Transcript Slide 1
Clearing the Path for Data
Discovery and Re-Use
Thomson Reuters Panel Discussion:
Libraries Taking a Leading Role in Data
Curation and Preservation
Elizabeth Moss
ICPSR
[email protected]
ALA Annual Conference
June 24, 2012
Overview
1. About ICPSR and
the data we archive
2. Data discovery with
the Bibliography of
Data-related
Literature
3. Aiding the cultural
shift to reliable data
citing practice
What is ICPSR?
50 Years of Data Management
• One of the world’s oldest and largest social
science data archives, est. 1962
• Data distributed on punch cards, then reelto-reel tape, now:
– Data available on demand, online
– Over 8,000 studies with over 65,000 data sets
• Membership organization started among 21
universities, now:
– Over 700 members world-wide
– Federal funding of public collections
Data Sharing Increases
Research Productivity . . .
• The majority of social science data are not
archived publicly
• Younger researchers are more protective of their
research than established ones
• When data are archived (formally), 2-3 times more
publications are created
-- Pienta, Amy M.; Alter, George C.; Lyle, Jared A. (2010) The
enduring value of social science research: The use and reuse of
primary research data. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/78307
Top 10 Downloads This Year
1. National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2010
2. National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add
Health), 1994-2008
3. General Social Survey (1972-2010)
4. Chinese Household Income Survey, 2002
5. India Human Development Survey (IHDS), 2005
6. Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Surveys (CPES),
2001-2003
7. National Crime Victimization Survey, 2010
8. Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Study (CILS), 19912006
9. National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2009
10. The 500 Family Study, 1998-2000
In References, with DOI
doi:10.3886/ICPSR21240
Finding Cited Data in the Social
Science Research Literature
Sample?
Methods?
Discussion?
Footnotes?
Abstract?
Acknowledgements?
Data
“Sighting”
(implicit)
vs.
Data
Citing
(explicit)
Appendices?
References!
Charts and
Tables?
Issues with Attribution and Access
• Sample described, not named, no author
information, no access information, only a
publication cited
• Data named in text, with some attribution,
but no access information
• Cited in reference section, but with no
permanent, unique identifier
Other efforts to
IASSIST Special Interest Group
on Data Citation
Contact Information
Jared Lyle: [email protected]
Data Management Planning
Amy Pienta: [email protected]
Depositing Data at ICPSR
Mary Vardigan: [email protected]
DDI and Metadata
Elizabeth Moss: [email protected]
ICPSR Bibliography of Data-related Literature
Thank you!