Take control of your author record with an official ID and learn more about the ORCID system, which can save you time and help you fulfill the expectations of an increasing number of publishers and foundations, while disambiguating your work from that of others with the same name.
This event will take place in Cabot Library, in the Instruction Room on the lower level.
Whether you are about to submit a dissertation, or publish a chapter or article, you want to feel confident that the way you’re using copyrighted material—via quotation, embedded images or media, etc.—is permissible under the law, correct? If so, then this is the session for you!
Normally, any use of another party's copyrighted material requires permission from the rightsholder, and in some circumstances, you may need to pay a licensing fee. However, the fair use doctrine allows scholars to use copyrighted material under certain conditions without seeking permission. But there...
Working with frustrating, unmanaged data? Need to get your data organized and documented? This introduction to managing, annotating, and publishing research data using the Open Science Framework is for you! Managing your data is not only essential for responsible research, it will help your data be findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable.
Working with frustrating, unmanaged data? Need to get your data organized and documented? This introduction to managing, annotating, and publishing research data using the Open Science Framework is for you! Managing your data is not only essential for responsible research, it will help your data be findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable.
This class is part of the Countway Research Data Management Seminar Series
Most of the raw and analyzed data we generate in the lab exists as digital files. Organizing your data in a way that preserves essential research information and ensures long-term value is critical. One of the important components of successful research data management is to establish a filing (or directory) structure for your records. Filing structures enable research processes to be more transparent, make it easier for investigators to determine where files should be saved, and ultimately...
Working with frustrating, unmanaged data? Need to get your data organized and documented? This overview of using the Open Science Framework for managing, annotating, and publishing research data is for you! Managing your data is not only essential for responsible research, it will help your data be findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable.
Hosted by the Institute for Applied Computational Science (IACS), ComputeFest is an annual winter event of knowledge and skill-building activities in computational science, engineering and data science.