Published in Front Matter

The open source research data management platform InvenioRDM today announced the first Long-Term Support (LTS) release, usable on production services. And I am joining the effort as a participating partner via Front Matter, the organization I started this week.

References

Library and Information SciencesStatistics, Probability and UncertaintyComputer Science ApplicationsEducationInformation Systems

A data citation roadmap for scholarly data repositories

Published in Scientific Data
Authors Martin Fenner, Mercè Crosas, Jeffrey S. Grethe, David Kennedy, Henning Hermjakob, Phillippe Rocca-Serra, Gustavo Durand, Robin Berjon, Sebastian Karcher, Maryann Martone, Tim Clark

AbstractThis article presents a practical roadmap for scholarly data repositories to implement data citation in accordance with the Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles, a synopsis and harmonization of the recommendations of major science policy bodies. The roadmap was developed by the Repositories Expert Group, as part of the Data Citation Implementation Pilot (DCIP) project, an initiative of FORCE11.org and the NIH-funded BioCADDIE (https://biocaddie.org) project. The roadmap makes 11 specific recommendations, grouped into three phases of implementation: a) required steps needed to support the Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles, b) recommended steps that facilitate article/data publication workflows, and c) optional steps that further improve data citation support provided by data repositories. We describe the early adoption of these recommendations 18 months after they have first been published, looking specifically at implementations of machine-readable metadata on dataset landing pages.

Guidelines for publishing structured metadata on the Web

Published

The FAIR principles refer frequently to metadata as a key enabler in discoverability, but also having a major role in accessibility and reusability. Publishing structured metadata on the web can provide a simple and efficient means to increase the FAIRness of research resources: it exposes metadata contained in web pages through a formal mechanism, allowing systematic collection and processing by web-based crawlers. Efforts to adopt structured metadata within and across domains would benefit greatly from a set of recommendations that would help ensure consistent implementation leading to enhanced discoverability and accessibility of data. Based on community consultation and subsequent work, this guidelines provides nine recommendations to support the process of publishing structured metadata on the web, namely: Recommendation 1: Clarify the purpose(s) of your markup Recommendation 2: Identify what resource are to be marked up with structured data Recommendation 3: Adopt or develop a crosswalk from a repository schema to markup vocabulary Recommendation 4: Incorporate external vocabulary if it helps to improve data discoverability and interoperability Recommendation 5: Implement markup syntax consistently by following community practices Recommendation 6: Be friendly to web crawlers Recommendation 7: Make the best use of available tools for mapping, generating and validating structured data Recommendation 8: Document and share every step Recommendation 9: Find and join a community, and follow their established practices