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Research Data Management

Introduction

This guide covers Research Data Management (RDM) at CSBSJU. In this guide you will find information about research data management plans, data storage/archiving, funding agency guidelines, and metadata.

 

What is Research Data Management?

What is Research Data Management?

Research Data Management (RDM) is the practice of organizing, documenting, storing, sharing, and preserving data gathered during a research project. RDM ensured that data are usable over time.

 

Effective RDM includes:

  • File organization

  • Naming conventions

  • Documentation and version control

  • Storage and access for security and collaboration

  • Policies for sharing and reuse

 

Data Lifecycle

The research data management lifecycle. This is s circular process that starts with data search/reuse, goes to a data management plan, data storage (including data collection, description, analysis, and re-collection), then to archive, publication, research question, and finally back to data search/reuse.

Image CC BY-NC from University of Southern California Santa Cruz (http://guides.library.ucsc.edu/datamanagement/). 

CSB and SJU Libraries' Research Data Management Services

The CSB and SJU Libraries can help you manage your research data. Once you contact your liaison librarian, your needs will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

We will help you determine:

  1. How to make your research data discoverable.

  2. Where your research data will be stored.
    Options include our institutional repository (CSB and SJU Digital Commons); CSB and SJU IT Services file storage; or a discipline-specific repository. For more information, click on the “Data Repositories tab in the sidebar navigation.

  3. The best long-term storage format for your research data.
    In general, archived file formats should be non-proprietary; unencrypted; uncompressed; open; interoperable; documented standards; common usage within your research community; and standard representation.