ARDC Research Data Rights Management Guide
A practical guide for people and organisations working with data, about rights information and licences, and to raise awareness of the implications of not having licences on data.
Who is this for? This guide is primarily directed toward members of the research sector, particularly data rights...
Keywords: data, rights, management, licence, licensing, research, policy, guide, training material
ARDC Research Data Rights Management Guide
https://zenodo.org/records/5091580
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-research-data-rights-management-guide
A practical guide for people and organisations working with data, about rights information and licences, and to raise awareness of the implications of not having licences on data.
Who is this for? This guide is primarily directed toward members of the research sector, particularly data rights holders users and suppliers. Some general reference is made to characteristics and management of government data, acknowledging that this kind of data can be input to the research process. Government readers should consult their agency’s data management policies, in addition to reading this guide.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Australian Research Data Commons
Laughlin, Greg (type: Editor)
Appleyard, Baden (type: Editor)
data, rights, management, licence, licensing, research, policy, guide, 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
ARDC Research Data Rights Management Guide 2019
A practical guide for people and organisations working with data, about rights information and licences, and to raise awareness of the implications of not having licences on data.
Who is this for? This guide is primarily directed toward members of the research sector, particularly data rights...
Keywords: data, rights, management, licence, licensing, research, policy, guide, training material
ARDC Research Data Rights Management Guide 2019
https://zenodo.org/records/5091580
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-research-data-rights-management-guide-149e27b4-fd5e-4739-8e40-be2c5ca6709c
A practical guide for people and organisations working with data, about rights information and licences, and to raise awareness of the implications of not having licences on data.
Who is this for? This guide is primarily directed toward members of the research sector, particularly data rights holders users and suppliers. Some general reference is made to characteristics and management of government data, acknowledging that this kind of data can be input to the research process. Government readers should consult their agency’s data management policies, in addition to reading this guide.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Australian Research Data Commons
Laughlin, Greg (type: Editor)
Appleyard, Baden (type: Editor)
data, rights, management, licence, licensing, research, policy, guide, training material
Data Policy
Increasing the availability of research data for reuse is in part being driven by research data policies. While the number of research funders, journals and institutions with some form of research data policy is growing, the landscape is complex and therefore the implementation and implications...
Keywords: policy, data policy, publishers, training material
Data Policy
https://zenodo.org/records/4922756
https://dresa.org.au/materials/data-policy-c8bc856f-0afa-49dc-b100-36e9a8375327
Increasing the availability of research data for reuse is in part being driven by research data policies. While the number of research funders, journals and institutions with some form of research data policy is growing, the landscape is complex and therefore the implementation and implications of policies for researchers can be unclear, confusing and sometimes even contradictory. The RDA Data Policy Standardisation and Implementation IG was established to help address these challenges.
Initially the Group focussed on Developing a Research Data Policy Framework for All Journals and Publishers and with journal adoptions of the framework growing, the Group is now focussing on alignment between publishers and funders. This session provided an overview of the joint session held at RDA P17 of the Research Funders and Stakeholders on Open Research and Data Management and Practices IG, the Data Policy Standardisation and Implementation IG and the FAIRsharing WG.
The focus of this RDA VP17 session was to provide an overview of a joint project to examine funder-publisher policy alignment and provide recommendations on how to improve alignment.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Simons, Natasha (orcid: 0000-0003-0635-1998)
policy, data policy, publishers, training material
CheckEM User Guide
CheckEM is an open-source web based application which provides quality control assessments on metadata and image annotations of fish stereo-imagery. It is available at marine-ecology.shinyapps.io/CheckEM. The application can assess a range of sampling methods and annotation data formats for...
Keywords: stereo-video, fish, annotation
CheckEM User Guide
https://globalarchivemanual.github.io/CheckEM/articles/manuals/CheckEM_user_guide.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/checkem-user-guide
CheckEM is an open-source web based application which provides quality control assessments on metadata and image annotations of fish stereo-imagery. It is available at marine-ecology.shinyapps.io/CheckEM. The application can assess a range of sampling methods and annotation data formats for common inaccuracies made whilst annotating stereo imagery. CheckEM creates interactive plots and tables in a graphical interface, and provides summarised data and a report of potential errors to download.
brooke.gibbons@uwa.edu.au
Brooke Gibbons
stereo-video, fish, annotation
EventMeasure Annotation Guide
EventMeasure annotation guide for baited remote underwater stereo video systems (stereo-BRUVs) for count and length
Keywords: fish, stereo-video, annotation
EventMeasure Annotation Guide
https://globalarchivemanual.github.io/CheckEM/articles/manuals/EventMeasure_annotation_guide.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/eventmeasure-annotation-guide
EventMeasure annotation guide for baited remote underwater stereo video systems (stereo-BRUVs) for count and length
tim.langlois@uwa.edu.au
Brooke Gibbons
Tim Langlois
Claude Spencer
fish, stereo-video, annotation
Stereo-video workflows for fish and benthic ecologists
Stereo imagery is widely used by research institutions and management bodies around the world as a cost-effective and non-destructive method to research and monitor fish and habitats (Whitmarsh, Fairweather and Huveneers, 2017). Stereo-video can provide accurate and precise size and range...
Keywords: stereo-video, fish, sharks, habitats
Resource type: tutorial
Stereo-video workflows for fish and benthic ecologists
https://globalarchivemanual.github.io/CheckEM/index.html
https://dresa.org.au/materials/stereo-video-workflows-for-fish-and-benthic-ecologists
Stereo imagery is widely used by research institutions and management bodies around the world as a cost-effective and non-destructive method to research and monitor fish and habitats (Whitmarsh, Fairweather and Huveneers, 2017). Stereo-video can provide accurate and precise size and range measurements and can be used to study spatial and temporal patterns in fish assemblages (McLean et al., 2016), habitat composition and complexity (Collins et al., 2017), behaviour (Goetze et al., 2017), responses to anthropogenic pressures (Bosch et al., 2022) and the recovery and growth of benthic fauna (Langlois et al. 2020). It is important that users of stereo-video collect, annotate, quality control and store their data in a consistent manner, to ensure data produced is of the highest quality possible and to enable large scale collaborations. Here we collate existing best practices and propose new tools to equip ecologists to ensure that all aspects of the stereo-video workflow are performed in a consistent way.
tim.langlois@uwa.edu.au
Tim Langlois
Brooke Gibbons
Claude Spencer
stereo-video, fish, sharks, habitats