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Elizabeth Litting

Australian Consortium of Humanities Research Centres (ACHRC) - 0 views

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    The Australian Consortium of Humanities Research Centres (ACHRC) is a network for groups engaged in Humanities-based research. Our aim is to connect Humanities researchers and centres, both within the Australasian region and internationally, and to promote relationships with cultural institutions and sector representative bodies in the wider community. We provide a virtual and physical hub for information about research opportunities and events, and seek to strengthen the public profile of research in the Humanities.
Elizabeth Litting

Managing Creative Arts Research Data - 0 views

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    Unit 1 provides a broad overview of research data management for creative arts researchers. Definitions are offered and a case for effective data management is made. Common threats to research data are then examined, before presentation of an arts data workflow.
Elizabeth Litting

I Got the Wrong Request from the Wrong Journal to Review the Wrong Piece. The... - 0 views

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    Sniffing out peer review scams
Elizabeth Litting

Internet Ruffles Pricey Scholarly Journals - 0 views

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    LONDON - After decades of healthy profits, the scholarly publishing industry now finds itself in the throes of a revolt led by the most unlikely campus revolutionaries: the librarians.
Elizabeth Litting

DataCite - list of repositories - 1 views

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    This list is a working document, initated via a collaboration between the British Library, BioMed Central and the Digital Curation Centre, that aims to capture the growing number of repositories for research data. It is provided for information purposes only: DataCite provides no endorsements as to the quality or suitability of the repositories listed.
Elizabeth Litting

The conundrum of sharing research data. - 0 views

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    Abstract The deluge of research data has excited researchers, policy makers, and the general public. Not only might research be reproducible, but new questions can be asked, with great benefit to research, innovation, education, and the citizenry. However, very little data is being shared, despite the best efforts of funding agencies and journals. This article explores the complexities of data, research practices, innovation, incentives, economics, intellectual property, and public policy associated with the data sharing conundrum - "an intricate and difficult problem."
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