Now that you’ve heard about several kinds of data services, how could they fit in your workflow? In this hands-on hour Sarah and Marjan invite you to flesh out your Data Management Plan by linking to services. They will also introduce tools to link publications and data: you know how they are related, but is this transparent for others who may be interested in your work?
Visit: https://www.eudat.eu/eudat-summer-school
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Linking data and publications with OpenAIRE - EUDAT Summer School (Sarah Jones, DCC, Marjan Grootveld, DANS)
1. www.eudat.eu
EUDAT receives funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 programme - DG CONNECT e-Infrastructures. Contract No. 654065
Linking data and publications
with OpenAIRE
This work is licensed under the Creative
Commons CC-BY 4.0 licence
#EUDATschool
2. EUDAT Data Domain modeled on the ANDS1 Data Curation Continuum
1. Australian National Data Service organization – www.ands.org.au
Data Domains
4. Human
Network
A “dual core” eInfrastructure
for Open Scholarship
Digital
Network
Fosters the social and technical links
that enable Open Science in Europe and beyond
4
www.openaire.eu
5.
6. EUDAT Summer School, 3-7 July 2017, Crete
Researchers
& research
communities
Data
providers
Funders &
research
administrator
s
3rd party
service
providers
Smart services for all
Dashboards for data providers, funders and researcher
communities
Open Science services for the whole research life-cycle
6
8. EUDAT Summer School, 3-7 July 2017, Crete
Acknowledge project funding:
e.g. Zenodo
8
API
9. EUDAT Summer School, 3-7 July 2017, Crete
Link research results tool
https://www.openaire.eu/participate/claim
Link publications or datasets
to projects.
Identify the project, select
publications or datasets and
set the access rights.
9
11. www.eudat.eu
Acknowledgements:
Thanks to the OpenAIRE project for slides
https://www.openaire.eu/
Authors:
Marjan Grootveld, DANS
Sarah Jones, DCC
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0 licence
Editor's Notes
You know about FAIR and how important it is that data are shared with rich context information. Publications are part of this. So, how can you easily link data and publications?
Of course you can share the data via a repository and refer to the related publication.
This is an example of a data set in the Zenodo repository: the title already tells what it is. Other metadata is about the authors, publication date (NB: of the DATA), the persistent identifier assigned by Zenodo, keywords, a grant identifier, the reference to the associated publication, and the access rights in the form of a Creative Commons license.
At the top you also see that it’s indexed in OpenAIRE…
OpenAIRE is European project like EUDAT with the mission to promote and support Open Science: OA, Open Data, citizen science etc.
On the one hand OpenAIRE invests in a human network, consisting of 33 expert nodes all over Europe who offer OA training and support as well as OA policy development.
On the other hand it is building and connecting services into an e-infrastructure.
OpenAIRE aims to form the bridge between all research stakeholders and the world of scholarly publications. Sustainable OA to all research outcomes is its mission and therefore it develops services for discovery, reproducibility of studies and for monitoring and analysing the advance of science and research.
This means the project targets several stakeholders …
Let’s focus now on the researchers…
Let’s start with the publications.
When you receive funding from H2020 or ERC, you must publish your articles in open access. One way to do this is to deposit your publications in an OA repository.
If a researcher isn’t sure where to deposit a publication, OpenAIRE can help. As you can see, across europe there are many repositories – mostly institutional repos.
If you receive H2020 funding, you must acknowledge the project funding in the PUBLICATION OR DATASET METADATA record.
This is stated in the AO H2020 mandate, OpenAIRE is helping to make it easy.
Example: zenodo: developed by OpenAIRE and CERN, and integrated into reporting mechanisms that funders – primarily the EC but also others – use for monitoring what we do with they money.
You can also claim publications or datasets. You start with selecting the funder and the project, and then you search a publication or dataset to link to that project.
And finally, you can search for publications and data. search and browse over a catalogue of Europe’s interlinked research artefacts (literature, research data, software)
Whereas EUDAT’s B2FIND focuses on datasets, OpenAIRE-as-a-portal allows you to look for publications as well.
BTW: you can see how much information about data providers (”Unknown repository”), language (“Undetermined”) and data access mode (“not available”) is still missing… Enough to do!