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Found 5 result(s)
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ICPSR maintains a data archive of more than 350,000 files of research in the social and behavioral sciences. It hosts 23 specialized collections of data in education, aging, criminal justice, substance abuse, terrorism, and other fields. ICPSR advances and expands social and behavioral research, acting as a global leader in data stewardship and providing rich data resources and responsive educational opportunities for present and future generations.
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ROHub is a holistic solution for the storage, lifecycle management and preservation of scientific investigations, campaigns and operational processes via research objects. It makes these resources available to others, allows to publish and release them through a DOI, and allows to discover and reuse pre-existing scientific knowledge. Built entirely around the research object concept and inspired by sustainable software management principles, ROHub is the reference platform implementing natively the full research object model and paradigm, which provides the backbone to a wealth of RO-centric applications and interfaces across different scientific communities.
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An online data management workbench and computing service provider for biology and related disciplines.
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Yoda is a data repository built by Utrecht University and hosted by SURF for the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Yoda can store and share all kinds of scientific research data in a safe way (encrypted, stored in multiple geo locations). Yoda takes care of publishing research data with its metadata as datasets and making them findable for different harvesters. Yoda, short for Your data, is an integrated digital environment to support all kind of researchers from different backgrounds during and after their research. Yoda is based on open source software iRODS. During the development of the key features the most important aim was to make daily life of researchers more easy as far as data management and the requirements of funders are concerned. Yoda publishes data packages via DataCite. Datacite Commons can be used to find data packages: https://commons.datacite.org/doi.org?query=client.uid:delft.vudata
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The Open Science Framework (OSF) is part network of research materials, part version control system, and part collaboration software. The purpose of the software is to support the scientist's workflow and help increase the alignment between scientific values and scientific practices. Document and archive studies. Move the organization and management of study materials from the desktop into the cloud. Labs can organize, share, and archive study materials among team members. Web-based project management reduces the likelihood of losing study materials due to computer malfunction, changing personnel, or just forgetting where you put the damn thing. Share and find materials. With a click, make study materials public so that other researchers can find, use and cite them. Find materials by other researchers to avoid reinventing something that already exists. Detail individual contribution. Assign citable, contributor credit to any research material - tools, analysis scripts, methods, measures, data. Increase transparency. Make as much of the scientific workflow public as desired - as it is developed or after publication of reports. Find public projects here. Registration. Registering materials can certify what was done in advance of data analysis, or confirm the exact state of the project at important points of the lifecycle such as manuscript submission or at the onset of data collection. Discover public registrations here. Manage scientific workflow. A structured, flexible system can provide efficiency gain to workflow and clarity to project objectives, as pictured.