Data management and curation of research data in academic scientific research environments
โ Scribed by Barrie Hayes; James Harroun; Brenda Temple
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 41 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0044-7870
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
The Structural Bioinformatics Core Facility at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (SBI Core) assists researchers universityโwide in computational structural biology techniques and incorporating structural biology/bioinformatics into their grants and publications. The SBI Core works with a diverse population of researchers from numerous departments and provides support to an everโchanging body of research. The computational biology services provided by the SBI Core are dataโintensive and use a diverse and distributed set of applications for processing, data storage, and data management.
As the amount of data and number of projects have increased, the SBI Core requires an effective strategy for managing data and facilitating data sharing between the SBI Core and the researchers it assists. The UNCโCH Health Sciences Library (HSL) has begun a collaborative project with the SBI Core to identify the crucial data management needs and to envision new roles for the library in eโscience and data management. In partnership, the SBI Core and the HSL have identified major obstacles in data sharing, data management, and data access. Furthermore, the SBI Core and the HSL will develop solutions in which the library facilitates collaboration among campus resources and matches unmet needs to external resources. One of the library's goals in this proofโofโconcept project with the SBI Core is to become a central campus resource for research support and data management.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Clinical Research Associates have assumed an expanding role in the conduct and design of clinical trial protocols. The perspectives of these health professionals are presented in the referenced articles, and implications for clinical trials are discussed. See also pages 1577โ83 and 1584โ91.
Based on a doctoral experience of using Grounded Theory to research processes of hotel brand internationalisation, this article explains and critically evaluates how researchers can utilise the method to best effect within tourism and hospitality management settings. The fundamental characteristics
PREAMBLE I. PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY A. Deยฎnitions B. Rationale II. MAJOR CONTRIBUTIONS OF PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY TO THE PUBLIC'S HEALTH A. Appropriate use of drugs B. Birth defects C. Reye's syndrome D. Vaginal cancer in young women E. Endometrial cancer F. Heart disease III. METHODS AND THEIR RELATED DA