Filter
Reset all

Subjects

Content Types

Countries

AID systems

API

Certificates

Data access

Data access restrictions

Database access

Database access restrictions

Database licenses

Data licenses

Data upload

Data upload restrictions

Enhanced publication

Institution responsibility type

Institution type

Keywords

Metadata standards

PID systems

Provider types

Quality management

Repository languages

Software

Syndications

Repository types

Versioning

  • * at the end of a keyword allows wildcard searches
  • " quotes can be used for searching phrases
  • + represents an AND search (default)
  • | represents an OR search
  • - represents a NOT operation
  • ( and ) implies priority
  • ~N after a word specifies the desired edit distance (fuzziness)
  • ~N after a phrase specifies the desired slop amount
Found 152 result(s)
Country
ISTA Research Explorer is an online digital repository of multi-disciplinary research datasets as well as publications produced at IST Austria, hosted by the Library. ISTA researchers who have produced research data associated with an existing or forthcoming publication, or which has potential use for other researches, are invited to upload their dataset for sharing and safekeeping. A persistent identifier and suggested citation will be provided.
Country
In a changing climate, water raises increasingly complex challenges: concerning its quantity, quality, availability, allocation, use and significance as a habitat, resource and cultural medium. Dharmae, a ‘Data Hub of Australian Research on Marine and Aquatic Ecocultures’ brings together multi-disciplinary research data relating to water in all these forms. The term “ecoculture” guides the development of this collection and its approach to data discovery. Ecoculture recognizes that, since nature and culture are inextricably linked, there is a corresponding need for greater interconnectedness of the different knowledge systems applied to them.
Country
As Germany’s first disciplinary repository in the field of international and interdisciplinary legal scholarship <intR>²Dok offers to all academic scholars currently affiliated with a university, college or research institute the opportunity to self-archive their quality-assured research data, research papers, pre-prints and previously published articles by means of open access. The disciplinary repository <intR>²Dok is a service offer provided by the Scientific Information Service for International and Interdisciplinary Legal Research (Fachinformationsdienst für internationale und interdisziplinäre Rechtsforschung) established at Berlin State Library (Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin) and funded by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft).
<<<!!!<<< All user content from this site has been deleted. Visit SeedMeLab (https://seedmelab.org/) project as a new option for data hosting. >>>!!!>>> SeedMe is a result of a decade of onerous experience in preparing and sharing visualization results from supercomputing simulations with many researchers at different geographic locations using different operating systems. It’s been a labor–intensive process, unsupported by useful tools and procedures for sharing information. SeedMe provides a secure and easy-to-use functionality for efficiently and conveniently sharing results that aims to create transformative impact across many scientific domains.
Provided by the University Libraries, KiltHub is the comprehensive institutional repository and research collaboration platform for research data and scholarly outputs produced by members of Carnegie Mellon University and their collaborators. KiltHub collects, preserves, and provides stable, long-term global open access to a wide range of research data and scholarly outputs created by faculty, staff, and student members of Carnegie Mellon University in the course of their research and teaching.
The CESSDA Data Catalogue contains the metadata of all data in the holdings of CESSDA service providers. It is a one-stop-shop for search and discovery, enabling effective access to European research data for researchers. Details of over 40, 000 data collections are listed. These are harvested from fifteen different CESSDA Service Providers.
Biological collections are replete with taxonomic, geographic, temporal, numerical, and historical information. This information is crucial for understanding and properly managing biodiversity and ecosystems, but is often difficult to access. Canadensys, operated from the Université de Montréal Biodiversity Centre, is a Canada-wide effort to unlock the biodiversity information held in biological collections.
The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) combines and provides scientifically collected data from a wide range of sources such as museums, herbaria, community groups, government departments, individuals and universities. Data records consist of images, literature, molecular DNA data, identification keys, species interaction data, species profile data, nomenclature, source data, conservation indicators, and spatial data.
GigaDB primarily serves as a repository to host data and tools associated with articles published by GigaScience Press; GigaScience and GigaByte (both are online, open-access journals). GigaDB defines a dataset as a group of files (e.g., sequencing data, analyses, imaging files, software programs) that are related to and support a unit-of-work (article or study). GigaDB allows the integration of manuscript publication with supporting data and tools.
The Language Archive at the Max Planck Institute in Nijmegen provides a unique record of how people around the world use language in everyday life. It focuses on collecting spoken and signed language materials in audio and video form along with transcriptions, analyses, annotations and other types of relevant material (e.g. photos, accompanying notes).
PORTULAN CLARIN Research Infrastructure for the Science and Technology of Language, belonging to the Portuguese National Roadmap of Research Infrastructures of Strategic Relevance, and part of the international research infrastructure CLARIN ERIC
CMO is a long-term project for the critical edition of Near Eastern music manuscripts. The project focusing on manuscripts of Ottoman music written in Hampartsum and staff notations during the nineteenth century, is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). This platform provides access to the online versions of both music and text editions, as well as the source catalogue, which is a comprehensive database of printed, manuscript and online sources.
Country
The "Database for Spoken German (DGD)" is a corpus management system in the program area Oral Corpora of the Institute for German Language (IDS). It has been online since the beginning of 2012 and since mid-2014 replaces the spoken German database, which was developed in the "Deutsches Spracharchiv (DSAv)" of the IDS. After single registration, the DGD offers external users a web-based access to selected parts of the collection of the "Archive Spoken German (AGD)" for use in research and teaching. The selection of the data for external use depends on the consent of the respective data provider, who in turn must have the appropriate usage and exploitation rights. Also relevant to the selection are certain protection needs of the archive. The Archive for Spoken German (AGD) collects and archives data of spoken German in interactions (conversation corpora) and data of domestic and non-domestic varieties of German (variation corpora). Currently, the AGD hosts around 50 corpora comprising more than 15000 audio and 500 video recordings amounting to around 5000 hours of recorded material with more than 7000 transcripts. With the Research and Teaching Corpus of Spoken German (FOLK) the AGD is also compiling an extensive German conversation corpus of its own. !!! Access to data of Datenbank Gesprochenes Deutsch (DGD) is also provided by: IDS Repository https://www.re3data.org/repository/r3d100010382 !!!
