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Found 58 result(s)
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SODHA is the federal Belgian data archive for social sciences and the digital humanities. SODHA is a new service of the State Archives of Belgium and acts as the Belgian service provider for the Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives (CESSDA).
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bonndata is the institutional, FAIR-aligned and curated, cross-disciplinary research data repository for the publication of research data for all researchers at the University of Bonn. The repository is fully embedded into the University IT and Data Center and curated by the Research Data Service Center (https://www.forschungsdaten.uni-bonn.de/en). The software that bonndata is based on is the open source software Dataverse (https://dataverse.org)
The Duke Research Data Repository is a service of the Duke University Libraries that provides curation, access, and preservation of research data produced by the Duke community. Duke's RDR is a discipline agnostic institutional data repository that is intended to preserve and make public data related to the teaching and research mission of Duke University including data linked to a publication, research project, and/or class, as well as supplementary software code and documentation used to provide context for the data.
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FDAT is a research data repository hosted by the University of Tübingen, designed to facilitate long-term archiving and publication of research data. Managed by the Information, Communication and Media Center (IKM), it primarily caters to the humanities and social sciences, while welcoming researchers from all scientific disciplines at the university. Committed to high-quality data management, FDAT emphasizes the importance of adhering to the FAIR Data Principles, promoting findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability of the research data it contains.
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PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Sciences has an almost 30-year history as an open-access library for archiving, publishing, and disseminating georeferenced data from the Earth, environmental, and biodiversity sciences. Originally evolving from a database for sediment cores, it is operated as a joint facility of the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) and the Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM) at the University of Bremen. PANGAEA holds a mandate from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and is accredited as a World Radiation Monitoring Center (WRMC). It was further accredited as a World Data Center by the International Council for Science (ICS) in 2001 and has been certified with the Core Trust Seal since 2019. The successful cooperation between PANGAEA and the publishing industry along with the correspondent technical implementation enables the cross-referencing of scientific publications and datasets archived as supplements to these publications. PANGAEA is the recommended data repository of numerous international scientific journals.
The WashU Research Data repository accepts any publishable research data set, including textual, tabular, geospatial, imagery, computer code, or 3D data files, from researchers affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis. Datasets include metadata and are curated and assigned a DOI to align with FAIR data principles.
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OpenAgrar is an open access repository which publishes, stores, archives and distributes publications, publication references and research data. Its resources can be searched and used by everyone. It contains amongst others theses, reports, conference proceedings, journal articles, books, institutional documents, research datasets, videos and interviews.
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An institutional repository at Graz University of Technology to enable storing, sharing and publishing research data, publications and open educational resources. It provides open access services and follows the FAIR principles.
Brainlife promotes engagement and education in reproducible neuroscience. We do this by providing an online platform where users can publish code (Apps), Data, and make it "alive" by integragrate various HPC and cloud computing resources to run those Apps. Brainlife also provide mechanisms to publish all research assets associated with a scientific project (data and analyses) embedded in a cloud computing environment and referenced by a single digital-object-identifier (DOI). The platform is unique because of its focus on supporting scientific reproducibility beyond open code and open data, by providing fundamental smart mechanisms for what we refer to as “Open Services.”
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Swedish National Data Service (SND) is a research data infrastructure designed to assist researchers in preserving, maintaining, and disseminating research data in a secure and sustainable manner. The SND Search function makes it easy to find, use, and cite research data from a variety of scientific disciplines. Together with an extensive network of almost 40 Swedish higher education institutions and other research organisations, SND works for increased access to research data, nationally as well as internationally.
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The Goethe University Data Repository (GUDe) provides a platform for its members to electronically archive, share, and publish their research data. GUDe is jointly operated by the University Library and the University Data Center of the Goethe University. The metadata of all public content is freely available and indexed by search engines as well as scientific web services. GUDe follows the FAIR principles for long-term accessibility (minimum 10 years), allows for reliable citation via DOIs as well as cooperative access to non-public data and operates on DSpace-CRIS v7. If you have any questions regarding the use of GUDe, please consult the user documentation.
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Rodare is the institutional research data repository at HZDR (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf). Rodare allows HZDR researchers to upload their research software and data and enrich those with metadata to make them findable, accessible, interoperable and retrievable (FAIR). By publishing all associated research software and data via Rodare research reproducibility can be improved. Uploads receive a Digital Object Identfier (DOI) and can be harvested via a OAI-PMH interface.
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Kadi4Mat instance for use at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) and for cooperations, including the Cluster of Competence for Solid-state Batteries (FestBatt), the Battery Competence Cluster Analytics/Quality Assurance (AQua), and more. Kadi4Mat is the Karlsruhe Data Infrastructure for Materials Science, an open source software for managing research data. It is being developed as part of several research projects at the Institute for Applied Materials - Microstructure Modelling and Simulation (IAM-MMS) of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). The goal of this project is to combine the ability to manage and exchange data, the repository , with the possibility to analyze, visualize and transform said data, the electronic lab notebook (ELN). Kadi4Mat supports a close cooperation between experimenters, theorists and simulators, especially in materials science, to enable the acquisition of new knowledge and the development of novel materials. This is made possible by employing a modular and generic architecture, which allows to cover the specific needs of different scientists, each utilizing unique workflows. At the same time, this opens up the possibility of covering other research disciplines as well.
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Jülich DATA is a registry service to index all research data created at or in the context of Forschungszentrum Jülich. As an institutionial repository, it may also be used for data and software publications.
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The Austrian NeuroCloud (ANC) is a FAIR-enabling platform for sustainable research data management in Cognitive Neuroscience. Most of the offered research data is restricted, the publicly available datasets can be seen under https://data.anc.plus.ac.at/explore The ANC offers tools and services to archive, manage, and share neurocognitive data flexibly and according to community standards. Scientists have full control over what they share (e.g., full original datasets or data derivatives), how they share it (by choosing from a selection of licensing models), and with whom (e.g., by using the ANC’s adjustable User Agreement templates). The ANC provides persistent DOIs for data releases and operates in accordance with European GDPR. Moreover, the ANC fully supports the mission of the EOSC and is committed to the EU’s open science policy, legal standards, and best open science practices. Accordingly, the ANC aspires to facilitate FAIR data operations along the entire data lifecycle, actively supporting the ongoing shift in research culture towards increased transparency, data reusability, and result reproducibility.
Reference anatomies of the brain and corresponding atlases play a central role in experimental neuroimaging workflows and are the foundation for reporting standardized results. The choice of such references —i.e., templates— and atlases is one relevant source of methodological variability across studies, which has recently been brought to attention as an important challenge to reproducibility in neuroscience. TemplateFlow is a publicly available framework for human and nonhuman brain models. The framework combines an open database with software for access, management, and vetting, allowing scientists to distribute their resources under FAIR —findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable— principles. TemplateFlow supports a multifaceted insight into brains across species, and enables multiverse analyses testing whether results generalize across standard references, scales, and in the long term, species, thereby contributing to increasing the reliability of neuroimaging results.
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'Redape' is a digital repository that aims to preserve and disseminate research data produced by the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation - Embrapa. It allows the organization, management and publication of data in accordance with the FAIR principles.
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depositar — taking the term from the Portuguese/Spanish verb for to deposit — is an online repository for research data. The site is built by the researchers for the researchers. You are free to deposit, discover, and reuse datasets on depositar for all your research purposes.
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GESIS preserves (mainly quantitative) social research data to make it available to the scientific research community. The data is described in a standardized way, secured for the long term, provided with a permanent identifier (DOI), and can be easily found and reused through browser-optimized catalogs (https://search.gesis.org/).