Managing your research data
May 22, 2014
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Monday, May 26, 9 am-noon
Stauffer Library, Speaker's Corner
By Mark Kerr, Senior Communications Officer
Technological advances have allowed researchers to capture and process more and more data. While increased information often leads to new insights and innovations, institutions, funders and individual researchers face the challenge of figuring out how to make data available to others once their project is finished.
To meet this opportunity, the Office of the Vice-Principal (Research), Queens Library and ITServices have partnered to offer the inaugural Data Day on May 26. The event seeks to raise awareness of the services Queens offers to researchers to manage their data and make it accessible and reusable by the wider research community.
Around the world, research data management plans are being increasingly required by funding agencies, including the National Science Foundation in the U.S. and the Research Councils in the U.K., says Karina McInnis, Executive Director, University Research Services. Canadas main funding agencies are also moving in the direction of requiring data management plans in research proposals. We see this event as a way to kick-start the discussion around data preservation, dissemination and re-use.

The Data Day workshop will include:
An overview of the Canadian digital scholarship landscape and infrastructure by representatives from the Library, ITServices, and Vice-Principal (Research)
A presentation on data services offered at Queens by directors and managers of service units across campus
An examination of data management and curation case studies from researchers in a variety of disciplines
Data Day is a forum for researchers and data service providers to meet and discuss data management opportunities and challenges, says Sharon Murphy, Head of Academic Services, Queens Library.
More information and a registration form are available on the .