Open Access

Workshop on DMPTool: Preparing data management plans for grant applications


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Submitting a grant proposal to the NSF, NIH, or NEH? If you apply for funding from government agencies, you may be required to include a data management plan (DMP) in your application. Preparation of your plan is made easier through use of the online DMPTool, which walks you through each component of the plan.

Join us for a workshop on the DMPTool next Tuesday, October 9, in Woodruff Library Room 312 from 11:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. We will cover the basics of using the tool, review some sample data management plans, and step through the process of crafting your own plan to accompany a grant proposal.

Register for the workshop.

Need further assistance in preparing a DMP or general guidance on how to manage research data? Contact the Research Data Management group at dataplans@emory.edu.

Authored By: 

Jennifer Doty, Data Management Specialist, Electronic Data Center
Katherine Akers, e-Science Librarian and CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow

Preparing data management plans with the DMPTool

DMPTool


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Related Links: 

DMPTool

Electronic Data Center

Research Data Management

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Although journal articles are often the most visible products of research studies, the data underlying those articles are in themselves important sources of information.  The careful documentation, preservation, and sharing of research data not only prevents unnecessary duplication of research efforts, but also may lead to new discoveries. That data, however, is difficult to share if it exists only on an external hard drive in a desk drawer.

To promote the preservation and sharing of data, many major funding agencies, including the NSF, NIH, and NEH, now require a data management plan(DMP) as a component of grant proposals. In a DMP, researchers can formulate strategies for storing their data while their study is in progress, preserving their data long-term for the scholarly record, sharing their data with others, and describing or documenting their data to make them computer-readable and meaningful in the future.

To assist Emory researchers with the preparation of DMPs, the Research Data Management group at Robert W. Woodruff Library now offers use of the DMPTool. This free online tool, which is a service of the University of California Curation Center and the California Digital Library, allows Emory researchers to create, save, and revisit their DMPs by logging in with their Emory network ID and password. The DMPTool also provides helpful information and links for each component of the plan.

Need further assistance in preparing a DMP or general guidance on how to manage research data? Contact the Research Data Management group at dataplans@emory.edu.

Authored By: 

Jennifer Doty, Data Management Specialist, Electronic Data Center
Katherine Akers, CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow

Update - Does the "Research Works Act" work for you?

by Melanie T. Kowalski, Library Research Fellow, The Intellectual Property Rights Office

UPDATE: Since the original drafting of this post, several organizations and publishers have released statements against the Research Works Act (H.R. 3699):

Federal Agency Institutional Repository Announced!

The United States has taken step forward in the Open Access Movement. On October 5th, 2011, the National Technical Information Service (NTIS) announced its partnership with Information International Associates, Inc. (IIa) in developing an Institutional Repository Service for federal agencies.

Open Access Initiatives at Emory

Open Access is a method of sharing scholarship that is digital, online, free of charge and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions.  You can participate in Open Access initiatives at Emory to preserve your work, and to make it more visible and accessible around the world.

Know Your Copy Rights

Open Access is all about openly and freely sharing scholarly content. Understanding the rights you have as an author under copyright law is the first step in participating in Open Access, since these right give you the ability to ensure that your content is openly accessible.  You own the copyright to your work from the moment you put your finger tips to a keyboard or pen to paper. This includes articles, manuscripts, poems and even blog posts. Copyright owners have the exclusive right to reproduce their work, distribute their work, and publicly perform or display their work.

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