planning for research data management

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Planning for Research Data Management 7 th February 2017 Wendy Mears, Research Support Librarian [email protected]

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Page 1: Planning for Research Data Management

Planning for

Research Data Management

7th February 2017

Wendy Mears,

Research Support Librarian

[email protected]

Page 3: Planning for Research Data Management

What is Research Data

Management?“Research data management concerns the organisation of data, from its entry to the

research cycle through to the dissemination and archiving of valuable results. It aims to ensure reliable verification of results, and permits new and innovative research built on

existing information."

Digital Curation Centre (2011)

Making the Case for Research Data Managementhttp://www.dcc.ac.uk/sites/default/files/documents/publications/

Making%20the%20case.pdf

http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/create-

manage/life-cycle

Page 4: Planning for Research Data Management

Why bother?

Page 5: Planning for Research Data Management

Or even worse...

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Good data management...

• Helps you work more

efficiently and effectively

– Save time and reduce

frustration

– Highlight patterns or

connections that might

otherwise be missed

• Enable data re-use and

sharing

• Allow you to meet funders’

and institutional requirements

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Benefits of data sharing...

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OU Principles of

Research Data Management

“Research data must be managed to the highest standards throughout their life-cycle in order to support excellence in research practice.

In keeping with OU principles of open-ness, it is expected that research data will be open and accessible to other researchers, as soon as appropriate and verifiable, subject to the application of appropriate safeguards relating to the sensitivity of the data and legal requirements.”

OU Principles of Research Data Management, April 2013http://intranet.open.ac.uk/research-school/strategy-info-

governance/docs/CoPamendedJuly2013mergedwithappendix-forintranet.pdf

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Data Management Planning

• Make informed decisions to anticipate

and avoid problems

• Avoid duplication, data loss and

security breaches

• Develop procedures early on for

consistency

• Ensure data are accurate, complete,

reliable and secure

• Save time and effort – make your life

easier!

Data Management Plans are useful whenever

you are creating data to:

Page 10: Planning for Research Data Management

Data Management Planning

DMPOnline

https://dmponline.dcc.ac.uk

A web-based tool to help you

write DMPs according to

different requirements. DCC,

funder and OU guidance.

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The rest of the session...

Page 12: Planning for Research Data Management

“Write a paragraph on the aim

and purpose of your research.”

1. Introduction and Context

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1. Introduction and Context

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“Describe the data aspects of your

research, how you will capture/generate

them, the file formats you are using and

why. Mention how metadata will be created

to describe the data, and your reasons for

choosing particular data standards and

approaches.”

2. Data types, formats,

standards and capture methods

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2. Data types, formats,

standards and capture methods

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2. Data types, formats,

standards and capture methods

Metadata tips:

• Use disciplinary standards

• Create a data file

• Use file properties

• Use functions in data

analysis software, e.g.

NVIVO, R, SPSS, Electronic

Lab Notebooks

Page 17: Planning for Research Data Management

2. Data types, formats,

standards and capture methods

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“Detail any ethical and privacy issues,

including the consent of participants.

Explain the copyright/IPR and whether

there are any data licensing issues – either

for data you are reusing, or your data which

you will make available to others.”

3. Ethics and Intellectual Property

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3. Ethics and Intellectual

Property

Sharing sensitive data:

• Gain consent

• Anonymise

• Restrict access

• Lock down (with

justification)

Page 22: Planning for Research Data Management

3. Ethics and Intellectual

Property

Intellectual Property:

• Secondary data use

• Understanding open

licences

• Who owns IP of

your data?

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3. Ethics and Intellectual

Property

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“Note who would be interested in your data,

and describe how you will make them

available (with any restrictions). Detail any

reasons not to share, as well as embargo

periods or if you want time to exploit your

data for publishing.”

4. Access, Data Sharing

and Re-use

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4. Access, Data Sharing and

Re-use

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4. Access, Data Sharing and

Re-use

Page 27: Planning for Research Data Management

4. Access, Data Sharing and

Re-useLicensing your data

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ORDO

Online data sharing services

• Figshare

• Zenodo

• CKAN DataHub

• Mendeley Data

Directories

• re3data

Funders’ repository services

• UK Data Service ReShare

• NERC data centres

4. Access, Data Sharing and

Re-use

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4. Access, Data Sharing and

Re-use

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“Give a rough idea of data volume. Say

where and on what media you will store

data, and how they will be backed-up.

Mention security measures to protect data

which are sensitive or valuable.”

