A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.

Growth of the open science movement has drawn significant attention to data sharing and availability across the scientific community. In this study, we tested the ability to recover data collected under a particular funder-imposed requirement of public availability. We assessed overall data recovery...

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Main Authors: Jessica L Couture, Rachael E Blake, Gavin McDonald, Colette L Ward
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6034829?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a419462bde8a450c857c3274ab2b3d4e2020-11-25T01:46:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01137e019978910.1371/journal.pone.0199789A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.Jessica L CoutureRachael E BlakeGavin McDonaldColette L WardGrowth of the open science movement has drawn significant attention to data sharing and availability across the scientific community. In this study, we tested the ability to recover data collected under a particular funder-imposed requirement of public availability. We assessed overall data recovery success, tested whether characteristics of the data or data creator were indicators of recovery success, and identified hurdles to data recovery. Overall the majority of data were not recovered (26% recovery of 315 data projects), a similar result to journal-driven efforts to recover data. Field of research was the most important indicator of recovery success, but neither home agency sector nor age of data were determinants of recovery. While we did not find a relationship between recovery of data and age of data, age did predict whether we could find contact information for the grantee. The main hurdles to data recovery included those associated with communication with the researcher; loss of contact with the data creator accounted for half (50%) of unrecoverable datasets, and unavailability of contact information accounted for 35% of unrecoverable datasets. Overall, our results suggest that funding agencies and journals face similar challenges to enforcement of data requirements. We advocate that funding agencies could improve the availability of the data they fund by dedicating more resources to enforcing compliance with data requirements, providing data-sharing tools and technical support to awardees, and administering stricter consequences for those who ignore data sharing preconditions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6034829?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jessica L Couture
Rachael E Blake
Gavin McDonald
Colette L Ward
spellingShingle Jessica L Couture
Rachael E Blake
Gavin McDonald
Colette L Ward
A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jessica L Couture
Rachael E Blake
Gavin McDonald
Colette L Ward
author_sort Jessica L Couture
title A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.
title_short A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.
title_full A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.
title_fullStr A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.
title_full_unstemmed A funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.
title_sort funder-imposed data publication requirement seldom inspired data sharing.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Growth of the open science movement has drawn significant attention to data sharing and availability across the scientific community. In this study, we tested the ability to recover data collected under a particular funder-imposed requirement of public availability. We assessed overall data recovery success, tested whether characteristics of the data or data creator were indicators of recovery success, and identified hurdles to data recovery. Overall the majority of data were not recovered (26% recovery of 315 data projects), a similar result to journal-driven efforts to recover data. Field of research was the most important indicator of recovery success, but neither home agency sector nor age of data were determinants of recovery. While we did not find a relationship between recovery of data and age of data, age did predict whether we could find contact information for the grantee. The main hurdles to data recovery included those associated with communication with the researcher; loss of contact with the data creator accounted for half (50%) of unrecoverable datasets, and unavailability of contact information accounted for 35% of unrecoverable datasets. Overall, our results suggest that funding agencies and journals face similar challenges to enforcement of data requirements. We advocate that funding agencies could improve the availability of the data they fund by dedicating more resources to enforcing compliance with data requirements, providing data-sharing tools and technical support to awardees, and administering stricter consequences for those who ignore data sharing preconditions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6034829?pdf=render
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