DataShare | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 20 2008 | data management, articles, data curation, JISC
DataShare | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 19 2008 | data management, repositories, project, data curation, australia, articles
This article describes the work currently underway at Monash University to rethink the role of repositories in supporting data management. It first describes the context within which the work has taken place and some of the local factors that have contributed to the inception and continuation of this work. It then introduces the idea of a Data Curation Continuum and describes the various continua that might be applicable in a repository data management context. The article then discusses some of the implications of this approach, before reviewing related work.
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DataShare | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 20 2007 | data archives, data management, data sharing, institutional repositories, articles
There's also an open access version at http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/41214
Findings – The key message is that by visualizing the role of repositories explicitly in the life cycle of the social science research enterprise, the ways that the partnerships work will be clear. These workings can be seen as a sequence of reciprocal information flows between parties to the process, triggers that signal that one party or another has a task to perform, and hand-offs of information from one party to another that take place at crucial moments. This approach envisions both cooperation and specialization.
Author(s): Ann G. Green, Myron P. Gutmann
Journal: OCLC Systems & Services
ISSN: 1065-075X
Year: 2007 Volume: 23 Issue: 1 Page: 35 - 53
DOI: 10.1108/10650750710720757
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing LimitedShareViewed: 3 Times
DataShare | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 20 2007 | data management, data sharing, JISC, project, disciplinary differences, articles, Edinburgh
Findings – The paper finds that significant support was expressed for the provision of bi-directional links between source and output repositories, tempered by a limited knowledge of repositories among the survey constituency and the need for reassurance on measures for the protection of data ownership. Diversity in the application of good data management practice is marked both between and within each of the disciplines surveyed, with solutions adopted characterised by a culture of self-sufficiency and the use of repositories driven by practical research requirements. Common areas for improvement have been recognised across the disciplines, notably in the processes described for the assignment of metadata, and opportunities for expert assistance in data management were identified.
Author(s): Graham Pryor
Journal: OCLC Systems & Services
ISSN: 1065-075X
Year: 2007 Volume: 23 Issue: 1 Page: 70 - 78
DOI: 10.1108/10650750710720775
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing LimitedShareViewed: 2 Times


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