”
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/data_sharingdata_sharing_guidance.htm#time
“NEH is committed to timely and rapid data distribution”
http://www.neh.gov/files/grants/data_management_plans_2012.pdf
5. 5
"Products of research are not just publications.”
NSF senior policy specialist Beth Strausser.
Biographical Sketch(es), has been revised to rename the “Publications”
section to “Products” and amend terminology and instructions accordingly.
13 January 2013: "National Science Foundation’s Merit Review Criteria: Review and Revisions” Chapter II.C.2.f(i)(c),
6.
7.
8.
9. 2
What is figshare?
A cloud based research data management
system for academics and administrators:
Manage their research
outputs privately and
securely, with controlled
collaborative spaces
Public repository of all
research outputs from an
institution, with impact and
usage metrics
10.
11.
12. 4 Key Modules
1
2
Research Data Management
Private, controlled storage and collaborative spaces
for every academic at the institution.
Public Digital Research Repository
A customisable public portal with all digital files made public at an
institutional, departmental and group level.
3
4 Reporting Dashboard
Administrative Workflow Portal
A portal where administrators can manage curation of files to be
made public, storage space allocation and user rights.
Impact and Usage Reporting.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17. 37
Institutional API
The figshare API allows you to push
data to figshare, or pull data out.
This allows you to build applications on
top of your academic’s research.
27. •Incentivising compliance
•Facilitating international collaboration
•Integration into user workflows
•Quantifying impact
•Administrative curation layer
•Embargo support
•Open data principles
•Citable – with DOIs
•Increases impact of research
•Trusted Repository
•Persistent links
•Heavyweight infrastructure
35. Figshare’s positioning: the only player to support institutions all the way
to the top of the hierarchy: ‘Active Data’
Figshare Mendelay Archivum
Research
Gate Dryad Eprints
Fedora+Fr
ont End Zenodo
Lab
Archive
✓ ✓ no ✓
have the
community
✓
Needs
developers.
Files all stored
as individual
objects
Can but don’t
have a
community of
eyes on the
system.
Example of
Missouri
✓ ✓
✓ no no no no
Can track use
at level of
article.
No - needs
manual
intervention
no no
✓ ✓ no ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓
✓
No – focused
on papers.
None of the
permanence
✓ no
✓
but not an
institutional
offer
✓
Own servers
so yes
✓
because its on
the institutions
servers
No – as only a
5 (2?) year
funding plan
Promoting
Sharing
Managing
Open Data
Making it
discoverable
• advocacy – driving uptake of
tools
• training for researchers,
• incentives?
• facilitating international
collaboration
• knowing the numbers. How
many papers, how many
citations, also for data
• Allocation of space around the
institution – e.g. 30GB / user.
User management
• Having a rights system for
access approval. CCO, CCBY,
CCNC etc
• Configurable workflow?
• Open data principles
• Having data stored somewhere
where – technically – it’s
discoverable – ie not on hard
drives
• Ensuring metadata attached
within 12 months
• Raw storage capacity
• Security and back up
• Persitent links
• Storage for 10 years from last use
(which must therefore be known)
Storing it properly • Archiving for posterity
no
Active Data