5. Short-term storage and data

management

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5. Short-term Storage and

Data Management

• Follow the 3-2-1 rule:

• 3 copies

• At least 2 formats

• 1 offsite

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• Shared areas or SharePoint

• Zendto

• Be wary of Dropbox & similar

• ORDO

IT support for research:

http://intranet6.open.ac.uk/library/main/supporting-ou-

research/research-data-management/creating-your-data

5. Short-term Storage and

Data Management

Page 34: Planning for Research Data Management

• Thinking ahead will help when you need to share/archive

your data

• Define processes at project start

• Think about:

– File naming and versioning

– File directory structure

– Metadata

– File formats

– Quality assurance

– Data security

5. Short-term Storage and

Data Management

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5. Short-term Storage and

Data Management

Page 36: Planning for Research Data Management

“Consider what data are worth selecting for

long-term access and preservation and how

you will need to prepare those data for

archiving. Say where you intend to deposit

the data.”

6. Deposit and long-term

preservation

Page 37: Planning for Research Data Management

6. Deposit and long-term

preservation

Deciding what to keep:

• Raw data

• Derived data

• Data underpinning publications

• Code

• Methods

What are research data in your context?

What would others need to understand your research?

Page 38: Planning for Research Data Management

6. Deposit and long-term

preservation

To allow long-term access to data:

• Don't use obscure formats

• Don't use obscure media

• Don't rely on technology being

available

• Provide sufficient documentation

Page 39: Planning for Research Data Management

For preservation, file formats should be…

• Unencrypted

• Uncompressed

• Non-proprietary/patent-encumbered

• Open, documented standard

• Standard representation (ASCII, Unicode)

Type Recommended Avoid for data sharing

Tabular data CSV, TSV, SPSS portable Excel

Text Plain text, HTML, RTF

PDF/A only if layout matters

Word

Media Container: MP4, Ogg

Codec: Theora, Dirac, FLAC

Quicktime

H264

Images TIFF, JPEG2000, PNG GIF, JPG

Structured data XML, RDF RDBMS

Further examples: http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/create-manage/format/formats-table

6. Deposit and long-term

preservation

Page 40: Planning for Research Data Management

• Metadata is additional information that is required to

make sense of your files – it’s data about data.

Guidance on disciplinary metadata standards: http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/metadata-

standards

6. Deposit and long-term

preservation

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6. Deposit and long-term

preservation

Page 42: Planning for Research Data Management

Library ServicesHow we can help

• Data Management Plan checking

• Support with setting up new projects

• Advice on preparation of data for sharing

• ORDO

• Online guidance

• Enquiries

Email: [email protected]

Page 43: Planning for Research Data Management

Useful links

• The OU Research Data Management intranet site: http://intranet6.open.ac.uk/library/main/supporting-ou-research/research-data-management

• VRE: http://www.open.ac.uk/students/research/activities/lists/organising-your-research

• Digital Curation Centre: http://www.dcc.ac.uk/

• DMPOnline: https://dmponline.dcc.ac.uk/

• UK Data Archive: http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/

• MANTRA: http://datalib.edina.ac.uk/mantra/

• The Orb: http://open.ac.uk/blogs/the_orb

Page 44: Planning for Research Data Management

Reflection

and

Questions

Page 45: Planning for Research Data Management

Image credits

Other cartoons from the Research Data Alliance 4th Plenary, Amsterdam 2014:

https://rd-alliance.org/plenary-meetings/fourth-plenary/plenary-cartoons.html (CC-BY)

BASF (2007) Crop Design – the fine art of gene discovery, https://www.flickr.com/photos/basf/4837267013 (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Jay Oliver (2005) UGA research in Tifton, GA. June 2005, https://www.flickr.com/photos/ugacommunications/6254516052 (CC BY-NC 2.0)

Teddy-rised (2008) Making every litter count, https://www.flickr.com/photos/teddy-rised/2947952302 (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Stan Leary (2009) University of Georgia Griffin Campus:Research, https://www.flickr.com/photos/ugacommunications/6254368548 (CC BY-NC 2.0)

Morten Oddvik (2011) Papers, https://www.flickr.com/photos/mortsan/5430418545 (CC BY 2.0)

Lars Rosengreen (2012) Using a GoPro camera to collect data on pollinators, https://www.flickr.com/photos/46369606@N04/7543827396/ (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Casldlyrose (2009) Be Prepared https://www.flickr.com/photos/calsidyrose/3552473207 (CC-BY 2.0)

Caleb Roenigk (2012) Writing? Yeah. https://www.flickr.com/photos/crdot/6855538268/ (CC-BY 2.0)

Jamie Henderson (2010) Day 22 https://www.flickr.com/photos/xelcise/4296734826 (CC-BY-NC-ND 2.0)

PHDComics.com (2007) http://www.phdcomics.com/comics/archive.php?comicid=814 (CC-BY 2.0)

Sybren Stuvel (2008) Frustration https://www.flickr.com/photos/sybrenstuvel (CC-BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Brian Yap (2012) Blowing Questions https://www.flickr.com/photos/sybrenstuvel (CC-BY-NC 2.0)