D-Lib MagazineJanuary/February 2011 Access to Research DataIntroduction From the Guest Editors
Jan Brase AbstractScientists around the world are addressing the need to increase access to research data. Science is international and global cooperation is imperative. DataCite, launched in December 2009, is an association of more than a dozen members from 10 countries and growing, that enables researchers to locate, identify, and cite research datasets with confidence, and plays a global leadership role in promoting the use of persistent identifiers for datasets. In June 2010, the first DataCite summer meeting took place in Hannover, Germany and provided a forum for 25 speakers and nearly 100 participants from Europe, North America and Australia to exchange information for handling research data. This special issue of D-Lib Magazine includes eight articles derived from talks given at the summer meeting and one additional article on the quality of research data. Together, these articles provide a snapshot of the state-of-the-art on these topics. IntroductionAccess to research data has become a global imperative. Around the world, the organisations that fund scientific research at the national level are addressing the need to increase awareness of, and accessibility to, research data. Nevertheless science itself is international. Scientists participate in global unions, associate themselves with their disciplines, and collaborate in projects. They share results with colleagues all over the world and use information from many global sources. In order to address the challenge of increasing access to research data, an effective approach much take this dual nature into account. It must encourage global cooperation for data access via national representatives:
These insights underlay our work to establish DataCite an international association that aims to support researchers by enabling them to locate, identify, and cite research datasets with confidence. DataCite was launched on December 1st 2009 in London. As of December 2010, its international membership has grown to include:
German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB) Further countries and organisations are encouraged to join the association. DataCite plays a global leadership role promoting the use of persistent identifiers for datasets. Through its members, it establishes and promotes common methods, best practices, and guidance. The member organisations work independently with data centres and other holders of research data sets in their own domains. As science is global with individual researchers working and publishing, DataCite is global with local partners offering services and advice where they are needed by the scientists. Identifying datasetsAs Nelson points out in [doi:10.1038/461160a], nothing exists in any useful way until it is identified. Providing datasets with identifiers is an absolutely essential pre-requisite for citing, locating, retrieving, using, and even receiving credit for creating them. As a consequence, DataCite has focused on providing identifiers for datasets that support these uses. While DataCite supports a variety of identifier schemes, the focus of its work has been to use Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) for datasets. A DOI® name is used to cite and link to electronic resources. DOI names are widely used for scientific information and are the most common method in place to identify scientific articles. A DOI name can refer to any sort of resource including research data. The DOI® System differs from other reference systems commonly used on the Internet, such as the URL. A DOI name is permanently linked to the resource itself, not just to the place where it is located a DOI is a name, not an address. A major advantage of using the DOI System for data is that scientists, publishers, and libraries can use the same syntax and technical infrastructure for datasets that are already in use for research articles. The DOI System offers persistent stable references to scientific content and an easy way to connect the article with the underlying data. For example: The dataset: Storz, D et al. (2009): is a supplement to the article: Storz, David; Schulz, Hartmut; Waniek, Joanna J; Schulz-Bull, Detlef; Kucera, Michal (2009): Seasonal and interannual variability of the planktic foraminiferal flux in the vicinity of the Azores Current. Deep-Sea Research Part I-Oceanographic Research Papers, 56(1), 107-124, doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2008.08.009 Since 2005, TIB has been a DOI Registration Agency with a focus on registering research data. TIB provided DOI registration and core metadata services for datasets. The research data was held at data centres or other trusted institutions. The content holders are responsible for quality assurance, metadata creation, storage and access. DataCite as an international initiativeAt the end of 2006, TIB established contact with Library of ETH Zürich in Switzerland, which was interested in using the same infrastructure and approach to assign DOI names to datasets. From this collaboration, the core idea of DataCite was born. By March 2009, nine organisations signed a Memorandum of Understanding, and in December 2009 DataCite was founded. By December 2010 the DataCite members have together registered over one million scientific objects with DOI names. In June 2010, the first DataCite summer meeting took place in Hannover Germany. The theme of the meeting was "Making datasets visible and accessible" and it provided a forum for data centres to exchange experience, workflows and standards for the handling of research data. It brought together 25 speakers and nearly 100 participants from Europe, North America and Australia to discuss:
In this special issue of D-Lib Magazine on data you will find eight publications derived from talks given at the summer meeting, as well as this introduction and one additional article on the quality of research data. They provide a snapshot of the state-of-the-art on these topics. We hope to see you all at the next DataCite summer meeting in September 2011 in California. AcknowledgementsWe would like to thank Larry Lannom and Catherine Rey from D-Lib for giving us the opportunity to make this special issue a reality. Furthermore, we would like to thank Irina Sens from the German National Library of Science and Technology for her most valuable help in the editorial work. About the Authors
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