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  • Other research product . Other ORP type . 2017
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Odijk, Jan; LS OZ Taal en spraaktechnologie; UiL OTS LLI;
    Country: Netherlands
  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Tjalsma, H.D.; Rombouts, J.P.;
    Publisher: Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
    Country: Netherlands

    The report “Selection of Research Data” contains general guidelines on how to determine what research data should be preserved for the long term and what data should not. These guidelines can be used by individual researchers or research groups, researchers who co-operate within a collaboratory, research institutes, university faculties and national or international organisations focusing on a specific scientific/scholarly discipline and bodies funding research. The checklist is also suitable for use by managers of archives, research repositories, and heritage institutions. This study shows the situation in the area of selecting research data, based on a survey of the literature, interviews with key players and the experience gained by DANS and the 3TU Data Centre. The main issues are considered. The most important reasons for preserving research data for the long term have been formulated. The checklist based on these can be used as a guide for creating guidelines for specific scientific/scholarly disciplines. The report also describes the various roles of people involved in selection. Attention is paid to the best moment in the digital life cycle of research data for selecting them.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Hogenaar, A.Th.; Witkamp, P.; Bruijne, M.C. de; Wijnant, Arnaud; Kvamme, Trond; Kvalheim, Vigdis; Recker, Astrid; Fihn, Johan; Berglund, Torbjörn; Jerlehag, Birger; +7 more
    Publisher: University of Copenhagen
    Country: Netherlands
    Project: EC | DASISH (283646)

    This report was produced in the context of the project Data Service Infrastructure for the Social Sciences and Humanities (DASISH) work package 4.3 Convergence of Data Services. The goal has been to allow the selection and promotion of high-quality deposit services for researchers in the Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) and to make suggestions for service improvements.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Buddenbohm, Stefan; Cretin, Nathanael; Dijk, E.M.S.; Gaiffe, Bertrand; De Jong, M.A.; Le Tellier-Becquart, Nathalie; Minel, Jean-Luc;
    Publisher: DARIAH
    Country: Netherlands
    Project: EC | HaS-DARIAH (675570)

    Publishing research data as open data is not yet common practice for researchers in the arts and humanities, and lags behind other scientific fields, such as the natural sciences. Moreover, even when humanities researchers publish their data in repositories and archives, these data are often hard to find and use by other researchers in the field. This report gives an overview of the various aspects that are connected to open access publishing of research data in the humanities. After the introduction, where we give definitions of key concepts, we describe the research data life cycle. We present an overview of the different stakeholders involved and we look into advantages and obstacles for researchers to share research data. Furthermore, a description of the European data repositories is given, followed by certification standards of trusted digital data repositories. The possibility of data citation is important for sharing open data and is also described in this report. We also discuss the standards and use of metadata in the humanities. Finally, we discuss best practice example of open access research data system in the humanities: the French open research data ecosystem. With this report we provide information and guidance on open access publishing of humanities research data for researchers. It will also serve as input for the design and implementation of an open humanities data platform in DARIAH.

  • Other research product . Other ORP type
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Clever Cat Design;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The Social Sciences and Humanities Open Marketplace - marketplace.sshopencloud.eu -, built as part of the Social Sciences and Humanities Open Cloud project (SSHOC), is a discovery portal which pools and contextualises resources for Social Sciences and Humanities research communities: tools, services, training materials, datasets, publications and workflows. The Marketplace highlights and showcases solutions and research practices for every step of the SSH research data life cycle. These flyers presenting the SSH Open Marketplace can be used for printing or online dissemination.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Giglia, Elena;
    Project: WT

    The international meeting, Berlin 7: Open Access reaching diverse communities [1] took place from December 2nd to 4th, 2009 in Paris. This seventh follow up of the 2003 Berlin conference highlighted the different pathways to Open Access that research communities are taking. The conference was conducted primarily in a round-table style and addressed all of the most debated issues in the Open Access area. The aim of this report is to offer a synthesis of the different topics and perspectives.

  • Other research product . Other ORP type . 2017
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Hollander, H.S.; Geser, Guntram;
    Publisher: ARIADNE
    Country: Netherlands
    Project: EC | ARIADNE (313193)

    This report addresses the ARIADNE project objectives and the framework of the impact evaluation, summarises the overall results, and gives recommendations for ARIADNE and other stakeholders with a focus on potential further advances.

