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Where are the rewards?

Where are the rewards?. Building a culture of data citation workshop Edith Cowan University, Perth March 2014. Rewards are real … but few (yet). Citations for related publications. The citation benefit intensified over time ...

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Where are the rewards?

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  1. Where are the rewards? Building a culture of data citation workshop Edith Cowan University, Perth March 2014

  2. Rewards are real … but few (yet)

  3. Citations for related publications • The citation benefit intensified over time... • ...with publications from 2004 and 2005 cited 30 per cent more often if their data was freely available. • Every 100 papers with open data prompted 150 "data reuse papers" within five years • Original authors tended to use their data for only two years, but others re-used it for up to six years. • Piwowar HA, Vision TJ. (2013) Data reuse and the open data citation advantage. PeerJ 1:e175 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.175

  4. Recent developments … And “The Code” What will the next revision say about data?

  5. Enabling rewards • More rewards for data citation are on the horizon, but … • We (and our funders) can’t reward what we don’t know about. • Like publications, citation metrics can provide ‘evidence’ of impact and reach. • Citation tracking products are in their infancy, but maturing quickly among commercial and not-for-profit organisations.

  6. Measuring data citation Alt-metrics Metrics • Alternative metrics • = reach, influence • “Likes” in: • Social media • Social bookmarking • Fast • Traditional • = impact • Formal citations in: • H Index etc • Journal Indexes • Slow Measuring data citation Image: http://commons.wikimedia.org

  7. Measuring data citation Alt-metrics Metrics • Alternative metrics • = reach, influence • “Likes” in: • Social media • Social bookmarking • Fast • Traditional • = impact • Formal citations in: • H Index etc • Journal Indexes • Slow Measuring data citation Image: http://commons.wikimedia.org

  8. Metrics Data? What data? Book Journal article

  9. Data Citation Tracking – Scopus (not yet) http://www.info.sciverse.com/scopus/scopus-in-detail/tools

  10. Released Nov 2012 http://wokinfo.com/products_tools/multidisciplinary/dci/ http://wokinfo.com/products_tools/multidisciplinary/dci/

  11. Thomson Reuters recommends citing this resource as: Global Soil Data Task (2000): GLOBAL GRIDDED SURFACES OF SELECTED SOIL CHARACTERISTICS (IGBP-DIS). Version 9.0. Oak Ridge National Laboratory Distributed Active Archive Center for Biogeochemical Dynamics. http://dx.doi.org/10.3334/ORNLDAAC/569

  12. Self Citation

  13. Cited by others

  14. RDA records to Data Citation Index • ANDS is currently working closely with Thomson Reuters to enable a feed of RDA records to the Data Citation Index • We have a number of institutions working with us as “early adopters” with the aim of having a BAU service in place Q2 2014. • ANDS has also been talking with Elsevier as they develop their ‘Scopus’ data citation tracking capability. • ANDS will provide this as a service (so you don’t need to!) • Learn more at: http://ands.org.au/cite-data/dci.html

  15. Measuring data citation Alt-metrics Metrics • Alternative metrics • = reach, influence • “Likes” in: • Social media • Social bookmarking • Fast • Traditional • = impact • Formal citations in: • H Index etc • Journal Indexes • Slow Measuring data citation Image: http://commons.wikimedia.org

  16. blog Radio Interview Life-log TV Appearance Documentary Citizen Science Initiative Podcast Monograph Book Oh, you mean THAT DATA! Journal Article Report White Paper Derived Datasets Lecture Tour Textbook Conference Paper International Collaboration Poster Data Citation Index Longitudinal Study

  17. Altmetrics

  18. Source: impactstory.org

  19. Twimpact http://www.plosone.org/article/metrics/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0066981

  20. Do tweets count? ….. people tweeting or sharing articles are not necessarily broadcasting the relevance of the articles to ongoing research, as citations are thought to do. “That's the point of collecting altmetrics; the hope that they provide some insight beyond the things we usually look at. It's interesting to look at top-tweeted articles because that's evidence that there was something about them worth sharing,” …. Nature doi:10.1038/nature.2013.14354

  21. Where are we up to? • Products that track data citation metrics are rapidly evolving, but (more) authors need to cite data. • While metrics are an enabler, our institutions and funding bodies also need to recognise and reward data sharing and reuse through policy and practice. • This will further encourage good data citation practice. • The wheel is turning and gaining momentum. • Be on the ‘front foot’! Image:almightydad.com

  22. Be ready for the rewards… • Ensure data is discoverable, reusable, citable and trackable • Refer to the “readiness checklist” • Describe data (well) • Assign open licensing where possible (eg CC-BY) • Preferably, assign a DOI to data • Publish data (with descriptions) • Encourage researcher to cite their own data in their publications • Encourage researchers to cite data from other sources they’ve reused • Track reuse through altmetrics and indexing products

  23. Is my organisation ready for data citation?? Do we have a metadata catalogue? Do we have a store of publicly available data? Do our researchers regularly archive data? Are our researchers interested in data citation? Do our policy makers support data citation? Are our datasets stable? Do we have access to a developer to implement the tools? Source: Dave Connell, Australian Antarctic Data Centre

  24. Thank you & Questions?

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