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Overviews Jisc's investigation of including electronic lab notebooks in the Research Data Shared Service, and the benefits of Connected ELNs like RSpace
In order to be reused, research data must be discoverable.
The EPSRC Research Data Expectations* requires research organisations to maintain a data catalogue to record metadata about research data generated by EPSRC-funded research projects.
Universities are increasingly making research data assets available through repositories or other data portals.
The requirement for a UK research data discovery service has grown as universities become more involved in RDM and capacity develops.
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Introduction to panel presentations from Universities of Edinburgh, Southampton, Yale, Cornell at IPRES 2015 conference, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 3 Nov 2015
Integrating repositories and eLab notebooks through an open science frameworkrmacneil88
Overviews Jisc's investigation of including electronic lab notebooks in the Research Data Shared Service, and the benefits of Connected ELNs like RSpace
In order to be reused, research data must be discoverable.
The EPSRC Research Data Expectations* requires research organisations to maintain a data catalogue to record metadata about research data generated by EPSRC-funded research projects.
Universities are increasingly making research data assets available through repositories or other data portals.
The requirement for a UK research data discovery service has grown as universities become more involved in RDM and capacity develops.
Staffing Research Data Services at University of EdinburghRobin Rice
Invited remote talk for Georg-August University of Göttingen workshop: RDM costs and efforts on 28 May in Göttingen. Organised by the project Göttingen Research Data Exploratory (GRAcE).
‘Good, better, best’? Examining the range and rationales of institutional dat...Robin Rice
Introduction to panel presentations from Universities of Edinburgh, Southampton, Yale, Cornell at IPRES 2015 conference, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 3 Nov 2015
Research Data Management Initiatives at the University of EdinburghRobin Rice
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Research Data Network
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Research Data Management Initiatives at the University of EdinburghRobin Rice
This paper will discuss the issues involved in exploring university obligations in the area of research data management, while conveying the current state of progress at one institution, Edinburgh. The issues are fairly static – from data ownership and rights to retention and sustainability – but the solutions are a moving target as the research environment and its technologies continue to change, subtly altering what is perceived as possible, feasible, and desirable. The planned University of Edinburgh approach to research data storage and management will be outlined.
**Researcher engagement resources: a demonstration**
*Rosie Higman, University of Cambridge/Manchester, Hardy Schwamm, Lancaster University*
Research Data Network
RDAP14: DataONE: Data Observation Network for EarthASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2014
San Diego, CA
March 26-28, 2014
Amber E. Budden, Director for Community Engagement and Outreach, DataONE, University of New Mexico
This presentation was given by Jon Wheeler and Karl Benedict of the University of New Mexico during the joint NISO-NFAIS Virtual Conference held on December 7, 2016
Overview of the UKRDDS pilot project at Univwersity of Edinburgh employing PhD interns to validate metadata about research data created by University of Edinburgh researchers and held in local RDM services solutions. This was presented at IASSIST in June 2016, Bergen, Norway.
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*Previous Office Hours Slides and Recording: https://dknet.org/about/blog/2535
Upcoming Webinars Schedule: https://dknet.org/about/webinar
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Talk given by Nigel Goddard of the Department of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, on 26 August, 2014 at the Dealing with Data Conference to launch the Research Data Management programme at Edinburgh
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Improving RDM through closer integration of electronic lab notebooks and data repositories
1. Improving RDM through closer integration
of electronic lab notebooks and data
repositories
EUNIS 2018
Christopher Brown and Rachel Bruce, Jisc
Rory Macneil, Research Space
Nigel Goddard, the University of Edinburgh
6 June, 2018
2. Overview
❖ Focus on getting data out of repositories overlooks
constraints on getting data in
❖ Electronic notebooks emerging as an important vehicle for
organising active data
❖ ELN repository data flow is still clunky
❖ The future:
➢ ‘Connected’ ELNs
➢ Tighter ELN repository integration
❖ Jisc Research Data Shared Service
➢ Current Scope
➢ Plans to include ELNs
3. Current
repository
rrent repository focus and limitatio
Manipulate
Access
? Query
Other
repository
Interoperate
Data Deposit
Barriers to use
• Hard work to
prepare deposit
• No support for
tools already in
use e.g., ELN
4. The emergence of ELNs as a
key active data research tool
❖ELNs
➢ For life sciences and related areas
➢ For active research phase: organisation of data
➢ But often just another data silo!
