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What To Do About Data

What To Do About Data. The NISO-NFAIS Working Group Recommendations on Supplemental Materials. Are Supplemental Materials Data?. Supplemental Materials comprise a vast array of content types: Text (extended methods, bibliographies, survey results, derivations. . .) Tables and figures

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What To Do About Data

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  1. What To Do About Data The NISO-NFAIS Working Group Recommendations on Supplemental Materials Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  2. Are Supplemental Materials Data? • Supplemental Materials comprise a vast array of content types: • Text (extended methods, bibliographies, survey results, derivations. . .) • Tables and figures • Multimedia • Gene sequences, protein structures, chemical compounds, structures, 3-D images • Datasets • Computer programs—algorithms, code, executables Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  3. But are they data? NSF Definition Data are not only the information and observations made as part of scientific inquiry but also the materials, the means, and the products of that inquiry. More— Data are considered to be anything and everything that informs the way in which individuals are able to understand and to process their world. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  4. Evolution of Supplemental Materials • ~1999-2003 • Authors opportunity to expand reach • Easy access to data needed to verify or replicate • Multimedia enhancements • Technology enabled so not much cost • 2009-2011 • Some journals overrun with materials • Costs are high • Returns are unknown • No standards Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  5. Deluge: sup. mat. ratio Chart courtesy of Ken Beauchamp, American Society for Clinical Investigation Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  6. Outcomes for Users & Publishers For the User For the Publisher Direct Costs Crisis in peer review Tough decisions Decisions What is value-add? Quality vs. workload in peer review Migration • Lack of good metadata • Discoverability issues • Lack of context • Concern about persistence • What to cite? How to cite? • What is supplemental? Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  7. NISO-NFAIS Working Group Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  8. Actually 2 Working Groups • Business Working Group, co-chaired by Marie McVeigh and Linda Beebe • 10 other members including Bonnie Lawler, ED of NFAIS • Task—the “what”—policies and practices • Technical Working Group, co-chaired by Dave Martinsen and Sasha Schwarzman • 15 other members • Task—the “how”—technical aspects of implementation Plus a Stakeholders’ Group Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  9. The Vision─ • “Reader’s Choice” article • Modular with what is now supplemental material available in some modules • Clearly identified and easy to select • Emilie Marcus of Cell: “a more modern concept of a hierarchical or layered presentation in which the reader can define which level of detail best fits their interests and needs.” Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  10. Recommended Practices • Intended to help scholarly community develop more standardized approaches. • Lessen the burden on all parties. • Assure that Supplemental Materials add substance to the scholarship. • Make them more discoverable. • Aid in preserving Supplemental Materials. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  11. Challenges & Principles • Wide variance in disciplines, types of content, citation systems • Evolutionary time—technology changing so rapidly that this must be a living document. • Readers vary in need for information. • Need to look to the future, not limitations of the past. • Recommended practices, not rules. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  12. Two Types of Supplemental 1. Integral 2. Additional Content Provides additional, relevant, useful expansion But not necessary to the understanding of the core article. • Content essential to the understanding of the article • Oxymoron? • No, treated as supplemental for technical or logistical reasons. • Transitory phenomenon Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  13. Related Content • Often other work author wants to call attention to, but is not the typical cited reference. • Publishers treat differently—some include in cited references, some link to it outside the citation list. • Generally content in a repository or data center. Publisher has no authority. • No recommended practices, but some comments on preservation and linking. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  14. Data Repositories • Many discipline-specific—Chemspider, GenBank, Protein Data Bank, PANGEA • Journals—Dryad • International • Good list at datacite.org/repolist • Assembled by Datacite, BiomedCentral, British Library, and Digital Curation Centre Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  15. Part A, The Business Practices Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  16. Selecting Supplemental Materials Cautions • Are they relevant? • Are they useful additions to the scholarly record? • Can they be preserved? • Consider costs of vetting, delivery, and maintenance. Best Practices • Integral content: review at same level as article. Be sure reviewers get all content. • Additional content: ideally the same, but may not be possible. • Provide clear guidelines. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  17. Managing and Hosting Materials Who does it? External Repositories Data hosted by an external repository may be deemed essential. The publisher must preserve the link between core article and data in repository. Warning!! Repositories may be unstable. Author web sites are verboten as repository! • Generally, publishers manage and host their content. • Some outsource. Contracts should be crafted to assure the level of protection needed. • Journal content hosted by an aggregator or other host must include supplemental material. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  18. Assuring Discoverability─Consistency Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  19. Discoverability with A&I Services Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  20. Referencing Supplemental Materials Within the Article Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  21. Another View of Citing Data • How to Cite Datasets and Link to Publications • http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/cite-datasets • Excellent descriptions of identifiers • Look at issues like granularity, microattribution,nanopublications, etc. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  22. Maintaining Links • Links to information owned, published, or contracted by publisher must be maintained. • Broken links to content outside their control should be resolved when possible or deactivated. • If there are alternative access points, publisher should indicate. • Bidirectional linking for Integral and Additional Content is essential. • DOI registration assures persistence & findability. • Use separate DOIs for Integral and Additional Content to enable separate linking. Best Practice Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  23. Providing Context • Among the most egregious of current problems—what am I looking at and why? • Need an indication of the nature of the content and its connection to the article. • Need reminder of what they are seeing or hearing. • Include following on landing page or in content: • Article citation and DOI • Title and/or succinct statement about content • File extension and indication of size for multimedia • If multiple files, a list is helpful. • Player information for multimedia • If separate DOI, list. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  24. Preserving Supplemental Materials Integral Content • Preserve same standard as core article. • Give same metadata markup. • Tag text accompanying multimedia appropriately. Additional Content • Consider preservation before accepting. • If unsure of ability to preserve, ask author to put in trusted repository. • To extent possible, tag as for core article. These constitute an important part of the scholarly record. Consider distributed repositories. Specify acceptable repositories or outline criteria for evaluating them. Ideas: Accessibility, perpetual archiving, persistent identifiers, and bi-directional linking. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  25. Rights Management Intellectual Property • Treat rights for Integral Content same as for core article. • Rights for Additional Content may differ—but should be transparent to users. Access • Anyone with rights to core article must have rights to Integral Content. • ILL is a particular concern for librarians—best practice is to provide both article and Supplemental Materials. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  26. Part B, Technical Considerations Archiving Stronger for Integral Migration, not emulation Format guides • Packaging • Model offered • Standardized format • Hierachical • Linking—DOI! • Identifier Syntax • Identifier System • Community More to come! Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  27. Building Blocks • Finish draft BWG Recommended Practices. • TWG on packaging, metadata, etc. • Meld the two. • Open Review • NISO & NFAIS approve. • Circulate for other approval. Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

  28. The article of the Future may solve some of the problems. Linda Beebe Senior Director, PsycINFO American Psychological Association lbeebe@apa.org Linda Beebe, Charleston Library Conference 2011

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