Can sharing research data raise your research profile and impact?

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Can sharing research data raise your research profile and impact?

Gerry Ryder Charles Darwin University, September 2015

• Where are the rewards? -impact

-collaboration-funding-citation metrics

• Make connections to maximise the impact

Overview

www.businessaadvisor.co

https://youtu.be/WtS8A560EEI?list=PLG25fMbdLRa6om9CAD5_Lh0AG4Gyr0qAd

Data sharing is good … for lots of reasons

‘Data sharing by scientists: Practices and Perceptions’(Tenopir et al., 2011, PLoS one: 6(6) http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0021101)

85% of researchers were interested in using others’ data if easily accessible;

74% believed that their data could be used in other ways (across other research fields);

But…Only 36% report that their own data is easily accessible.

So why aren’t we doing it more?

https://theconversation.com/science-can-influence-policy-and-benefit-the-public-heres-how-41668

Sponsored by Google, PLoS, Wellcome Trust

Presented by

ResearchersData reuse and the open data citation advantage

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The citation benefit intensified over time... ...with publications from 2004 and 2005 cited 30 per cent

more often if their data was freely available. Every 100 papers with open data prompted 150 "data reuse

papers" within five years Original authors tended to use their data for only two years,

but others re-used it for up to six years.

Piwowar HA, Vision TJ. (2013) Data reuse and the open data citation advantage. PeerJ 1:e175 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.175

Article published in “Science” 7 Nov 2014Two co-authors from Australia

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Describing and linking related resources

ORCIDhttp://orcid.org/0000-0001-5109-3700

dataset

How to cite this collection

Journal article

software

workflow

your unique ID

Thank you and questions

Gerry Ryder