❖ Connected ELNs
➢ For data from other sources, e.g., microscope
➢ During active research: import and link
➢ Streamlined export to repositories
6. Benefits of integrated ELN
repository workflow
❖Limits need to reorganize data for deposit
➢ Saves time and effort for researchers
➢ Increases interest in depositing data
➢ Increases amount of data entering repositories
❖ELNs as a tool for data curation
➢ Platform for data curators and researchers to work
together on data curation
➢ Data already organised, freeing data curators to work
on higher level curation
❖Additional benefits with Connected ELN
➢ Include data from other tools and resources in deposits
➢ Direct deposit from within ELN to repository
7. Developments Needed
❖Conceptual
➢ Recognition of the benefits of
➢Connected ELNs as data organising tools
➢Enhanced ELN repository workflow
❖ Practical
➢ Development of Repository APIs
➢ for highly organised, heterogeneous data
➢ ingestion, query, export
8. Why a Research Data Shared
Service
❖ There is no single “solution” easily available that meets
requirements for universities to enable better management of
research data
➢ Managed research data shared service
➢ Repository, preservation, reporting and interoperability
components
➢ Help institutions meet funder policy compliance
➢ Enables reuse of research data for better research
➢ Enables good practices in research data management
➢ Allows for financial and resource efficiencies
➢ Allows researchers to easily publish, archive and
preserve their research outputs
9. Overview of Jisc Research
Data Shared Service
Jisc Research Data Shared Service
Capture
& reuse
Preserve Report
Cost-effective improvement in research data access and reuse
• Deposit
• Describe
• Store
• Publish
• Assure Integrity
• Normalise
• Transform
• Curate
• Flag at-risk data
• RDM planning
• Costs
• Service performance
• Audit trails
• Compliance and
benchmarking
API’s and Member
Dashboards
Secure managed storage
Shared standards-based technology framework
3rd party
tools
Integration
with local
systems
OpenStandardInterfaces
(APIs)
Advice & best practice
• Research data management toolkit and network
Research data
• Secure outputs
• Accelerate
research
• Grow reusable
data value
• Managed storage
included
https://www.jisc.ac.uk/rd/projects/research-data-shared-service
10. RDSS Framework
Jisc
beta repository
Jisc provided
preservation
Jisc reporting
Full reporting
capabilities
or
APIs available
Core RDSS
offering
Fully accredited infrastructure, technical underpinning and interoperability with UK Data centre cloud hosting for
your data by Jisc
Bronze,
Silver
or Gold
data storage
packages
available
Jisc
research
systems
framework
repositories
Jisc
research
systems
framework
preservation
Jisc
research
systems
framework
CRIS
Available
framework
options
11. Next Generation Research
Environment
❖ Recommendations and actions - http://bit.ly/NGRE_recs
❖Promote the adoption of concepts, standards and identifiers
that are beneficial to Jisc members.
❖Ensure Jisc services are developed in such a way that they
can be integrated or accessed via APIs and standard
interfaces as much as possible.
❖Investigate work required in the RDSS for closer integration
between active and archival research data, and for integrating
research data and research administrative data
12. Research Tools in an Open
Science Service
❖ Framework
➢ Procurement framework for ELNs (including assessing
current tools and level of demand)
❖ Exploratory
➢ Explore interoperability between ELNs, repositories and
Current Research Information Systems (CRIS) using open
standards
❖Integration
➢ Technical integration of ELNs within the RDSS
Editor's Notes
Focus is on on getting data out of repositories
Accessing, querying, manipulating data
To enable/facilitate reproducibility
Interoperability
But only a tiny fraction of research data gets into data repositories
Unorganized data requires repetitive work to prepare for deposit
Lack of support for data already organized in active data research tools like ELNs
ELNs
For life sciences and related areas
For active research phase: organisation of data
But often just another data silo!
Connected ELNs
Enable import of and linking to data from other tools and resources during active research
Support streamlined export to data repositories
Conceptual
Focus on post-deposit treatment of data limits interest and deployment of resources to ELN -> repository workflow.
Practical
Limited APIs from Repositories support only deposit of unstructured datasets, resulting in loss of organization already captured in the ELN
Development of Repository APIs
ingestion and retention of structured datasets produced by ELN and other active-research tools.
questions: query inside the organised data? export components of the organised data?
More effective Research Data Management must happen to comply with Funder Mandates, ensure data is not lost, and to realise a whole range of positive benefits
A shared service (provided by Jisc) seems to offer a number of benefits:
Cost savings and efficiencies
Common approaches and practice – do this together
Research system standardisation and interoperability ( do it once rather than many times! , & also address it across essential systems so we can key once and share)
Address market gaps
Samvera, EPrints and Dspace adaptors allows these to be plugged in.
Re: figshare, we are still their development partners and we are looking into producing a research systems framework, which we hope that they will be a part of. We don’t want to exclude any system (figshare, mendeley, ex-libris etc. from being one of the modules in RDSS, hence the interoperability layer based on open standards. We are currently looking at easy procurement routes for our members.