  • Other research product . 2013
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Delhaye, Marlene;
    Publisher: University of Bath

    Report about the two-day annual conference "Journées ABES" (dubbed "JABES") organised by the French Agence Bibliographique de l’Enseignement Supérieur (ABES) held in Montpellier, France over 14-15 May 2013.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Dillo, I.; De Leeuw, Lisa;
    Publisher: Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
    Country: Netherlands

    If we want to share data, the long-term storage of those data in a trustworthy digital archive is an essential condition. Trust is the basis of storing and sharing data. That trust must be present in the various stakeholders involved. Certification of digital archives can make an important contribution to the confidence of these stakeholders in the digital archives. Ten years ago DANS was assigned the task of developing a Seal of Approval for digital data to ensure that archived data can still be found, understood and used in the future. In 2009 this Data Seal of Approval (DSA) was transferred to an international body, the DSA Board, which has managed and further developed the guidelines and the peer review process ever since. The objectives of the DSA are to safeguard data, ensure high quality and guide reliable management of data for the future without requiring implementation of new standards, regulations or heavy investments. The DSA contains 16 guidelines for applying and verifying quality aspects concerning the creation, storage, use and reuse of digital data. Based on feedback from data archives that applied for a DSA and different case studies we have gained some insight into the benefits of DSA. Still, the impact of having the Seal is not easy to measure. Seal holders usually refer to qualitative benefits in the form of increased awareness of the value of their repositories to their communities, funders and publishers. Ten years down the line we can safely state that the Data Seal of Approval has proven its added value. If we try to look five years into the future, what can we expect? There are different developments: a growing interest in DSA among European research infrastructures, the collaboration between DSA and the ISCU World Data System under the umbrella of the RDA (Research Data Alliance) and the European Commission is showing a growing interest in certification services. The success of DSA also provides the challenge to further professionalize the DSA organization in the coming years, this to enable its community to continue to grow.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Dillo, I.; van Horik, M.P.M.; Scharnhorst, A.;
    Country: Netherlands
search
Include:
22 Research products, page 1 of 3
  • Other research product . Other ORP type . 2017
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Odijk, Jan; LS OZ Taal en spraaktechnologie; UiL OTS LLI;
    Country: Netherlands
  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Tjalsma, H.D.; Rombouts, J.P.;
    Publisher: Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
    Country: Netherlands

    The report “Selection of Research Data” contains general guidelines on how to determine what research data should be preserved for the long term and what data should not. These guidelines can be used by individual researchers or research groups, researchers who co-operate within a collaboratory, research institutes, university faculties and national or international organisations focusing on a specific scientific/scholarly discipline and bodies funding research. The checklist is also suitable for use by managers of archives, research repositories, and heritage institutions. This study shows the situation in the area of selecting research data, based on a survey of the literature, interviews with key players and the experience gained by DANS and the 3TU Data Centre. The main issues are considered. The most important reasons for preserving research data for the long term have been formulated. The checklist based on these can be used as a guide for creating guidelines for specific scientific/scholarly disciplines. The report also describes the various roles of people involved in selection. Attention is paid to the best moment in the digital life cycle of research data for selecting them.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Hogenaar, A.Th.; Witkamp, P.; Bruijne, M.C. de; Wijnant, Arnaud; Kvamme, Trond; Kvalheim, Vigdis; Recker, Astrid; Fihn, Johan; Berglund, Torbjörn; Jerlehag, Birger; +7 more
    Publisher: University of Copenhagen
    Country: Netherlands
    Project: EC | DASISH (283646)

    This report was produced in the context of the project Data Service Infrastructure for the Social Sciences and Humanities (DASISH) work package 4.3 Convergence of Data Services. The goal has been to allow the selection and promotion of high-quality deposit services for researchers in the Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) and to make suggestions for service improvements.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Buddenbohm, Stefan; Cretin, Nathanael; Dijk, E.M.S.; Gaiffe, Bertrand; De Jong, M.A.; Le Tellier-Becquart, Nathalie; Minel, Jean-Luc;
    Publisher: DARIAH
    Country: Netherlands
    Project: EC | HaS-DARIAH (675570)

