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Found 104 result(s)
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The Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) is a national trusted digital repository (TDR) for Ireland’s social and cultural data. We preserve, curate, and provide sustained access to a wealth of Ireland’s humanities and social sciences data through a single online portal. The repository houses unique and important collections from a variety of organisations including higher education institutions, cultural institutions, government agencies, and specialist archives. DRI has staff members from a wide variety of backgrounds, including software engineers, designers, digital archivists and librarians, data curators, policy and requirements specialists, educators, project managers, social scientists and humanities scholars. DRI is certified by the CoreTrustSeal, the current TDR standard widely recommended for best practice in Open Science. In addition to providing trusted digital repository services, the DRI is also Ireland’s research centre for best practices in digital archiving, repository infrastructures, preservation policy, research data management and advocacy at the national and European levels. DRI contributes to policy making nationally (e.g. via the National Open Research Forum and the IRC), and internationally, including European Commission expert groups, the DPC, RDA and the OECD.
The IMLS conducts annual surveys of public and state libraries in the US that have response rates near 100%. Data is compiled for states, library systems, and individual library branches and includes statistics for circulation, visits, staff, expenditures, and more. Data is available in two formats: MS Access and flat file, plain text. Data for museums is now included.
RunMyCode is a novel cloud-based platform that enables scientists to openly share the code and data that underlie their research publications. The web service only requires a web browser as all calculations are done on a dedicated cloud computer. Once the results are ready, they are automatically displayed to the user.
The UK Data Archive, based at the University of Essex, is curator of the largest collection of digital data in the social sciences and humanities in the United Kingdom. With several thousand datasets relating to society, both historical and contemporary, our Archive is a vital resource for researchers, teachers and learners. We are an internationally acknowledged centre of expertise in the areas of acquiring, curating and providing access to data. We are the lead partner in the UK Data Service (https://service.re3data.org/repository/r3d100010230) through which data users can browse collections online and register to analyse and download them. Open Data collections are available for anyone to use. The UK Data Archive is a Trusted Digital Repository (TDR) certified against the CoreTrustSeal (https://www.coretrustseal.org/) and certified against ISO27001 for Information Security (https://www.iso.org/isoiec-27001-information-security.html).
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The City of Calgary’s Open Data Catalogue provides public access to information and data managed by The City. The Open Data Catalogue contains hundreds of datasets which are available in multiple file formats and can be downloaded for free. The data may be used for any purpose subject to the Open Data Catalogue Terms of Use. By providing public access to City data, we are not only promoting transparency in government, but also innovation within our community.
The National Archives of the Netherlands (Nationaal Archief), which is situated in The Hague, holds over 3.5 million records that have been created by the central government, organisations and individuals and are of national significance. Many records relate to the colonial and trading history of the Netherlands in the period from 1600 to 1975. The Dutch presence in countries in North and South America, Africa and Asia is reflected within these collections.
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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).
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Phaidra Universität Wien, is the innovative whole-university digital asset management system with long-term archiving functions, offers the possibility to archive valuable data university-wide with permanent security and systematic input, offering multilingual access using metadata (data about data), thus providing worldwide availability around the clock. As a constant data pool for administration, research and teaching, resources can be used flexibly, where continual citability allows the exact location and retrieval of prepared digital objects.
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Welcome to the transparency portal of the city of Karlsruhe, your central contact point for open data and documents of the city of Karlsruhe. On this portal you will find documents and reports as well as machine-readable data sets ("open data"). You may - under a few conditions - distribute, edit and also commercially use this information free of charge. We are happy if interesting projects arise from this - and if you tell us about your project. The information offered is constantly being expanded.
