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Found 8 result(s)
The Research Collection is ETH Zurich's publication platform. It unites the functions of a university bibliography, an open access repository and a research data repository within one platform. Researchers who are affiliated with ETH Zurich, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, may deposit research data from all domains. They can publish data as a standalone publication, publish it as supplementary material for an article, dissertation or another text, share it with colleagues or a research group, or deposit it for archiving purposes. Research-data-specific features include flexible access rights settings, DOI registration and a DOI preview workflow, content previews for zip- and tar-containers, as well as download statistics and altmetrics for published data. All data uploaded to the Research Collection are also transferred to the ETH Data Archive, ETH Zurich’s long-term archive.
Lithuania became a full member of CLARIN ERIC in January of 2015 and soon CLARIN-LT consortium was founded by three partner universities: Vytautas Magnus University, Kaunas Technology University and Vilnius University. The main goal of the consortium is to become a CLARIN B centre, which will be able to serve language users in Lithuania and Europe for storing and accessing language resources.
The WashU Research Data repository accepts any publishable research data set, including textual, tabular, geospatial, imagery, computer code, or 3D data files, from researchers affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis. Datasets include metadata and are curated and assigned a DOI to align with FAIR data principles.
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Research Data Unipd is a data archive and supports research produced by the members of the University of Padova. The service aims to facilitate data discovery, data sharing, and reuse, as required by funding institutions (eg. European Commission). Datasets published in the archive have a set of metadata that ensure proper description and discoverability.
The Language Bank features text and speech corpora with different kinds of annotations in over 60 languages. There is also a selection of tools for working with them, from linguistic analyzers to programming environments. Corpora are also available via web interfaces, and users can be allowed to download some of them. The IP holders can monitor the use of their resources and view user statistics.
Country
RiuNet is intended to save the University community's production, personal or institutional, in collections. These can be made up of different types of documents such as Objects of learning (Polimedia, virtual labs and educational articles), theses, journal articles, maps, scholary works, creative works, institutional heritage, multimedia, teaching material, institutional production, electronic journals, conference proceedings and research data.
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.