Tack Monica!
Håller med. De ser väldigt intressanta ut. Helgen är räddad!
Med vänlig hälsning
Margareta
From: Fdatastod [mailto:fdatastod-bounces at lists.sunet.se] On Behalf Of Monica Lassi
Sent: den 20 januari 2017 14:44
To: fdatastod at lists.sunet.se
Subject: [Fdatastod] VB: [Rdap] ACRL Book release: Curating Research Data - öppet
tillgängliga
Hej!
Goda nyheter: Curating Research Data, i två volymer, är nu öppet tillgänglig och ser
väldigt intressant ut. Se länkar direkt till de två volymerna i vb:at mail.
Trevlig helg,
/Monica
Från: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at
asis.org] För Lisa Johnston
Skickat: den 17 januari 2017 21:35
Till: Datacure; Research Data, Access and Preservation
Ã"mne: [Rdap] ACRL Book release: Curating Research Data
Hey folks!
Today ACRL posted the open access editions of the epic two-volume set titled Curating
Research Data on their website at
http://www.ala.org/acrl/publications/booksanddigitalresources/booksmonograp…!
Special shout out to the amazing chapter authors and case study contributors that I've
worked with to bring these books together.
* Volume
1<http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/publications/…
is a traditional edited volume with 12 chapters (list of chapter titles and authors below)
* Volume
2<http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/publications/…
is a how-to handbook of data curation techniques presented in 8 steps (from receive to
reuse) and includes 30 case studies written by practitioners at institutional and
disciplinary data repositories.
Enjoy!
Lisa
Curating Research Data, Volume One: Practical Strategies for Your Digital Repository
Table of Contents
Introduction to Data Curation
Lisa R. Johnston
Part I. Setting the Stage for Data Curation. Policies, Culture, and Collaboration
Chapter 1. Research and the Changing Nature of Data Repositories
Karen S. Baker and Ruth E. Duerr
Chapter 2. Institutional, Funder, and Journal Data Policies
Kristin Briney, Abigail Goben, and Lisa Zilinski
Chapter 3. Collaborative Research Data Curation Services: A View from Canada
Eugene Barsky, Larry Laliberté, Amber Leahey, and Leanne Trimble
Chapter 4. Practices Do Not Make Perfect: Disciplinary Data Sharing and Reuse Practices
and Their Implications for Repository Data Curation
Ixchel M. Faniel and Elizabeth Yakel
Chapter 5. Overlooked and Overrated Data Sharing: Why Some Scientists Are Confused and/or
Dismissive
Heidi J. Imker
Part II. Data Curation Services in Action
Chapter 6. Research Data Services Maturity in Academic Libraries
Inna Kouper, Kathleen Fear, Mayu Ishida, Christine Kollen, and Sarah C. Williams
Chapter 7. Extending Data Curation Service Models for Academic Library and Institutional
Repositories
Jon Wheeler
Chapter 8. Beyond Cost Recovery: Revenue Models and Practices for Data Repositories in
Academia
Karl Nilsen
Chapter 9. Current Outreach and Marketing Practices for Research Data Repositories
Katherine J. Gerwig
Part III. Preparing Data for the Future. Ethical and Appropriate Reuse of Data
Chapter 10. Open Exit: Reaching the End of the Data Life Cycle
Andrea Ogier, Natsuko Nicholls, and Ryan Speer
Chapter 11. The Current State of Meta-Repositories for Data
Cynthia R. Hudson Vitale
Chapter 12. Curation of Scientific Data at Risk of Loss: Data Rescue and Dissemination
Robert R. Downs and Robert S. Chen
Contributor Biographies
Curating Research Data, Volume Two: A Handbook of Current Practice
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Preliminary Step 0: Establish Your Data Curation Service
Step 1.0: Receive the Data
1.1 Recruit Data for Your Curation Service
1.2 Negotiate Deposit
1.3 Transfer Rights (Deposit Agreements)
1.4 Facilitate Data Transfer
1.5 Obtain Available Metadata and Documentation
1.6 Receive Notification of Data Arrival
Step 2.0: Appraisal and Selection Techniques that Mitigate Risks Inherent to Data
2.1 Appraisal
2.2 Risk Factors for Data Repositories
2.3 Inventory
2.4 Selection
2.5 Assign
Step 3.0: Processing and Treatment Actions for Data
3.1 Secure the Files
3.2 Create a Log of Actions Taken
3.3 Inspect the File Names and Structure
3.4 Open the Data Files
3.5 Attempt to Understand and Use the Data
3.6 Work with Author to Enhance the Submission
3.7 Consider the File Formats
3.8 File Arrangement and Description
Step 4.0: Ingest and Store Data in Your Repository
4.1 Ingest the Files
4.2 Store the Assets Securely
4.3 Develop Trust in Your Digital Repository
Step 5.0: Descriptive Metadata
5.1 Create and Apply Appropriate Metadata
5.2 Consider Disciplinary Metadata Standards for Data
Step 6.0: Access
6.1 Determine Appropriate Levels of Access
6.2 Apply the Terms of Use and Any Relevant Licenses
6.3 Contextualize the Data
6.4 Increase Exposure and Discovery
6.5 Apply Any Necessary Access Controls
6.6 Ensure Persistent Access and Encourage Appropriate Citation
6.7 Release Data for Access and Notify Author
Step 7.0: Preservation of Data for the Long Term
7.1 Preservation Planning for Long-Term Reuse
7.2 Monitor Preservation Needs and Take Action
Step 8.0: Reuse
8.1 Monitor Data Reuse
8.2 Collect Feedback about Data Reuse and Quality Issues
8.3 Provide Ongoing Support as Long as Necessary
8.4 Cease Data Curation
Brief Concluding Remarks and a Call to Action
Bibliography
Biographies
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lisa Johnston
Research Data Management/Curation Lead
and Co-Director of the University Digital Conservancy
University of Minnesota Libraries
108 Walter Library, Minneapolis, MN 55455
Hangouts: ljohnsto at umn.edu<mailto:ljohnsto at umn.edu> / Skype: ifylawwt
http://lib.umn.edu/datamanagement |
http://conservancy.umn.edu
ORCID:
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6908-9240