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The Australian Data Archive (ADA) provides a national service for the collection and preservation of digital research data and to make these data available for secondary analysis by academic researchers and other users. Data are stored in seven sub-archives: Social Science, Historical, Indigenous, Longitudinal, Qualitative, Crime & Justice and International. Along with Australian data, ADA International is also a repository for studies by Australian researchers conducted in other countries, particularly throughout the Asia-Pacific region. The ADA International data catalogue includes links to studies from countries including New Zealand, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, and several other countries. In 2017 the archive systems moved from the existing Nesstar platform to the new ADA Dataverse platform https://dataverse.ada.edu.au/
The Prototype Data Portal allows to retrieve Data from World Data System (WDS) members. WDS ensures the long-term stewardship and provision of quality-assessed data and data services to the international science community and other stakeholders
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Arquivo.pt is a research infrastructure that preserves millions of files collected from the web since 1996 and provides a public search service over this information. It contains information in several languages. Periodically it collects and stores information published on the web. Then, it processes the collect data to make it searchable, providing a “Google-like” service that enables searching the past web (English user interface available at https://arquivo.pt/?l=en). This preservation workflow is performed through a large-scale distributed information system and can also accessed through API (https://arquivo.pt/api).
myExperiment is a collaborative environment where scientists can safely publish their workflows and in silico experiments, share them with groups and find those of others. Workflows, other digital objects and bundles (called Packs) can now be swapped, sorted and searched like photos and videos on the Web. Unlike Facebook or MySpace, myExperiment fully understands the needs of the researcher and makes it really easy for the next generation of scientists to contribute to a pool of scientific methods, build communities and form relationships — reducing time-to-experiment, sharing expertise and avoiding reinvention. myExperiment is now the largest public repository of scientific workflows.
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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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Thai National Research Repository (TNRR) is a central database of science, research, and innovation of Thailand managed by the National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT) under the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation (MHESI) Act B.E. 2562 (2019). The TNRR system serves and disseminates an extensive collection of information to the public as open access to research and innovation knowledge. The goal is to be the system that provides information services on Thailand's research findings. This information is collected from academic institutes and information-oriented government agencies in Thailand. In other words, the data in the TNRR system is accumulated from 3 national databases including 1. National Research Innovation and Information System (NRIIS), 2. Research agencies within Thailand’s research and innovation ecosystem that have agreed to share their data; including research projects, research results, bodies of knowledge, theses, as well as various inventions and innovations; and 3. Other related databases of agencies that have shared their data for audit purposes and to improve the operation of the central database, such as the Department of Provincial Administration, the Department of Intellectual Property, and the Department of Business Development, etc. Thai National Research Repository (TNRR) also provides open data of research findings via API which can be accessed at https://tnrr.nriis.go.th/#/service/opendata and https://opendata.nrct.go.th/en/
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The Research Data Gouv platform is the French national federated platform for open and shared research data serving the national scientific community. This platform was an integral part of the Second National Plan for Open Science (PNSO) and offers a multidisciplinary data repository, a registry which reports data hosted in other repositories and a web portal. The multidisciplinary repository is a sovereign publishing solution for sharing and opening up data for communities which are yet to set up their own recognised thematic repository.
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OECD iLibrary is the online library of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) featuring its books, papers and statistics and is the gateway to OECD’s analysis and data. It replaced SourceOECD in July 2010. OECD iLibrary also contains content published by the International Energy Agency (IEA), the Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA), the OECD Development Centre, PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment), and the International Transport Forum (ITF). OECD iLibrary presents all content so users can find - and cite - tables and databases as easily as articles or chapters in any available format: PDF, WEB, XLS, DATA, ePUB, READ.
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RADAR offers researchers at publicly funded universities and non-academic research institutions in Germany a customized and user-friendly repository for archiving and publication of research data independent of discipline and format. The administration of the service, the individual workflows for uploading, organising and annotating the research data with metadata as well as the curation of the datasets and optional quality assurance through peer review are the responsibility of the using institution. For data archiving, data providers can flexibly choose retention periods (5, 10, 15 years) and define access rights. Published datasets are kept for at least 25 years, they are always assigned a DOI via DataCite and can thus be internationally identified and cited. RADAR is operated exclusively on servers in Germany. The data are stored in three copies at two locations. All contracts are subject to German law.