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Found 69 result(s)
Yoda is a research data management service that enables researchers to deposit, share, publish and preserve large amounts of research data during all stages of a research project. This service is managed and supported by an interdisciplinary team of university employees. The software has been developed at Utrecht University and is used by multiple organisations, both in the Netherlands and abroad. Yoda publishes data packages via Datacite. To find data publications use: https://public.yoda.uu.nl/, or the Datacite search engine: https://commons.datacite.org/doi.org?query=client.uid:delft.uu
Mountain Scholar is an open access repository service that collects, preserves, and provides access to digitized library collections and other scholarly and creative works from several academic entities within the state of Colorado. Colorado State University research data from the fall of 2022 and forward is available in Dryad; CSU legacy research data prior to fall 2022 is in Mountain Scholar.
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RADAR4Culture is a low-threshold and easy-to use service for sustainable publication and preservation of cultural heritage research data. It offers free publication for any data type and format according to the FAIR principles, independent of the researcher´s institutional affiliation. Through persistent identifiers (DOI) and a guaranteed retention period of at least 25 years, the research data remain available, citable and findable long-term. Currently, the offer is aimed exclusively at researchers at publicly funded research institutions and (art) universities as well as non-commercial academies, galleries, libraries, archives and museums in Germany. No contract is required and no data publication fees are charged. The researchers are responsible for the upload, organisation, annotation and curation of research data as well as the peer-review process (as an optional step) and finally their publication.
Iceland joined CLARIN ERIC on February 1st, 2020, after having been an observer since November 2018. The Ministry of Education, Science and Culture assigned The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies the role of leading partner in the Icelandic National Consortium and appointed Professor Emeritus Eiríkur Rögnvaldsson as National Coordinator, later replaced by Starkaður Barkarson, a project manager at The Árni Magnússon Institute. Most of the relevant institutions participate in the CLARIN-IS National Consortium. The Árni Magnússon Institute has already established a Metadata Providing Centre (CLARIN C-Centre) which hosts metadata for Icelandic language resources and makes them available through the Virtual Language Observatory. The aim is to establish a Service Providing Centre (CLARIN B-Centre) which will provide both service and access to resources and knowledge.
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The CORA. Repositori de dades de Recerca is a repository of open, curated and FAIR data that covers all academic disciplines. CORA. Repositori de dades de Recerca is a shared service provided by participating Catalan institutions (Universities and CERCA Research Centers). The repository is managed by the CSUC and technical infrastructure is based on the Dataverse application, developed by international developers and users led by Harvard University (https://dataverse.org).
The University of Reading Research Data Archive (the Archive) is a multidisciplinary online service for the registration, preservation and publication of research datasets produced or collected at the University of Reading.
The domain of the IDS repository is the German language, mainly in its current form (contemporary New High German). Its designated community are national and international researchers in German and general linguistics. As an institutional repository, the repository provides long term archival of two important IDS projects: the Deutsches Referenzkorpus (‘German Reference Corpus’, DeReKo), which curates a large corpus of written German language, and the Archiv für Gesprochenes Deutsch (‘Archive of Spoken German’, AGD), which curates several corpora of spoken German. In addition, the repository enables germanistic researchers from IDS and from other research facilities and universities to deposit their research data for long term archival of data and metadata arising from research projects.
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MIDAS is a national research data repository. The aim of MIDAS is to collect, process, store and analyse research data and other relevant information in all fields of knowledge, enabling free, easy and convenient access to the data via the Internet. MIDAS provides services for registered and unregistered users: students, listeners, academics, researchers, scientists, research administrators, other actors of the research and studies ecosystem, and all individuals interested in research data. MIDAS consists of the MIDAS portal and MIDAS user account. The MIDAS portal is a public space accessible to anyone interested in discovering and viewing published research Data and their metadata, whereas MIDAS user account is available to registered users only. MIDAS is managed by Vilnius University.
In collaboration with other centres in the Text+ consortium and in the CLARIN infrastructure, the CLARIND-UdS enables eHumanities by providing a service for hosting and processing language resources (notably corpora) for members of the research community. CLARIND-UdS centre thus contributes of lifting the fragmentation of language resources by assisting members of the research community in preparing language materials in such a way that easy discovery is ensured, interchange is facilitated and preservation is enabled by enriching such materials with meta-information, transforming them into sustainable formats and hosting them. We have an explicit mission to archive language resources especially multilingual corpora (parallel, comparable) and corpora including specific registers, both collected by associated researchers as well as researchers who are not affiliated with us.
