About Robin Rice

Data Librarian and Head, Research Data Support Library & University Collections

Research Data Management: good news fit to print!

Congratulations to Digital Curation Centre staffer Sarah Jones, who co-authored an article about UK University RDM initiatives with Jisc Programme Manager Simon Hodson in the Guardian Higher Education Network pages today:

“Seven rules of successful research data management in universities: Sound research rests on the ability to evidence, verify and reproduce results – managing your data enables all three.”

http://gu.com/p/3hbh8

Sarah is helping the University develop support for Data Management Planning towards its RDM Roadmap goals as part of the DCC’s 21 institutional engagements providing tailored support to increase research data management capability.

A number of direct and indirect pointers to the University of Edinburgh’s work appear in this concise but well-presented piece, including the Research Data MANTRA online course, the formation of an RDM Steering Group, a roadmap to address EPSRC data sharing requirements, online guidance for staff, and librarian training.

Dabbling in data visualisation

image by David McCandless

Data visualisation is a powerful method to either explore or explain your data. A number of online tools have emerged in recent years making it easier for lay people to make their information beautiful, in the words of dataviz guru David McCandless.

Martin Hawksey from CETIS at University of Strathclyde gave a talk to Information Services staff last week on this popular topic. Following the talk, a small group including the Data Library team had a discussion about what sort of training course might be of interest to the University research community.

Martin’s abstract:

There are a number of examples throughout history where visualisations have been used to explore or explain problems. Notable examples include Florence Nightingale’s ‘Mortality of the British Army’ and John Snow’s Cholera Map of London. Recently the increased availability of data and software for analyzing and generating various views on this data has made it easier to generate data visualisations. In this presentation Martin Hawksey, advisor at the Jisc Centre for Educational, Technology and Interoperability Standards (Cetis), will demonstrate simple techniques for generating data visualisations: using tools (including MS Excel and Google Spreadsheets), drawing packages (including Illustrator and Inkscape) and software libraries (including d3.js and timeline.js). As part of this participants will be introduced to basic visual theories and the concepts of exploratory and explanatory analytics. The presentation will also highlight some of the skills required for discovering and reshaping data sources.

Martin Hawksey’s presentation and blog post

Would you be interested in a data visualisation training course? We’d love to hear from you at datalib@ed.ac.uk or in the comments below.

Robin Rice, Data Library

Sharing Edinburgh’s RDM lessons with other Scottish HEIs

In the interest of sharing Research Data Management (RDM) lessons with the wider community, Edinburgh University hosted a seminar for Higher Education Information Directors Scotland (HEIDS) and Scottish Confederation of University and Research Libraries (SCURL) in April, bringing together IT directors and librarians from Scottish universities.

The presentations (with links below) covered the range of RDM activities that Edinburgh University is currently engaged in:

Much of the discussion covered the potential for collaboration, from sharing lessons and models in these early stages to potentially offering shared services in the future. Senior managers emphasised that IS would need to look after its own users as a primary concern.

The audience appeared to take a lot of ideas away from the day and were keen for a follow-up session later in the year. Since the event, the University of Edinburgh has approved a business case, committing significant resource to invest in RDM infrastructure and staffing. Watch this space for further updates!

Sarah Jones, DCC

Where the data people meet: IASSIST

Last week I had the pleasure of attending IASSIST 2013 in Cologne, the annual conference of an international membership organisation of data librarians and data archivists, hosted by GESIS, the German social science data archive. Since 1974 this close-knit but dispersed community has been sharing knowledge and experience of provision of academic data services. Data Library staff have served in various elected and appointed posts over the years, and have hosted the conference twice in Edinburgh.

Corresponding with new jobs for data curators, data scientists and data managers, IASSIST has grown from an intimate group of regulars (such as those of us working in the Data Library and the UK Data Archive) to a conference of nearly 300 delegates from 29 countries, with three or four parallel tracks of presentations running across three days plus a training day for workshops.

data nerdWhatever the conference theme–this time it was Data Innovation: Increasing Accessibility, Visibility, and Sustainability— the programme never fails to be an indicator of the latest trends, albeit with a slant towards whichever European or North American country is hosting the conference. One speaker noted that Big Data may have seen its peak, as it was no longer necessary to cram the term into every presentation.

This year there was a noticeable increase in talks about data enclaves and means of providing access to sensitive personal and corporate data, including a keynote by Tim Mulcahy of NORC on record linkage. Tim set up the first data enclave in the US in 2004. After returning home I learned of a new proposal from the ESRC to fund four administrative data centres in the four UK countries, affirming this important trend towards secure access of sensitive data. As Tim pointed out, it’s much better for researchers than the status quo of not getting access at all.

The most number of talks appeared in the Research Data Management strand (RDM), including my colleague Stuart Macdonald’s presentation of our RDM Roadmap work here at UoE. Attention to RDM has exploded in recent years as research funders have applied more stringent rules to how data is created, managed and shared, to get the most value out of publicly funded research for themselves, researchers and the public. It was gratifying to hear praise by other speakers for MANTRA – our online course for PhD students to learn RDM basics—which has become well-known as an RDM primer.

Another strand covered more long-standing interest in data standards and tools – especially those around the DDI (Data Documentation Initiative) standard used in archiving social science data, which was invented and developed by IASSIST-ers. Data libraries serving a single institution were amply represented by a strand called Data Public Services/Librarianship. As part of a Pecha Kucha set of lightning talks I presented our work in training liaison librarians in RDM and outlined an openly licensed “training kit” that other small groups of librarians anywhere can use to train themselves.

IASSIST has been branching out from the social sciences as institutions such as ours grapple with how to support the data lifecycle across the University and its multitude of disciplines. As I sat on a panel discussing how data libraries and national data archives such as the UKDA can work together, I wondered what the future would bring for a mature set of data-related services that interoperate across an institution (as we’re trying to create through the RDM Roadmap work) and across institutions and the internet. The future for data – and data nerds – seem bright.

Robin Rice
Data Librarian