    Publishing research data as open data is not yet common practice for researchers in the arts and humanities, and lags behind other scientific fields, such as the natural sciences. Moreover, even when humanities researchers publish their data in repositories and archives, these data are often hard to find and use by other researchers in the field. This report gives an overview of the various aspects that are connected to open access publishing of research data in the humanities. After the introduction, where we give definitions of key concepts, we describe the research data life cycle. We present an overview of the different stakeholders involved and we look into advantages and obstacles for researchers to share research data. Furthermore, a description of the European data repositories is given, followed by certification standards of trusted digital data repositories. The possibility of data citation is important for sharing open data and is also described in this report. We also discuss the standards and use of metadata in the humanities. Finally, we discuss best practice example of open access research data system in the humanities: the French open research data ecosystem. With this report we provide information and guidance on open access publishing of humanities research data for researchers. It will also serve as input for the design and implementation of an open humanities data platform in DARIAH.

  • Other research product . Other ORP type
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Clever Cat Design;
    Publisher: Zenodo

    The Social Sciences and Humanities Open Marketplace - marketplace.sshopencloud.eu -, built as part of the Social Sciences and Humanities Open Cloud project (SSHOC), is a discovery portal which pools and contextualises resources for Social Sciences and Humanities research communities: tools, services, training materials, datasets, publications and workflows. The Marketplace highlights and showcases solutions and research practices for every step of the SSH research data life cycle. These flyers presenting the SSH Open Marketplace can be used for printing or online dissemination.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Giglia, Elena;
    Project: WT

    The international meeting, Berlin 7: Open Access reaching diverse communities [1] took place from December 2nd to 4th, 2009 in Paris. This seventh follow up of the 2003 Berlin conference highlighted the different pathways to Open Access that research communities are taking. The conference was conducted primarily in a round-table style and addressed all of the most debated issues in the Open Access area. The aim of this report is to offer a synthesis of the different topics and perspectives.

  • Other research product . Other ORP type . 2017
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Hollander, H.S.; Geser, Guntram;
    Publisher: ARIADNE
    Country: Netherlands
    Project: EC | ARIADNE (313193)

    This report addresses the ARIADNE project objectives and the framework of the impact evaluation, summarises the overall results, and gives recommendations for ARIADNE and other stakeholders with a focus on potential further advances.

  • Other research product . 2013
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Delhaye, Marlene;
    Publisher: University of Bath

    Report about the two-day annual conference "Journées ABES" (dubbed "JABES") organised by the French Agence Bibliographique de l’Enseignement Supérieur (ABES) held in Montpellier, France over 14-15 May 2013.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Dillo, I.; De Leeuw, Lisa;
    Publisher: Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
    Country: Netherlands

    If we want to share data, the long-term storage of those data in a trustworthy digital archive is an essential condition. Trust is the basis of storing and sharing data. That trust must be present in the various stakeholders involved. Certification of digital archives can make an important contribution to the confidence of these stakeholders in the digital archives. Ten years ago DANS was assigned the task of developing a Seal of Approval for digital data to ensure that archived data can still be found, understood and used in the future. In 2009 this Data Seal of Approval (DSA) was transferred to an international body, the DSA Board, which has managed and further developed the guidelines and the peer review process ever since. The objectives of the DSA are to safeguard data, ensure high quality and guide reliable management of data for the future without requiring implementation of new standards, regulations or heavy investments. The DSA contains 16 guidelines for applying and verifying quality aspects concerning the creation, storage, use and reuse of digital data. Based on feedback from data archives that applied for a DSA and different case studies we have gained some insight into the benefits of DSA. Still, the impact of having the Seal is not easy to measure. Seal holders usually refer to qualitative benefits in the form of increased awareness of the value of their repositories to their communities, funders and publishers. Ten years down the line we can safely state that the Data Seal of Approval has proven its added value. If we try to look five years into the future, what can we expect? There are different developments: a growing interest in DSA among European research infrastructures, the collaboration between DSA and the ISCU World Data System under the umbrella of the RDA (Research Data Alliance) and the European Commission is showing a growing interest in certification services. The success of DSA also provides the challenge to further professionalize the DSA organization in the coming years, this to enable its community to continue to grow.

  • Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Dillo, I.; van Horik, M.P.M.; Scharnhorst, A.;
    Country: Netherlands
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