Data terminology

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  We are listing here some data management key concepts and some of the terms that occurs frequently when looking at managing or publishing your data.  

 

Key concepts    

FAIR

The FAIR Data Principles:

  • Findable:  data should be easy to find and identify. 
  • Accessible: data should have open access whenever possible.
  • Interoperable: well formatted data that uses discipline conventions and vocabularies, for both the data itself and the metadata used to describe it.
  • Reusable: data should be accompanied by enough information on how it was collected or processed, as to guarantee its quality and hence make it usable by other

File Management

methods for storing, organising, naming, discovering and retrieving files in a structured consistent manner.Good systems mean more efficient and effective data retrieval.

Data Storage

The location and/or system you use to store your data during a research project. This could include on personal computers, on external storage devices such as hard drives or SD cards, and/or networked drives managed by your University or partner institution.

Data Back Up

The process of saving your data to protect against data loss. This can be an automatic process, where the storage location automatically retains previous versions of your data, or a manual process, where you need to actively save the data in another location.

Data Archiving or Preservation

The process of putting your data in long term storage following the completion of a project or publication for a minimum of 5 years. This includes identifying who can access the data and how it can be accessed. Many Institutions have Repositories which can be used by staff and students.

Data Sharing

Making your data available for use by other researchers for their own research projects. This requires quality metadata to determine data source and changes made to allow for reuse. The best way to share data is to publish it then it will be more discoverable and will be assigned a persistent identifier (such as DOI) which helps other to cite the data.

Data Provenance

Data provenance describes the journey data goes through. It documents the evolution of a dataset from the original source including all the processes and methodology by which it was produced.

Data Management Plan (DMP)

Tool to help you manage the data for a specific research project. It can takes different forms depending on the stage of your project, for example a DMP to submit with a grant application will be different from the DMP required to publish your data. A DMP evolves with your project and it is useful to record your data provenance

 

Vocabulary

ARDC (ex ANDS)

attribution - is the act of recognising the author/s of a piece of work that you used in your research and it is a common requirement of licenses, 

CC - Creative Commons, a nonprofit organisation that produces licenses to encourage sharing of knowledge, commonly used for data products

citation - is the way you attribute a piece of work, it should contain all the information necessary to locate the original work

copyright - copyright is a form of intellectual property meant to protect the right of the author of a creative work to control how the work is used. More comprehensive but readbale information on copyright is available here.

DMP - Data Management Plan

FAIR - see definition in key concepts

license - a copyright license is a legal document stating what someone else is allowed or not allowed to do with (in this case) a dataset.

open access

provenance - see definition in key concepts

RDA - Research Data Australia

RDA - Research Data Alliance

 

 

Terms