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Found 23 result(s)
The Spiral Digital Repository is the Imperial College London institutional open access repository. This system allows you, as an author, to make your research documents open access without incurring additional publication costs. When you self-archive a research document in Spiral it becomes free for anyone to read. You can upload copies of your publications to Spiral using Symplectic Elements. All deposited content becomes searchable online.
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FDAT is a research data repository hosted by the University of Tübingen, designed to facilitate long-term archiving and publication of research data. Managed by the Information, Communication and Media Center (IKM), it primarily caters to the humanities and social sciences, while welcoming researchers from all scientific disciplines at the university. Committed to high-quality data management, FDAT emphasizes the importance of adhering to the FAIR Data Principles, promoting findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability of the research data it contains.
Merritt is a curation repository for the preservation of and access to the digital research data of the ten campus University of California system and external project collaborators. Merritt is supported by the University of California Curation Center (UC3) at the California Digital Library (CDL). While Merritt itself is content agnostic, accepting digital content regardless of domain, format, or structure, it is being used for management of research data, and it forms the basis for a number of domain-specific repositories, such as the ONEShare repository for earth and environmental science and the DataShare repository for life sciences. Merritt provides persistent identifiers, storage replication, fixity audit, complete version history, REST API, a comprehensive metadata catalog for discovery, ATOM-based syndication, and curatorially-defined collections, access control rules, and data use agreements (DUAs). Merritt content upload and download may each be curatorially-designated as public or restricted. Merritt DOIs are provided by UC3's EZID service, which is integrated with DataCite. All DOIs and associated metadata are automatically registered with DataCite and are harvested by Ex Libris PRIMO and Thomson Reuters Data Citation Index (DCI) for high-level discovery. Merritt is also a member node in the DataONE network; curatorially-designated data submitted to Merritt are automatically registered with DataONE for additional replication and federated discovery through the ONEMercury search/browse interface.
Kaggle is a platform for predictive modelling and analytics competitions in which statisticians and data miners compete to produce the best models for predicting and describing the datasets uploaded by companies and users. This crowdsourcing approach relies on the fact that there are countless strategies that can be applied to any predictive modelling task and it is impossible to know beforehand which technique or analyst will be most effective.
The range of CIRAD's research has given rise to numerous datasets and databases associating various types of data: primary (collected), secondary (analysed, aggregated, used for scientific articles, etc), qualitative and quantitative. These "collections" of research data are used for comparisons, to study processes and analyse change. They include: genetics and genomics data, data generated by trials and measurements (using laboratory instruments), data generated by modelling (interpolations, predictive models), long-term observation data (remote sensing, observatories, etc), data from surveys, cohorts, interviews with players.
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The Goethe University Data Repository (GUDe) provides a platform for its members to electronically archive, share, and publish their research data. GUDe is jointly operated by the University Library and the University Data Center of the Goethe University. The metadata of all public content is freely available and indexed by search engines as well as scientific web services. GUDe follows the FAIR principles for long-term accessibility (minimum 10 years), allows for reliable citation via DOIs as well as cooperative access to non-public data and operates on DSpace-CRIS v7. If you have any questions regarding the use of GUDe, please consult the user documentation.
OLOS is a Swiss-based data management portal tailored for researchers and institutions. Powerful yet easy to use, OLOS works with most tools and formats across all scientific disciplines to help researchers safely manage, publish and preserve their data. The solution was developed as part of a larger project focusing on Data Life Cycle Management (dlcm.ch) that aims to develop various services for research data management. Thanks to its highly modular architecture, OLOS can be adapted both to small institutions that need a "turnkey" solution and to larger ones that can rely on OLOS to complement what they have already implemented. OLOS is compatible with all formats in use in the different scientific disciplines and is based on modern technology that interconnects with researchers' environments (such as Electronic Laboratory Notebooks or Laboratory Information Management Systems).
UltraViolet is part of a suite of repositories at New York University that provide a home for research materials, operated as a partnership of the Division of Libraries and NYU IT's Research and Instruction Technology. UltraViolet provides faculty, students, and researchers within our university community with a place to deposit scholarly materials for open access and long-term preservation. UltraViolet also houses some NYU Libraries collections, including proprietary data collections.
Yareta is a repository service built on digital solutions for archiving, preserving and sharing research data that enable researchers and institutions of any disciplines to share and showcase their research results. The solution was developed as part of a larger project focusing on Data Life Cycle Management (dlcm.ch) that aims to develop various services for research data management. Thanks to its highly modular architecture, Yareta can be adapted both to small institutions that need a "turnkey" solution and to larger ones that can rely on Yareta to complement what they have already implemented. Yareta is compatible with all formats in use in the different scientific disciplines and is based on modern technology that interconnects with researchers' environments (such as Electronic Laboratory Notebooks or Laboratory Information Management Systems).
