Abstract

The DMPTool and DMPonline were developed to meet an emerging need arising from the advent of open data policies and each is now well established as the resource for researchers seeking guidance in creating data management plans (DMPs) in the US and UK respectively. Both services, and their sponsoring organizations, the California Digital Library (CDL) and the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), have succeeded in enabling researchers to comply with funder requirements in producing DMPs. However, this is just one step along the road to advancing open science. We see an opportunity to further leverage DMPs to support open science by integrating them into the broader ecosystem of data management infrastructure. In order to achieve this goal, we must redefine success to include not just adoption of our services by institutions but also widespread adoption by individual researchers, disciplinary communities, and funders. Working together with all stakeholders to make DMPs an essential, open part of the research lifecycle, and not just a matter of compliance, is the next step toward effectively managing and sharing research data. We propose to join forces and build a new, global data management advisory platform that links DMPs to other components of the research lifecycle. The biomedical research community provides an opportunity to adapt the infrastructure and associated educational resources to one specific disciplinary community and plug into new initiatives. We will reposition DMPs as living documents useful for structuring the course of biomedical research activities and integrating with related data management systems to lower the barriers for implementation and promote culture change. Consolidating around a single platform for DMPs extends our reach, keeps costs down, and moves best practices forward, allowing us to participate in a truly global open science ecosystem.

Highlights

  • We propose to join forces and build a new, global data management advisory platform that links data management plans (DMPs) to other components of the research lifecycle

  • The Open Science Prize offers an opportunity to work with the biomedical research community as a pilot for integrating DMPs with established Research data management (RDM) infrastructure, researcher workflows, and other community initiatives (e.g., bioCADDIE (2016), BioSharing (2016), and ELIXIR (2016))

  • DCC has already secured a grant from the University of Edinburgh Innovation Fund to develop locale-aware support for DMPonline (Digital Curation Centre 2016)

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Summary

Grant Proposals

Stephanie Simms‡, Sarah Jones§, Kevin Ashley|, Marta Ribeiro|, John Chodacki‡, Stephen Abrams‡, Marisa Strong‡. Research Ideas and Outcomes 2: e8649. doi: 10.3897/ rio.2.e8649

Executive summary
Problem Statement
The Roadmap Project
Data Reuse
Phase I Development Targets
Enabling Open Science
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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