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Found 183 result(s)
Data@Lincoln is the research data repository for Lincoln University (New Zealand). Datasets may stand alone, or may consist of appendices to theses, or figures or other supplementary material to journal articles and other publications.
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UBC Dataverse Collection is a free research data repository for our faculty, students and staff. The platform makes it possible for researchers to deposit data, create appropriate metadata, obtain DOIs for permanent links, and maintain version control of their datasets. All files are held in a secure environment on Canadian servers. Researchers are encouraged to make their data available publicly, but can choose to restrict access to their data if they wish.
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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.
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DepositOnce is the institutional repository for research data and publications of TU Berlin. In DepositOnce, research results of TU Berlin members and, if applicable, their research partners are archived permanently and made freely accessible on the internet.
figshare allows researchers to publish all of their research outputs in an easily citable, sharable and discoverable manner. All file formats can be published, including videos and datasets. Optional peer review process. figshare uses creative commons licensing. figshare+ repository allows figshare users to share larger datasets, over 20GB up to many TBs, see: https://plus.figshare.com/
ZENODO builds and operates a simple and innovative service that enables researchers, scientists, EU projects and institutions to share and showcase multidisciplinary research results (data and publications) that are not part of the existing institutional or subject-based repositories of the research communities. ZENODO enables researchers, scientists, EU projects and institutions to: easily share the long tail of small research results in a wide variety of formats including text, spreadsheets, audio, video, and images across all fields of science. display their research results and get credited by making the research results citable and integrate them into existing reporting lines to funding agencies like the European Commission. easily access and reuse shared research results.
Apollo (previously DSpace@Cambridge) is the University of Cambridge’s Institutional Repository (IR), preserving and providing access to content created by members of the University. The repository stores a range of content and provides different levels of access, but its primary focus is on providing open access to the University’s research publications.
The ADAS Project is a self-funding (i.e. funded by participants) project consisting of most major fusion laboratories along with other astrophysical and university groups. As an implementation, it is an interconnected set of computer codes and data collections for modelling the radiating properties of ions and atoms in plasmas. It can address plasmas ranging from the interstellar medium through the solar atmosphere and laboratory thermonuclear fusion devices to technological plasmas. ADAS assists in the analysis and interpretation of spectral emission and supports detailed plasma models.
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WueData is the institutional research data repository of the University of Würzburg. This service offered by the IT Center and the University Library enables scientists to publish their digital research data in accordance with the FAIR principles.
ChemSynthesis is a freely accessible database of chemicals. This website contains substances with their synthesis references and physical properties such as melting point, boiling point and density. There are currently more than 40,000 compounds and more than 45,000 synthesis references in the database.
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RADAR4Chem is a low-threshold and easy-to use service for sustainable publication and preservation of research data from all disciplines of chemistry. 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 in the field of chemistry at publicly funded research institutions and universities 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.
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The URV's institutional repository is a deposit of digital documents that contains the teaching and research output of the members of the URV university community: for example, articles that have not yet been published (preprints), published articles (postprints), research data, end-of-degree projects, bachelor's degree theses, doctoral theses, teaching material and other documents that may be useful for generating knowledge. It is available to all the institutions that are part of the Campus of International Excellence Southern Catalonia and who wish to use it in cooperation with others.
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.
e-cienciaDatos is a multidisciplinary data repository that houses the scientific datasets of researchers from the public universities of the Community of Madrid and the UNED, members of the Consorcio Madroño, in order to give visibility to these data, to ensure its preservation And facilitate their access and reuse. e-cienciaDatos is structured as a system constituted by different communities that collects datasets of each of the individual universities. e-cienciaDatos offers the deposit and publication of datasets, assigning a digital object identifier DOI to each of them. The association of a dataset with a DOI will facilitate data verification, dissemination, reuse, impact and long-term access. In addition, the repository provides a standardized citation for each dataset, which contains sufficient information so that it can be identified and located, including the DOI.
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Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI) research data repository METIS is provided by EUDAT and enables the institute data to be preserved, discovered, and accessed. FMI covers a wide range of research on weather, sea, climate and space. According to the FMI's Research Data policy , publicly funded research data must be made available to the widest possible audience (under CC BY license, at the minimum), as the best way to maximize the data impact but also to do justice to all the hard labor put into collecting, cleaning, and analyzing the data.
Data products developed and distributed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology span multiple disciplines of research and are widely used in research and development programs by industry and academia. NIST's publicly available data sets showcase its committment to providing accurate, well-curated measurements of physical properties, exemplified by the Standard Reference Data program, as well as its committment to advancing basic research. In accordance with U.S. Government Open Data Policy and the NIST Plan for providing public access to the results of federally funded research data, NIST maintains a publicly accessible listing of available data, the NIST Public Dataset List (json). Additionally, these data are assigned a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) to increase the discovery and access to research output; these DOIs are registered with DataCite and provide globally unique persistent identifiers. The NIST Science Data Portal provides a user-friendly discovery and exploration tool for publically available datasets at NIST. This portal is designed and developed with data.gov Project Open Data standards and principles. The portal software is hosted in the usnistgov github repository.
California Digital Library (CDL) seeks to be a catalyst for deeply collaborative solutions providing a rich, intuitive and seamless environment for publishing, sharing and preserving our scholars’ increasingly diverse outputs, as well as for acquiring and accessing information critical to the University of California’s scholarly enterprise. University of California Curation Center (UC3) is the digital curation program within CDL. The mission of UC3 is to provide transformative preservation, curation, and research data management systems, services, and initiatives that sustain and promote open scholarship.