• Title

    Eleven Quick Tips for Finding Research Data

  • Author(s) Stefanie Kethers,
  • Abstract

    Data Discovery Paradigms IG

    Group co-chairs: Siri Jodha Khalsa, Anita de Waard, Mingfang Wu, Fotis Psomopoulos

    Supporting Output title:  Eleven Quick Tips for Finding Research Data

    Authors: Kathleen Gregory, Siri Jodha Khalsa, William K. Michener, Fotis E. Psomopoulos, Anita de Waard, Mingfang Wu

    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006038 

    Citation:  Gregory K, Khalsa SJ, Michener WK, Psomopoulos FE, de Waard A, Wu M (2018) Eleven quick tips for finding research data. PLoS Comput Biol 14(4): e1006038. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006038

    Note: This is the published and updated version of the “Ten Quick Tips for Finding Research Data” supporting output described below.

     
    Summary:
    Over the past decades, science has experienced rapid growth in the volume of data available for research – from a relative paucity of data in many areas to what has been recently described as a data deluge. Data volumes have increased exponentially across all fields of science and human endeavour, including data from sky, earth and ocean observatories; social media such as Facebook and Twitter; wearable health monitoring devices; gene sequences and protein structures; and climate simulations. This brings opportunities to enable more research, especially cross-disciplinary research that could not be done before. However, it also introduces challenges in managing, describing and making data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable by researchers. 
    When this vast amount and variety of data are made available, finding relevant data to meet a research need is increasingly a challenge. In the past when data were relatively sparse, researchers discovered existing data by searching literature, attending conferences and asking colleagues. In today’s data-rich environment, with accompanying advances in computational and networking technologies, researchers increasingly conduct web searches to find research data. The success of such searches varies greatly and depends to a large degree on the expertise of the person looking for data, the tools used and, partially, on luck.  This article offers eleven quick tips that researchers can follow to more effectively and precisely discover data that meets their specific needs. A list of useful resources and examples from the article are listed in the final Resources section. 

     
    Previous version of the Supporting Output

    Data Discovery Paradigms IG

    Group co-chairs: Siri Jodha Khalsa, Anita de Waard, Mingfang Wu, Fotis Psomopoulos

    Supporting Output title:  Ten Quick Tips for Finding Research Data

    Authors: Kathleen Gregory, Siri Jodha Khalsa, William K. Michener, Fotis E. Psomopoulos, Anita de Waard, Mingfang Wu

    DOI: See above for the DOI for the published version.

    File: https://www.rd-alliance.org/system/files/RDA%20DDP%20IG%20Ten%20Quick%20…

     
    Summary:
    Over the past decades, science has experienced rapid growth in the volume of data available for research – from a relative paucity of data in many areas to what has been recently described as a data deluge. Data volumes have increased exponentially across all fields of science and human endeavour, including data from sky, earth and ocean observatories; social media such as Facebook and Twitter; wearable health monitoring devices; gene sequences and protein structures; and climate simulations. This brings opportunities to enable more research, especially cross-disciplinary research that could not be done before. However, it also introduces challenges in managing, describing and making data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable by researchers. 
    When this vast amount and variety of data are made available, finding relevant data to meet a research need is increasingly a challenge. In the past when data were relatively sparse, researchers discovered existing data by searching literature, attending conferences and asking colleagues. In today’s data-rich environment, with accompanying advances in computational and networking technologies, researchers increasingly conduct web searches to find research data. The success of such searches varies greatly and depends to a large degree on the expertise of the person looking for data, the tools used and, partially, on luck.  This article offers ten quick tips that researchers can follow to more effectively and precisely discover data that meets their specific needs. A list of useful resources and examples from the article are listed in the final Resources section. 
     

  • Group Technology focus Dissemination,
  • Output
    Once20consejos20raCC81pidos20para20encontrar20datos20de20investigacioCC81n.pdf
    1120dicas20raCC81pidas20para20encontrar20dados20de20pesquisa.pdf