Force11 jddcp intro

8
Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles Synthesis Group By Mercè Crosas, IQSS, Harvard University at Force2015, Oxford University, January 12, 2015 @mercecrosas

Transcript of Force11 jddcp intro

Page 1: Force11  jddcp intro

Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles

Synthesis Group

By Mercè Crosas, IQSS, Harvard Universityat Force2015, Oxford University, January 12, 2015

@mercecrosas

Page 2: Force11  jddcp intro

Data in scholarly publications: Current State

Most Publications:

1. No link to data

2. Or footnote with a link to

data, but no persistent

identifier

3. Or persistent citation to

data, but no common

machine-actionable

metadata

PUBLICATION DATA

Page 3: Force11  jddcp intro

Are we ready to make data citable products of research?

Page 4: Force11  jddcp intro

A Brief History of Citing Data

Altman M., Crosas M., 2014, “The Evolution of Data Citation: From Principles to Implementation” IASSIST Quarterly, In Press

1906Chicago Manual of Style

Standards in Scholarly Citation: author/creator, title, dates, publisher or distributor of the work

~1960First scientific digital repositories(e.g., ICPSR,World Data Center)

1979 ASBR (“Data File” type)MARC (machine readable catalog)Domain Repositories (e.g., GenBank)

1999 - NowData Repositories (e.g., NESSTAR, Dataverse, Dryad, Figshare)DOI services (DataCite)

Page 5: Force11  jddcp intro

The Making of the Principles

• Decades of research and practices in data citation

• Consolidated to a single set of Principles

• By a synthesis group representing 25+ organizations

• Driven by the premise that:

"sound, reproducible scholarship rests upon a foundation of robust, accessible data”

"data should be considered legitimate, citable products of research”

Page 6: Force11  jddcp intro

Synthesis Group

CODATA Principles

Amsterdam Manifesto

DataCite Principles

+ contribution from 25 organizations (DCC, ORCID, Publishers, Repositories, …)

Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles

Page 7: Force11  jddcp intro

The Principles

1 Importance

2 Credit and Attribution

3 Evidence

4 Unique Identification

5 Access

6 Persistence

7 Specificity and Verifiability

8 Interoperability and flexibilityhttps://www.force11.org/datacitation

Page 8: Force11  jddcp intro

ExampleA data citation generated by the Dataverse Repository (dataverse.org)

Principle 2:Credit and Attribution

Principle 4, 5, 6:Unique Id Access Persistence

Principle 7:Specificity and Verifiability

Principle 8: Interoperability and flexibility:Repository exports citation metadata in XML, JSON formats

Authors, Year, Dataset Title, DOI, Data Repository, UNF, version

Resolves to landing page with access to metadata, docs, and data

See Details at: Altman and King, 2007, A Proposed Standard for the Scholarly Citation of Quantitative Data;Altman, Crosas, 2013, The Evolution of Data Citation