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sciencedata.dk is a research data store provided by DTU, the Danish Technical University, specifically aimed at researchers and scientists at Danish academic institutions. The service is intended for working with and sharing active research data as well as for safekeeping of large datasets. The data can be accessed and manipulated via a web interface, synchronization clients, file transfer clients or the command line. The service is built on and with open-source software from the ground up: FreeBSD, ZFS, Apache, PHP, ownCloud/Nextcloud. DTU is actively engaged in community efforts on developing research-specific functionality for data stores. Our servers are attached directly to the 10-Gigabit backbone of "Forskningsnettet" (the National Research and Education Network of Denmark) - implying that up and download speed from Danish academic institutions is in principle comparable to those of an external USB hard drive. Data store for research data allowing private sharing and sharing via links / persistent URLs.
RUresearch Data Portal is a subset of RUcore (Rutgers University Community Repository), provides a platform for Rutgers researchers to share their research data and supplementary resources with the global scholarly community. This data portal leverages all the capabilities of RUcore with additional tools and services specific to research data. It provides data in different clusters (research-genre) with excellent search facility; such as experimental data, multivariate data, discrete data, continuous data, time series data, etc. However it facilitates individual research portals that include the Video Mosaic Collaborative (VMC), an NSF-funded collection of mathematics education videos for Teaching and Research. Its' mission is to maintain the significant intellectual property of Rutgers University; thereby intended to provide open access and the greatest possible impact for digital data collections in a responsible manner to promote research and learning.
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Research Data Australia is the data discovery service of the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). The ARDC is supported by the Australian Government through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy Program. Research Data Australia helps you find, access, and reuse data for research from over one hundred Australian research organisations, government agencies, and cultural institutions. We do not store the data itself here but provide descriptions of, and links to, the data from our data publishing partners.
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The USN Research Data Archive is an institutional archive where research data produced and collected by University of South-East Norway's reseachers can be stored, made visible and accessible. The researcher can apply the necessary licenses and possibly put embargo and access restrictions on the research data.
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TUdatalib is the institutional repository of the TU Darmstadt for research data. It enables the structured storage of research data and descriptive metadata, long-term archiving (at least 10 years) and, if desired, the publication of data including DOI assignment. In addition there is a fine granular rights and role management.
The Maine Dataverse Network is a cloud-based data repository intended to act as a long-term archive and to facilitate data sharing among the research community in accordance with NSF, NIH, NASA and other granting authority data management plan requirements. The Maine Dataverse Network offers a convenient and secure method of sharing and archiving data and is made available to the Maine research community at no cost.
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REDU is the institutional open research data repository of the University of Campinas, Brazil. It contains research data produced by all research groups of the University, in a wide range of scientific domains, which are indexed by DataCite DOI. Created at the end of 2020, it is coordinated by a scientific and technical committee composed by data librarians, IT professionals, and scientists representing user groups. Implemented on top of Dataverse, it exports metadata using OAIS. Files with sensitive content (due to ethics or legal constraints) are not stored therein - rather, only their metadata is recorded in REDU, as well as contact information so that interested researchers can contact the persons responsible for the files for conditional subsequent access. It is being little by little populated, following the University's Open Science policies.
The Stanford Digital Repository (SDR) is Stanford Libraries' digital preservation system. The core repository provides “back-office” preservation services – data replication, auditing, media migration, and retrieval -- in a secure, sustainable, scalable stewardship environment. Scholars and researchers across disciplines at Stanford use SDR repository services to provide ongoing, persistent, reliable access to their research outputs.
The Arctic Data Center is the primary data and software repository for the Arctic section of NSF Polar Programs. The Center helps the research community to reproducibly preserve and discover all products of NSF-funded research in the Arctic, including data, metadata, software, documents, and provenance that links these together. The repository is open to contributions from NSF Arctic investigators, and data are released under an open license (CC-BY, CC0, depending on the choice of the contributor). All science, engineering, and education research supported by the NSF Arctic research program are included, such as Natural Sciences (Geoscience, Earth Science, Oceanography, Ecology, Atmospheric Science, Biology, etc.) and Social Sciences (Archeology, Anthropology, Social Science, etc.). Key to the initiative is the partnership between NCEAS at UC Santa Barbara, DataONE, and NOAA’s NCEI, each of which bring critical capabilities to the Center. Infrastructure from the successful NSF-sponsored DataONE federation of data repositories enables data replication to NCEI, providing both offsite and institutional diversity that are critical to long term preservation.
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The Universidad del Rosario Research data repository is an institutional iniciative launched in 2019 to preserve, provide access and promote the use of data resulting from Universidad del Rosario research projects. The Repository aims to consolidate an online, collaborative working space and data-sharing platform to support Universidad del Rosario researchers and their collaborators, and to ensure that research data is available to the community, in order to support further research and contribute to the democratization of knowledge. The Research data repository is the heart of an institutional strategy that seeks to ensure the generation of Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) data, with the aim of increasing its impact and visibility. This strategy follows the international philosophy of making research data “as open as possible and as closed as necessary”, in order to foster the expansion, valuation, acceleration and reusability of scientific research, but at the same time, safeguard the privacy of the subjects. The platform storage, preserves and facilitates the management of research data from all disciplines, generated by the researchers of all the schools and faculties of the University, that work together to ensure research with the highest standards of quality and scientific integrity, encouraging innovation for the benefit of society.