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.
LINDAT/CLARIN is designed as a Czech “node” of Clarin ERIC (Common Language Resources and Technology Infrastructure). It also supports the goals of the META-NET language technology network. Both networks aim at collection, annotation, development and free sharing of language data and basic technologies between institutions and individuals both in science and in all types of research. The Clarin ERIC infrastructural project is more focused on humanities, while META-NET aims at the development of language technologies and applications. The data stored in the repository are already being used in scientific publications in the Czech Republic. In 2019 LINDAT/CLARIAH-CZ was established as a unification of two research infrastructures, LINDAT/CLARIN and DARIAH-CZ.
Europeana is the trusted source of cultural heritage brought to you by the Europeana Foundation and a large number of European cultural institutions, projects and partners. It’s a real piece of team work. Ideas and inspiration can be found within the millions of items on Europeana. These objects include: Images - paintings, drawings, maps, photos and pictures of museum objects Texts - books, newspapers, letters, diaries and archival papers Sounds - music and spoken word from cylinders, tapes, discs and radio broadcasts Videos - films, newsreels and TV broadcasts All texts are CC BY-SA, images and media licensed individually.
The ADS is an accredited digital repository for heritage data that supports research, learning and teaching with freely available, high quality and dependable digital resources by preserving and disseminating digital data in the long term. The ADS also promotes good practice in the use of digital data, provides technical advice to the heritage community, and supports the deployment of digital technologies.
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NAKALA is a repository dedicated to SSH research data in France. Given its generalist and multi-disciplinary nature, all types of data are accepted, although certain formats are recommended to ensure longterm data preservation. It has been developed and is hosted by Huma-Num, the French national research infrastructure for digital humanities.
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mediaTUM – the media and publications repository of the Technical University of Munich: mediaTUM supports the publication of digital documents and research data as well as the use of multimedia content in research and teaching.
LSE Research Online is the institutional repository for the London School of Economics and Political Science. LSE Research Online contains research produced by LSE staff, including journal articles, book chapters, books, working papers, conference papers and more.
UEL Research Repository: the institutional repository of open access publications and research data at the University of East London. As a research archive, it preserves and disseminates scholarly work created by members of the University of East London.
The UCD Digital Library is a platform for exploring cultural heritage, engaging with digital scholarship, and accessing research data. The UCD Digital Library allows you to search, browse and explore a growing collection of historical materials, photographs, art, interviews, letters, and other exciting content, that have been digitised and made freely available.
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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.
RADAR (Research And Digital Assets Repository) is the institutional repository of Oxford Brookes University. The role of RADAR is to share the intellectual product of Oxford Brookes freely and openly with the staff and students of Oxford Brookes or with the global academic and public community. ​RADAR has a variety of research collections (primarily containing original research publications) and teaching collections (primarily containing resources that support teaching at Oxford Brookes University). Some of the collections​ and resources on RADAR are freely accessible to the general public and other collections​ and resources are only accessible by current Oxford Brookes staff and students.
BOARD (Bicocca Open Archive Research Data) is the institutional data repository of the University of Milano-Bicocca. BOARD is an open, free-to-use research data repository, which enables members of University of Milano-Bicocca to make their research data publicly available. By depositing their research data in BOARD researchers can: - Make their research data citable - Share their data privately or publicly - Ensure long-term storage for their data - Keep access to all versions - Link their article to their data
The Tromsø Repository of Language and Linguistics (TROLLing) is a FAIR-aligned repository of linguistic data and statistical code. The archive is open access, which means that all information is available to everyone. All data are accompanied by searchable metadata that identify the researchers, the languages and linguistic phenomena involved, the statistical methods applied, and scholarly publications based on the data (where relevant). Linguists worldwide are invited to deposit data and statistical code used in their linguistic research. TROLLing is a special collection within DataverseNO (https://doi.org/10.17616/R3TV17), and C Centre within CLARIN (Common Language Resources and Technology Infrastructure, a networked federation of European data repositories; https://www.clarin.eu/), and harvested by their Virtual Language Observatory (VLO; https://vlo.clarin.eu/).