ARDC Research Software Rights Management Guide
How researchers may license their research software in order to share it with others.
It addresses the types of open‑source licences, and considerations you (as a researcher) should have in deciding which licence to adopt for sharing.
Keywords: Software citation, Software licensing, Software, research software, licence, License, training material
ARDC Research Software Rights Management Guide
https://zenodo.org/records/5003962
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-research-software-rights-management-guide
How researchers may license their research software in order to share it with others.
It addresses the types of open‑source licences, and considerations you (as a researcher) should have in deciding which licence to adopt for sharing.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Australian Research Data Commons
Laughlin, Greg (type: Editor)
Appleyard, Baden (type: Editor)
Martinez, Paula Andrea (type: ProjectLeader)
Software citation, Software licensing, Software, research software, licence, License, training material
Research Data Governance
This video contains key information for those who make research data-related decisions. It will help project leaders to start investigating ways to develop their own data governance policy, roles and responsibilities and procedures with the input of appropriate stakeholders.
If you want to share...
Keywords: data governance, data, research, FAIR, data management, authority, share, reuse, access, provenance, policy, responsibilities, ARDC_AU, training material
Research Data Governance
https://zenodo.org/records/5044585
https://dresa.org.au/materials/research-data-governance-6ad9ab90-1a29-41db-b4aa-f1988501530d
This video contains key information for those who make research data-related decisions. It will help project leaders to start investigating ways to develop their own data governance policy, roles and responsibilities and procedures with the input of appropriate stakeholders.
If you want to share the video please use this:
Australian Research Data Commons, 2021. Research Data Governance. [video] Available at: https://youtu.be/K_xVQRdgCIc DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5044585 [Accessed dd Month YYYY].
contact@ardc.edu.au
Australian Research Data Commons
Martinez, Paula Andrea (type: ProjectLeader)
Wilkinson, Max (type: Editor)
Callaghan,Shannon (type: Editor)
Savill, Jo (type: Editor)
Kang, Kristan (type: Editor)
Levett, Kerry (type: Editor)
Russell, Keith (type: Editor)
Simons, Natasha (type: Editor)
data governance, data, research, FAIR, data management, authority, share, reuse, access, provenance, policy, responsibilities, ARDC_AU, training material
How can software containers help your research?
This video explains software containers to a research audience. It is an introduction to why containers are beneficial for research. These benefits are standardisation, portability, reliability and reproducibility.
Software Containers in research are a solution that addresses the challenge of a...
Keywords: containers, software, research, reproducibility, RSE, standard, agility, portable, reusable, code, application, reproducible, standardisation, package, system, cloud, server, version, reliability, program, collaborator, ARDC_AU, training material
How can software containers help your research?
https://zenodo.org/records/5091260
https://dresa.org.au/materials/how-can-software-containers-help-your-research-ca0f9d41-d83b-463b-a548-402c6c642fbf
This video explains software containers to a research audience. It is an introduction to why containers are beneficial for research. These benefits are standardisation, portability, reliability and reproducibility.
Software Containers in research are a solution that addresses the challenge of a replicable computational environment and supports reproducibility of research results. Understanding the concept of software containers enables researchers to better communicate their research needs with their colleagues and other researchers using and developing containers.
Watch the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HelrQnm3v4g
If you want to share this video please use this:
Australian Research Data Commons, 2021. How can software containers help your research?. [video] Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HelrQnm3v4g DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5091260 [Accessed dd Month YYYY].
contact@ardc.edu.au
Australian Research Data Commons
Martinez, Paula Andrea (type: ProjectLeader)
Sam Muirhead (type: Producer)
The ARDC Communications Team (type: Editor)
The ARDC Skills and Workforce Development Team (type: ProjectMember)
The ARDC eResearch Infrastructure & Services (type: ProjectMember)
The ARDC Nectar Cloud Services team (type: ProjectMember)
containers, software, research, reproducibility, RSE, standard, agility, portable, reusable, code, application, reproducible, standardisation, package, system, cloud, server, version, reliability, program, collaborator, ARDC_AU, training material
ARDC Research Software Rights Management Guide 2021
How researchers may license their research software in order to share it with others.
It addresses the types of open‑source licences, and considerations you (as a researcher) should have in deciding which licence to adopt for sharing.
Keywords: Software citation, Software licensing, Software, research software, licence, License, training material
ARDC Research Software Rights Management Guide 2021
https://zenodo.org/records/5003962
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-research-software-rights-management-guide-d147c836-6ba8-4c76-a258-88e4c293569c
How researchers may license their research software in order to share it with others.
It addresses the types of open‑source licences, and considerations you (as a researcher) should have in deciding which licence to adopt for sharing.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Australian Research Data Commons
Laughlin, Greg (type: Editor)
Appleyard, Baden (type: Editor)
Martinez, Paula Andrea (type: ProjectLeader)
Software citation, Software licensing, Software, research software, licence, License, training material
ARDC Guide to making software citable
A short guide to making software citable using a code repository, an ORCID and a licence.