Country
This data archive of experiments studying the dynamics of pedestrians is build up by the Institute for Advanced Simulation 7: Civil Safety Research of Forschungszentrum Jülich. The landing page provides our own data of experiments. Data of research colleagues are listed within the data archive at https://ped.fz-juelich.de/extda For most of the experiments, the video recordings, as well as the resulting trajectories of single pedestrians, are available. The experiments were performed under laboratory conditions to focus on the influence of a single variable. You are very welcome to use our data for further research, as long as you name the source of the data. If you have further questions feel free to contact Maik Boltes.
The Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC) is an open consortium of universities, libraries, corporations and government research laboratories. It was formed in 1992 to address the critical data shortage then facing language technology research and development. Initially, LDC's primary role was as a repository and distribution point for language resources. Since that time, and with the help of its members, LDC has grown into an organization that creates and distributes a wide array of language resources. LDC also supports sponsored research programs and language-based technology evaluations by providing resources and contributing organizational expertise. LDC is hosted by the University of Pennsylvania and is a center within the University’s School of Arts and Sciences.
myExperiment is a collaborative environment where scientists can safely publish their workflows and in silico experiments, share them with groups and find those of others. Workflows, other digital objects and bundles (called Packs) can now be swapped, sorted and searched like photos and videos on the Web. Unlike Facebook or MySpace, myExperiment fully understands the needs of the researcher and makes it really easy for the next generation of scientists to contribute to a pool of scientific methods, build communities and form relationships — reducing time-to-experiment, sharing expertise and avoiding reinvention. myExperiment is now the largest public repository of scientific workflows.
The Measures of Effective Teaching(MET) project is the largest study of classroom teaching ever conducted in the United States. The University of Michigan compiled the MET data and video files into a rich research collection called the MET Longitudinal Database. Approved researchers can access the restricted MET quantitative and video data using secure online technical systems. The MET Longitudinal Database consists of a Web-based application for searching the collection and viewing the videos with accompanying metadata, and a Virtual Data Enclave that provides secure remote access to the quantitative data and documentation files.
Polish Platform of Medical Research (PPM) is a digital platform presenting the scientific achievements and research potential of 8 Polish medical universities from Bialystok, Gdansk, Katowice, Lublin, Szczecin, Warsaw, Wroclaw, the Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine in Lodz and the Jagiellonian University Medical College in Cracow that form a partnership for the PPM Project. It incorporates the features of a Current Research Information System and a consortium repository and uses OMEGA-PSIR software. It provides open access to full texts of publications, doctoral theses, research data and other documents. PPM is a central platform that aggregates data from the local platforms of the PPM Project Partners. PPM is accessible for any Internet user.
San Raffaele Open Research Data Repository (ORDR) is an institutional platform which allows to safely store, preserve and share research data. ORDR is endowed with the essential characteristics of trusted repositories, as it ensures: a) open or restricted access to contents, with persistent unique identifiers to enable referencing and citation; b) a comprehensive set of Metadata fields to enable discovery and reuse; c) provisions to safeguard integrity, authenticity and long-term preservation of deposited data.
Country
Portal Zarządzania Wiedzą UJ CM is a knowledge and research potential management platform of medical information. Easy data localization will be possible thanks to DOI and URL addresses given by administrators of the Knowledge Management Platform JU MC. The data will be stored in 2 copies for 10 years.
Country
Thai National Research Repository (TNRR) is a central database of science, research, and innovation of Thailand managed by the National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT) under the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation (MHESI) Act B.E. 2562 (2019). The TNRR system serves and disseminates an extensive collection of information to the public as open access to research and innovation knowledge. The goal is to be the system that provides information services on Thailand's research findings. This information is collected from academic institutes and information-oriented government agencies in Thailand. In other words, the data in the TNRR system is accumulated from 3 national databases including 1. National Research Innovation and Information System (NRIIS), 2. Research agencies within Thailand’s research and innovation ecosystem that have agreed to share their data; including research projects, research results, bodies of knowledge, theses, as well as various inventions and innovations; and 3. Other related databases of agencies that have shared their data for audit purposes and to improve the operation of the central database, such as the Department of Provincial Administration, the Department of Intellectual Property, and the Department of Business Development, etc. Thai National Research Repository (TNRR) also provides open data of research findings via API which can be accessed at https://tnrr.nriis.go.th/#/service/opendata and https://opendata.nrct.go.th/en/
The Manchester Romani Project is part of an international network of scholarly projects devoted to research on Romani language and linguistics, coordinated in partnership with Dieter Halwachs (Institute of Linguistics, Graz University and Romani-Projekt Graz), and Peter Bakker (Institute of Linguistics, Aarhus University). The project explores the linguistic features of the dialects of the Romani language, and their distribution in geographical space. An interactive web application is being designed, which will allow users to search and locate on a map different dialectal variants, and to explore how variants cluster in particular regions. Examples sentences and words with sound files will also be made available, to give impressions of dialectal variation within Romani. From the distribution of linguistic forms among the dialects it will be possible to make infeences about social-historical contacts among the Romani communities, and about migration patterns.