Getting research data ‘out there’ : collaborative solutions to identifying, describing and making research data more visible


Autoria(s): Milne, Craig; Thompson, Ellen E.; De Vine, Lance
Data(s)

01/02/2011

Resumo

At QUT research data refers to information that is generated or collected to be used as primary sources in the production of original research results, and which would be required to validate or replicate research findings (Callan, De Vine, & Baker, 2010). Making publicly funded research data discoverable by the broader research community and the public is a key aim of the Australian National Data Service (ANDS). Queensland University of Technology (QUT) has been innovating in this space by undertaking mutually dependant technical and content (metadata) focused projects funded by ANDS. Research Data Librarians identified and described datasets generated from Category 1 funded research at QUT, by interviewing researchers, collecting metadata and fashioning metadata records for upload to the Australian Research Data commons (ARDC) and exposure through the Research Data Australia interface. In parallel to this project, a Research Data Management Service and Metadata hub project were being undertaken by QUT High Performance Computing & Research Support specialists. These projects will collectively store and aggregate QUT’s metadata and research data from multiple repositories and administration systems and contribute metadata directly by OAI-PMH compliant feed to RDA. The pioneering nature of the work has resulted in a collaborative project dynamic where good data management practices and the discoverability and sharing of research data were the shared drivers for all activity. Each project’s development and progress was dependent on feedback from the other. The metadata structure evolved in tandem with the development of the repository and the development of the repository interface responded to meet the needs of the data interview process. The project environment was one of bottom-up collaborative approaches to process and system development which matched top-down strategic alliances crossing organisational boundaries in order to provide the deliverables required by ANDS. This paper showcases the work undertaken at QUT, focusing on the Seeding the Commons project as a case study, and illustrates how the data management projects are interconnected. It describes the processes and systems being established to make QUT research data more visible and the nature of the collaborations between organisational areas required to achieve this. The paper concludes with the Seeding the Commons project outcomes and the contribution this project made to getting more research data ‘out there’.

Formato

application/pdf

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40081/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40081/2/PRE_InfoOnline_Final.pdf

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40081/4/c40081.pdf

http://www.information-online.com.au/sb_clients/iog/bin/iog_programme_2011_B2.cfm?vm_key=B48198D1-1422-0982-EB3E3F891965C07E

Milne, Craig, Thompson, Ellen E., & De Vine, Lance (2011) Getting research data ‘out there’ : collaborative solutions to identifying, describing and making research data more visible. In Australian Library and Information Association 15th Conference and Exhibition : Information Online 2011, 1-3 February 2011, Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre, Sydney, NSW. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2011 The Authors.

Fonte

Division of Technology, Information and Learning Support; High Performance Computing and Research Support

Palavras-Chave #080600 INFORMATION SYSTEMS #080700 LIBRARY AND INFORMATION STUDIES #Data Repository #Metadata #Research Data Management #HERN #Research data
Tipo

Conference Paper