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An Introduction to Research Data Management Things To Do With Data – Michaelmas 2014 Slides provided by Research Support Team, IT Services, University.

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Presentation on theme: "An Introduction to Research Data Management Things To Do With Data – Michaelmas 2014 Slides provided by Research Support Team, IT Services, University."— Presentation transcript:

1 An Introduction to Research Data Management Things To Do With Data – Michaelmas 2014 Slides provided by Research Support Team, IT Services, University of Oxford

2 What does data include? “A reinterpretable representation of information in a formalized manner suitable for communication, interpretation, or processing.” Digital Curation Centre Slide adapted from the PrePARe Project

3 What does data include? Any information you use in your research Slide adapted from the PrePARe Project

4 What does research data management cover? Storage Organizing Preservation Documenting Sharing Choosing technology Versioning Structuring Backing up Curation Security

5 Relevant throughout the research process Planning and applying for funding Setting up and starting work Day-to-day work during the project Project conclusion

6 Carrots and sticks  Enable efficient day- to-day work  More time for the meat of the research process  Avoid problems in the future  University of Oxford Policy on the Management of Research Data and Records  Funding body requirements

7 University of Oxford policy Introduced July 2012

8 University of Oxford policy  The full policy can be viewed on the Research Data Oxford websiteResearch Data Oxford  Research data is defined as the information needed ‘to support or validate a research project’s observations, findings or outputs’  Research data should be:  Accurate, complete, identifiable, retrievable, and securely stored  Able to be made available to others

9 Funders’ requirements  Funding bodies are taking an increasing interest in what happens to research data  You may be required to make data publicly available at the end of a project  Many funders require a data management plan as part of grant applications  RDO website provides a summary of requirementssummary of requirements

10 Setting up and starting work Day-to-day work during the project Project conclusion

11 Data management plans  A document created early on in a project  While planning, applying for funding, or setting up  An initial plan may be expanded later  Details plans and expectations for data  Nature of data and its creation or acquisition  Storage and security  Preservation and sharing

12 Benefits of data management plans  Ask key questions before problems arise  Have time to look for solutions  Saves time and reduces stress  Many tasks are straightforward if planned from the beginning, but much harder in retrospect  A framework for ongoing review of data management practices

13 DMP Online  Online data management planning tool  Can be customized according to funding body https://dmponline.dcc.ac.uk/

14 Planning and applying for funding Day-to-day work during the project Project conclusion

15 What storage media are in use? How about file formats? Slide adapted from the PrePARe Project

16 Storage  Departmental IT support may be able to provide server space or a shared drive  IT Services’ NSMS offers server rental and management, storage on the University’s private cloud, and other storage solutionsNSMS

17 Data security  Is there data that needs special treatment?  Sensitive or confidential information  Commercial potential  InfoSec at IT Services can provide advice – see http://www.it.ox.ac.uk/infosec/ for more detailshttp://www.it.ox.ac.uk/infosec/

18 http://blogs.ch.cam.ac.uk/pmr/2011/08/01/why-you-need-a-data-management-plan/ Backing up is easier than replacing lost data… Slide adapted from the PrePARe Project

19 LOCKSS – Lots Of Copies Keeps Stuff Safe Keep copies in different places Can the process be automated? Slide adapted from the PrePARe Project

20 IT Services: data back-up on the HFS  HFS is Oxford’s central back-up and archiving service HFS  Free of charge to University staff and postgraduates  Automated back-ups of machines connected to University network  Copies kept in multiple places

21 Choosing the right tools for the job  Are current software and methods meeting your needs?  Sticking with old familiars can be false economy  Ask friends and colleagues for recommendations

22 Tools and technologies for managing data  Spreadsheets may be fine for small, straightforward tasks  More complex projects might benefit from a relational database  Microsoft Access, FileMaker Pro, etc.  Or a qualitative data analysis package  Nvivo, Atlas.ti, etc.  Or an XML database...