Keywords: Software citation, Software publishing, Software registries, Software repositories, Research software, training material
ARDC Guide to making software citable
https://zenodo.org/records/5003989
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-guide-to-making-software-citable-46d0f9e4-ef55-43b9-b237-3e52a9d1e141
A short guide to making software citable using a code repository, an ORCID and a licence.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Liffers, Matthias (orcid: 0000-0002-3639-2080)
Honeyman, Tom (orcid: 0000-0001-9448-4023)
Martinez, Paula Andrea (type: ProjectLeader)
Software citation, Software publishing, Software registries, Software repositories, Research software, training material
Software publishing, licensing, and citation
A short presentation for reuse includes speaker notes.
Making software citable using a code repository, an ORCID and a licence.
Keywords: Software citation, Software publishing, Software registries, Software Repositories, research Software, training material
Software publishing, licensing, and citation
https://zenodo.org/records/5091717
https://dresa.org.au/materials/software-publishing-licensing-and-citation-d222144f-380a-455d-b4aa-c56283afc23e
A short presentation for reuse includes speaker notes.
Making software citable using a code repository, an ORCID and a licence.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Liffers, Matthias (orcid: 0000-0002-3639-2080)
Martinez, Paula Andrea (type: ProjectLeader)
Software citation, Software publishing, Software registries, Software Repositories, research Software, training material
The Living Book of Digital Skills
The Living Book of Digital Skills (You never knew you needed until now) is a living, open source online guide to 'modern not-quite-technical computer skills' for researchers and the broader academic community.
A collaboration between Australia's Academic Research Network (AARNet) and the...
Keywords: digital skills, digital dexterity, community, open source
Resource type: guide
The Living Book of Digital Skills
https://aarnet.gitbook.io/digital-skills-gitbook-1/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/the-living-book-of-digital-skills
*The Living Book of Digital Skills (You never knew you needed until now)* is a living, open source online guide to 'modern not-quite-technical computer skills' for researchers and the broader academic community.
A collaboration between Australia's Academic Research Network (AARNet) and the Council of Australian Librarians (CAUL), this book is the creation of the CAUL Digital Dexterity Champions and their communities.
**Contributing to the Digital Skills GitBook**
The Digital Skills GitBook is an open source project and like many projects on GitHub we welcome your contributions.
If you have knowledge or expertise on one of our [requested topics](https://aarnet.gitbook.io/digital-skills-gitbook-1/requested-articles), we would love you to write an article for the book. Please let us know what you'd like to write about via our [contributor form](https://github.com/AARNet/Digital-Skills-GitBook/issues/new?assignees=sarasrking&labels=contributors&template=contributor-form.yml&title=Contributor+form%3A+).
There are other ways to contribute too. For example, you might:
* have a great idea for a new topic to be included in one of our chapters (make a new page)
* notice some information that’s out-of-date or that could be explained better (edit a page)
* come across something in the GitBook that’s not working as it should be (submit an issue)
Sara King - sara.king@aarnet.edu.au
Sara King
Miah de Francesch
Emma Chapman
Katie Mills
Ruth Cameron
digital skills, digital dexterity, community, open source
ugrad
masters
mbr
phd
ecr
researcher
support
10 Reproducible Research things - Building Business Continuity
The idea that you can duplicate an experiment and get the same conclusion is the basis for all scientific discoveries. Reproducible research is data analysis that starts with the raw data and offers a transparent workflow to arrive at the same results and conclusions. However not all studies are...
Keywords: reproducibility, data management
Resource type: tutorial, video
10 Reproducible Research things - Building Business Continuity
https://guereslib.github.io/ten-reproducible-research-things/
https://dresa.org.au/materials/9-reproducible-research-things-building-business-continuity
The idea that you can duplicate an experiment and get the same conclusion is the basis for all scientific discoveries. Reproducible research is data analysis that starts with the raw data and offers a transparent workflow to arrive at the same results and conclusions. However not all studies are replicable due to lack of information on the process. Therefore, reproducibility in research is extremely important.
Researchers genuinely want to make their research more reproducible, but sometimes don’t know where to start and often don’t have the available time to investigate or establish methods on how reproducible research can speed up every day work. We aim for the philosophy “Be better than you were yesterday”. Reproducibility is a process, and we highlight there is no expectation to go from beginner to expert in a single workshop. Instead, we offer some steps you can take towards the reproducibility path following our Steps to Reproducible Research self paced program.
Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bANTr9RvnGg
Tutorial:
https://guereslib.github.io/ten-reproducible-research-things/
a.miotto@griffith.edu.au; s.stapleton@griffith.edu.au; i.jennings@griffith.edu.au;
Amanda Miotto
Julie Toohey
Sharron Stapleton
Isaac Jennings
reproducibility, data management
masters
phd
ecr
researcher
support