About

Log in?

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Anyone can log in and get personalized features such as favorites, tags and feeds.

Log in as DTU user Log in as non-DTU user No thanks

DTU Findit

Journal article

Approach for a joint global registration agency for research data

From

German National Library of Science and Technology1

The British Library2

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich3

Institute for Scientific and Technical Information4

Delft University of Technology5

Technical Information Center of Denmark, Technical University of Denmark6

The scientific and information communities have largely mastered the presentation of, and linkages between, text-based electronic information by assigning persistent identifiers to give scientific literature unique identities and accessibility. Knowledge, as published through scientific literature, is often the last step in a process originating from scientific research data.

Today scientists are using simulation, observational, and experimentation techniques that yield massive quantities of research data. These data are analyzed, synthesized, interpreted, and the outcome of this process is generally published as a scientific article. Access to the original data as the foundation of knowledge has become an important issue throughout the world and different projects have started to find solutions.

Global collaboration and scientific advances could be accelerated through broader access to scientific research data. In other words, data access could be revolutionized through the same technologies used to make textual literature accessible. The most obvious opportunity to broaden visibility of and access to research data is to integrate its access into the medium where it is most often cited: electronic textual information.

Besides this opportunity, it is important, irrespective of where they are cited, for research data to have an internet identity. Since 2005, the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB) has offered a successful Digital Object Identifier (DOI) registration service for persistent identification of research data.

In this white paper we discuss the possibilities to open this registration to a global consortium of information institutes and libraries.

Language: English
Publisher: IOS Press
Year: 2009
Pages: 13-27
ISSN: 18758789 and 01675265
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.3233/ISU-2009-0595
ORCIDs: Heller, Alfred and Sandfær, Mogens

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Log in as DTU user

Access

Analysis