23 ORDS – Online Research Database Service  Specifically designed for academic research data  Cloud-hosted and automatically backed up  Web interface makes collaboration straightforward  If desired, databases can easily be made public  Designed to permit easy archiving  Launched in the summer of 2014  http://ords.ox.ac.uk/ http://ords.ox.ac.uk/

24 Other data management tools and systems  LabTrove – an electronic lab notebook system LabTrove  NeuroHub – an information environment for managing data from lab-based research NeuroHub  DataStage – a secure personalized file management environment DataStage  myExperiment – record and share scientific workflows myExperiment  Taverna – for managing scientific workflows Taverna

25 Research Skills Toolkit  Website and hands- on workshops  A guide to software, University services, and other tools and resources for research http://www.skillstoolkit.ox.ac.uk/

26 Planning and applying for funding Setting up and starting work Project conclusion

27 What’s obvious now might not be in a few months, years, decades… Adapted from ‘Clay Tablets with Linear B Script’ by Dennis, via Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/archer10/5692813531 /http://www.flickr.com/photos/archer10/5692813531 / MAKE SURE YOU CAN UNDERSTAND IT LATER Slide adapted from the PrePARe Project

28 Documentation and metadata  Documentation is the contextual information required to make data intelligible and aid interpretation  A users’ guide to data  May be given at study level or data level  Metadata is similar, but usually more structured  Conforms to set standards  Machine readable 2014 HBS Survey Results Joe Bloggs

29

30 M. Farinelli et al. (2012) PLoS ONE 7(3): e34047 Who created the data, when and why Description of the item Methodology and methods Units of measurement Definitions of jargon, acronyms and code References to related data Documentation – what needs to be included www.texample.net Slide adapted from the PrePARe Project

31 Maintaining consistency  Agree a set of standard working practices as early as possible in a project  Method of recording what’s been done to data – and who did it  File naming conventions  Version information  Have these clearly documented, and store the documentation centrally

32 Planning and applying for funding Setting up and starting work Day-to- day work during the project

33 Long term solutions  Data repositories or archives offer a secure long-term home for research data  Data can be embargoed if needed  Databib and Re3Data.org offer searchable catalogues of repositories DatabibRe3Data.org  Figshare offers a DIY option Figshare

34 ORA-Data (formerly known as DataBank)  University of Oxford’s institutional data archive  Will work alongside ORA-Publications to form a composite University archive  Long term preservation for datasets without another natural home  Plus records for data archived elsewhere

35 Planning ahead  Data sharing needs to be planned from the beginning of a project  With sensitive data, consent may be needed  Third party data may come with restrictions  If data is destined for a particular archive, they may have specific requirements  Do they use a specific metadata schema, for example?

36 Data licensing  A licence clarifies the conditions for accessing and making use of a dataset  User knows what’s allowed without asking further permission  Doesn’t exclude possibility of specific requests to go beyond the terms of the licence  Licences used for data include Creative Commons and Open Data CommonsCreative CommonsOpen Data Commons

37 Further resources

38 Digital Curation Centre A national service providing advice and resources for the whole research data lifecycle http://www.dcc.ac.uk/

39 UK Data Archive  Largest UK collection of social sciences and humanities data  Advice on best practice for creating, preparing, storing and sharing data http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/

40 IT Services: Research Support Team  Can assist with technical aspects of research projects at all stages of the project lifecycle  Help with DMPs, selecting software or storage, modelling data, etc.  But the earlier you seek advice, the better  For more information, see: http://research.it.ox.ac.uk/ http://research.it.ox.ac.uk/

41 Research Data Oxford website  Oxford’s central advisory website  University policy is available  Questions? Email researchdata @ox.ac.uk researchdata @ox.ac.uk http://researchdata.ox.ac.uk/

42 Any questions? Ask now, or email us on researchdata@ox.ac.uk researchdata@ox.ac.uk

43 Rights and re-use  This presentation is part of a series of research data management training resources prepared by the Research Support Team at IT Services, University of Oxford.Research Support Team  Parts of this slideshow draw on material produced as part of the Oxford-based DaMaRO Project, and on resources produced by the PrePARe ProjectDaMaRO Project PrePARe Project  With the exception of clip art used with permission from Microsoft, and commercial logos and trademarks, and images specifically credited to other sources, the slideshow is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike LicenseMicrosoft Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike License  Within the terms of this licence, we actively encourage sharing, adaptation, and re-use of this material


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