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Preparing your submission

When submitting a record to the UCL Research Data Repository, there are different areas to consider

Contents


Before you begin

Before you begin preparing your submission to the UCL RDR, consider the following:

Browser choiceÌý

It is currentlyÌýnot recommended to use Firefox browserÌýdue to an issue with single sign on. Google Chrome or an alternative browser is recommended.

Who can use the repository

UCLÌýstaffÌýand UCL students enrolled for PhD, Mphil or MRes degrees can use the UCL RDR. Students enrolled on undergraduate or taught postgraduate programmes cannotÌýuse the UCL RDR but may utilise theÌýUCL Open Education Repository.

Legal Responsibilities

All authors are jointly responsible for ensuring that any data uploaded is compliant with:

Data containing personally identifiable information cannot be uploaded. PleaseÌýcontact the RDM teamÌýfor advice on what constitutes personal data and guidance on alternative repositories that can handle this kind of material.Ìý

Authorship

The expectation is that all contributors to research data should be acknowledged, following a similar code of practice to authorship for an academic paper. Authorship of a dataset should normally mirror that of any related papers. Further information onÌýUCL policy regarding authorshipÌýis available. Ìý

File sizes and formats

An upload to the repository can be one or multiple files of any format. For any files greater thanÌý5 GB should be uploaded using theÌýÌýto do this.ÌýThere is also Figshare guidance onÌýÌýIt is not possible to upload a directory containing a folder structure directly but a set of folders can be combined into a single zip file and uploaded as a single file.

Organising data

There are several ways to organise items uploaded to the repository. Files can be uploaded individually with their own titles, descriptive text and DOI. Individual items can be grouped together in a collection if needed, where a single DOI can be used to link to all the items within that collection. Alternatively, a single upload can contain multiple files (e.g. all of the raw data used to generate the figures of a particular paper) with a single title, description and DOI being used for the entire dataset.

Metadata

Some fields are mandatory to complete when depositing data, but we encourage you to be as thorough as possible when adding descriptive metadata. This will help us to process your submission quickly as well as help to make your data more useful for other researchers.

In the 'Description'Ìýfield, we recommend addingÌýone to two paragraphs describing the item you are publishing, including information such as how the data was created and the tools and technologies utilised and adding a descriptive title for your data record.ÌýYou can find more information about creating high quality metadataÌýon ourÌýSharing DataÌý²µ³Ü¾±»å±ð.

If a mistake is noticed after publication, title and author fields can only be altered by UCL RDR staff. This process will create a new version of the record with a new DOI. Please double check this information carefully. Other fields can be modified if desired, which allows links to any publications that make use of the data to be added.

Linking data sets to journal publications

It is good practice to provide a link from the UCL RDR to any publications related to the data, ideally with a DOI. There may not be a DOI issued for your paper until the final stage of the publication process, so you may not be able to add a link during the initial upload. If this is the case, you can add a link into the references or description field after your data are published in the repository as authors can always update these fields. You can also link to any pre-print versions of an article.

Please visit ourÌýextended FAQ pageÌýif you need further guidance, orÌýLibrary Services Research Data Management team usingÌýlib-researchsupport@ucl.ac.ukÌýif you have any questions.


Preparing your research outputs

What to deposit

The decision over what to keep and share should be informed by a number of considerations:

  • legal and ethical requirements;
  • and the potential usefulness of the data to others.

It might be tempting to keep and share all your data 'just in case'. You should try and make decisions on what to keep and share based on theÌýlikely potential value for others weighed against the time and costsÌýof documenting, preparing and preserving this data for the long-term.

Data you should deposit in the UCL RDR

1. Data underpinning publications

At a minimum, you should share the underlying research outputs toÌýthe conclusions of your published research. This helps facilitate research reproducibility and verification.ÌýThis includes publishing datasets which underpin charts, graphs and other visualisations in your papers.ÌýIf you only used part of a dataset then it is acceptable to publish only the parts of the dataset which underpin your published findings. If this data is available somewhere else then you should cite the data in your paper.ÌýAdvice on data citationÌýis available.

2. Wider datasets which may be useful in the future

You should consider depositing your wider datasets (i.e. not just data underpinning publications). These are datasets which have been processed, cleaned and/or curated and may have value for you or others in the future.

This data may:

  • Allow researchers to carry out other types of analysis from your data which could confirm your research conclusions and/or contribute to new research.
  • Help explain a novel, high quality or other valuable method/approach to carrying out research in your discipline.
  • Give access to data which would otherwise be very difficult, expensive, time consuming or impossible to reproduce.

Data you should NOT deposit in the UCL RDR

Please do not deposit the following categories:

  • Data for which you (or UCL)Ìýdo not holdÌýtheÌýcopyrightÌýor other intellectual property rights, and/or for which you have not obtained permission to share the data.
  • Data containing personal information. You cannot upload personal data or special category personal data in this repository.
  • There areÌýdata sharing agreementsÌýin place that restrict access to the data to particular individuals or groups (this may be the case where there are commercial agreements in place with industrial partners, for instance).

The UCL Research Data Repository is not intended for administrative data relating to human resources, finance and other operational matters. For support in managing this data see theÌýUCL Records Office’s advice.

Review process once you have submitted your record

When users submit records for review, the Research Data Management team in UCL Library Services review the records checking the metadata meets expected standards. If there are no issues with the metadata, the record will be published and the uploader will receive an automated email notifying them the record has been published. If a reviewer wshes to provide feedback to the uploader prior to the record being published, the uploader will be contacted via email.

The Research Data Group in the Centre for Advanced Research Computing manages membership and handles any technical issues.


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