Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

What is data citation & why do we care? What’s been happening here and overseas? How ready are you for data citation? 1 Welcome! Image:

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "What is data citation & why do we care? What’s been happening here and overseas? How ready are you for data citation? 1 Welcome! Image:"— Presentation transcript:

1 What is data citation & why do we care? What’s been happening here and overseas? How ready are you for data citation? 1 Welcome! Image: http://andrew-johnson.org

2 WHAT’S NEW? 2 ands.org.au

3 3 researchdata.ands.org.au

4 4

5 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 6 Benefits for research funders 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 Expanded publishing opportunities Data Citation – why we care

7 7 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 Data Citation – why we care

8 8 20th century data citation

9 9 JohnG; Jen. (2011?, 2012? N.D.): 3” res MFD. CSIRO. Lots of Misc Files Red USB, bottom RH drawer, my office. Early 21stC data citation 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

10 10

11 11

12 (Some) recent developments: Funders & Government(s) Publishers Standards Researchers Citation tracking ANDS and Australian institutions 12 Where are we up to? image: http://riverbankoftruth.com

13 13 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 Funders come on board

14 14 Early indications…

15 15 And elsewhere… “The Code” What will the next revision say about data?

16 Publishers come on board 16 http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/22/idUS109861+22-Jun- 2012+HUG20120622

17 17 Integrated access to publications <> data

18 18 Integrated access to publications <> data

19 19 Data Journals

20 20 http://www. nature. com/scientificdata / Scientific Data now calling for submissions for launch in May 2014.

21 21 Standards and conventions

22 DOIs : an ISO Standard 22 http://datacite.org

23 DataCite – unique identifiers for datasets http:dx.doi.org/10.5284/1000164 ORCID – unique identifiers for people http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5109-3700 ODIN – builds on these initiatives to address “identifier awareness” http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5109-3700 23 ORCID, DataCite & ODIN

24 24 Researchers come on board …

25 25 http://wokinfo.com/products_tools/multidisciplinary/dci/ Citation tracking http://wokinfo.com/products_tools/multidisciplinary/dci/

26 26 Altmetrics Source: impactstory.org

27 ANDS & Data Citation 27

28 28 To summarise … » Data citation is becoming accepted scholarly practice » Traditional journals are embracing data citation, Many new journals assume data citation » Research funding will have more emphasis on data access + reuse = citation » Scholarly metrics will eventually include citations to data » altmetrics will become more important: reach and impact & early identification of seminal datasets » DOIs – best practice for persistent access to data products

29 A number of institutions in Australia are building a culture of data citation within their organisations: Some are “dipping their toes” Some have it in their data management roadmap For some, it’s a “blip” on their radar Where are you? Next steps? 29 Are we there yet?

30  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 30 Is my organisation ready for data citation? ?


Download ppt "What is data citation & why do we care? What’s been happening here and overseas? How ready are you for data citation? 1 Welcome! Image:"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google