Data PublishingCarly Robinson will present
"Using PIDs at the US DOE to "publish" data and create connections through the research lifecycle."Description:There are many aspects to publishing data - data availability, data discovery, assigning PIDs, creating connections between data PIDs and other PIDs, and more. The Department of Energy Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) is working to tackle and implement these ideas, providing one example that can be used to discuss the larger topic of data publishing.
Shelley Stall will present
"The Societal Contract: Everyone Promises to Use and Link PIDs to Support Data Citation"Description: We have a great deal of trust in the research data ecosystem with little ability to verify accurate processes or troubleshoot problems. The community in the Earth, space, and environmental sciences has recently started implementing new authors guidelines requiring that data be in an appropriate repository and cited in the paper. As we implement these new practices in the publications process we are eager to see a successful data citation represented in Crossref and forwarded to DataCite.
For AGU, there are six organizations involved in publishing a paper and ensuring the data citation makes is accurately through the hand-offs to DataCite. The visibility into this process to troubleshot problems is very murky. How do we bring awareness and transparency to this process for all journals? What types of tools and metrics will ensure accurately processing of our data citations that ultimately lead to automated attribution and credit to the data creators?
Collaborative Note Document: http://bit.ly/NISOPlus_Data_Publishing