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Connecting the DOIs Overview

Connecting the DOIs Overview. eResearch Australasia 2013 24 Oct 2013. What’s new?. Welcome!. Purpose and outcomes of this workshop Format for the workshop Expectations Who are our session leads today?. Image: http://andrew-johnson.org. Ice Breaker. Why are you here?

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Connecting the DOIs Overview

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  1. Connecting the DOIs Overview eResearch Australasia 2013 24 Oct 2013

  2. What’s new?

  3. Welcome! Purpose and outcomes of this workshop Format for the workshop Expectations Who are our session leads today? Image: http://andrew-johnson.org

  4. Ice Breaker Why are you here? What do you hope to get out of today? What is, or might be, your role in supporting data citation in your institution? Image: supplychainn.blogspot.com

  5. Data Citation – why we care • Benefits for academia and the nation • global access to research data • legitimately citable contribution to the scientific record • results can be verified and re-purposed for future study • cross disciplinary studies never previously possible

  6. Data Citation – why we care • Benefits for individuals and institutions • acknowledge and reward data outputs • data citation metrics - reuse can be tracked   • increases the citation rate of linked publications • data publications acceptable for CVs and biosketches (NSF) • journals require citations for supplemental material

  7. Citing research data John Gallant; Jenet Austin (2012): Contributing Area - Multiple Flow Direction (Partial) (3" resolution) derived from 1" SRTM DEM-H. v1. CSIRO. Data Collection. http://dx.doi.org/ 10.4225/08/50A9D0E561DA6 JohnG; Jen. (2011?, 2012? N.D.): 3” res MFD. CSIRO. Lots of Misc Files Red USB, bottom RH drawer, my office.

  8. Where are we up to? (Some) recent developments: Funders & Government(s) Publishers Researchers Standards Citation tracking ANDS and Australian institutions image: http://riverbankoftruth.com

  9. Funders come on board the NSF now allows for citable data (ie with a DOI) to be listed as an outcome of research, like a journal article. This is done in what is called a "biosketch" - basically a summary of your work, an a key part of the granting process. <http://datapub.cdlib.org/?p=1343>

  10. And in Australia … “The Code” What will the next revision say about data?

  11. Publishers come on board http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/22/idUS109861+22-Jun-2012+HUG20120622

  12. Integrated access to publications and data

  13. Data Journals

  14. Scientific Datanow calling for submissions for launch in May 2014. http://www.nature.com/scientificdata/

  15. Standards and conventions

  16. DOIs : an ISO Standard http://datacite.org

  17. Researchers come on board …

  18. Citation tracking http://wokinfo.com/products_tools/multidisciplinary/dci/ http://wokinfo.com/products_tools/multidisciplinary/dci/

  19. Altmetrics Source: impactstory.org

  20. ANDS DOI minting service ands.org.au /services/cite-my-data.html

  21. ANDS website - Data Citation Toolkit ands.org.au/cite-data/index.html

  22. Why do we care? • Australia invests over $30B p/a in R&D • Australia has approximately 100K researchers • Data capture costs up to half of a research project • Enabling data reuse will reduce that cost • Data citation is key to enabling data reuse

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