Abstract

SUPER, a Study of User Priorities for e-infrastructure for Research, was a six-month effort funded by the UK e-Science Core Programme and JISC. Its aim was to inform investment in order to provide a usable, useful, and accessible e-infrastructure for all researchers and a coherent set of e-infrastructure services that would increase usage by at least a factor of ten by 2010. Through a series of unstructured face-to-face interviews with over 45 participants from 30 different projects, an online survey, together with a day-long workshop at NeSC, we have observed recurring issues relating to the provision of e-infrastructure. In this article we focus on the data-related issues identified during these interactions. We conclude with a prioritised list of future activities for research, development, and adoption in the data space.

Highlights

  • SUPER, a Study of User Priorities for e-infrastructure for Research, was a sixmonth effort funded by the UK e-Science Core Programme and JISC to inform investment in order to:

  • More information relating to issues other than data and input from other sources can be found in the SUPER technical report (Newhouse, Schopf, Richards, & Atkinson, 2007)

  • As a first step in carrying out the SUPER Project, we spent several months in late 2006 meeting with approximately 30 groups across the UK who represent a cross-section of the research community and which were engaged in a variety of roles and projects

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Summary

The International Journal of Digital Curation

SUPER, a Study of User Priorities for e-infrastructure for Research, was a six-month effort funded by the UK e-Science Core Programme and JISC. Its aim was to inform investment in order to provide a usable, useful, and accessible e-infrastructure for all researchers and a coherent set of einfrastructure services that would increase usage by at least a factor of ten by 2010. Through a series of unstructured face-to-face interviews with over 45 participants from 30 different projects, an online survey, together with a day-long workshop at NeSC, we have observed recurring issues relating to the provision of e-infrastructure. In this article we focus on the data-related issues identified during these interactions. We conclude with a prioritised list of future activities for research, development, and adoption in the data space.

Introduction
Community Inputs
Sharing Data
Access to Data

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