British Library leads the way for sharing research data in the UK as five major 
institutions sign up to DataCite
http://pressandpolicy.bl.uk/Press-Releases/British-Library-leads-the-way-for-sharing-research-data-in-the-UK-as-five-major-institutions-sign-up-to-DataCite-5d5.aspx

Five major research centres have expanded their commitment to make data more 
accessible through the British Library's DataCite service, a global initiative 
which addresses the problem of how to find, access and re-use the results of 
research. The Archaeology Data Service, the UK Data Archive, the Natural 
Environment Research Council, the Science & Technology Facilities Council and 
the Chinese genomics institute BGI have signed up to the service and are the 
first institutions to work with the British Library on this initiative.

Data from the participating organisations, which spans information derived from 
ice cores to gene sequences, cultural heritage to current populations, will be 
marked with DOIs (Digital Object Identifiers) to enable it to be identified and 
cited, a system which has been widely used to provide persistent links to 
academic journal articles. This initiative provides a practical solution to one 
of the most significant challenges facing researchers today - access to data - 
an issue highlighted by the Royal Society in a report published in June this 
year, 'Science as an open enterprise', which recommended that scientists should 
communicate the data they collect in fieldwork and research more widely. 

The benefits for researchers include:

■ Confidence that the link to the data (or information about the data) will be 
persistently and uniquely identified
■  Increased ease of citing data which will, in turn, increase its discovery 
and access, enabling others to verify the results and validate their own 
research
■ Access to a myriad of new research opportunities which have been out-of-reach 
until now
■ Acknowledgement and credit for sharing data and having it cited

"Enabling researchers to cite data, along with journal articles and other 
references, is becoming increasingly important, and DataCite has the potential 
to transform the way scientists communicate their research." said Dr Lee-Ann 
Coleman, Head of Science, Technology and Medicine at the British Library. "As 
an institution dedicated to providing information, as well as practical support 
to researchers, we believe that the British Library DataCite service is 
addressing some of the barriers to data sharing. We hope that the decision of 
these five institutions to participate will attract others to become involved, 
and will mark an important step towards changing community norms about sharing 
resources."

Professor Julian Richards, Director of the Archaeology Data Service, one of the 
newly signed-up data centres, said: "Digital archives are the primary record of 
many archaeological sites now destroyed, but researchers seeking to verify 
interpretations have been faced with a mountain of unpublished grey literature 
fieldwork reports and archives, which it has been impossible to access and 
reference. The decision to use DataCite is a significant step forward to 
resolving this problem, and will be transformational in getting archaeological 
research out to more people."

Joy Davidson
Associate Director
Digital Curation Centre (DCC)
HATII, University of Glasgow
11 University Gardens
Glasgow
G12 8QJ
Tel: 0141 330 8592
Email: joy.david...@glasgow.ac.uk
http://www.dcc.ac.uk
http://www.gla.ac.uk/hatii


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