The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit

INTRODUCTION Data citation should be a necessary corollary of data publication and reuse. Many researchers are reluctant to share their data, yet they are increasingly encouraged to do just that. Reward structures must be in place to encourage data publication, and citation is the appropriate tool f...

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Main Authors: Hailey Mooney, Mark P. Newton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Iowa State University Digital Press 2012-05-01
Series:Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.1035
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spelling doaj-c7a5f39846cd4c4c891e63ea5f351ac22021-07-02T01:45:47ZengIowa State University Digital PressJournal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication2162-33092012-05-0111eP1035The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and CreditHailey MooneyMark P. NewtonINTRODUCTION Data citation should be a necessary corollary of data publication and reuse. Many researchers are reluctant to share their data, yet they are increasingly encouraged to do just that. Reward structures must be in place to encourage data publication, and citation is the appropriate tool for scholarly acknowledgment. Data citation also allows for the identification, retrieval, replication, and verification of data underlying published studies. METHODS This study examines author behavior and sources of instruction in disciplinary and cultural norms for writing style and citation via a content analysis of journal articles, author instructions, style manuals, and data publishers. Instances of data citation are benchmarked against a Data Citation Adequacy Index. RESULTS Roughly half of journals point toward a style manual that addresses data citation, but the majority of journal articles failed to include an adequate citation to data used in secondary analysis studies. DISCUSSION Full citation of data is not currently a normative behavior in scholarly writing. Multiplicity of data types and lack of awareness regarding existing standards contribute to the problem. CONCLUSION Citations for data must be promoted as an essential component of data publication, sharing, and reuse. Despite confounding factors, librarians and information professionals are well-positioned and should persist in advancing data citation as a normative practice across domains. Doing so promotes a value proposition for data sharing and secondary research broadly, thereby accelerating the pace of scientific research.http://dx.doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.1035
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hailey Mooney
Mark P. Newton
spellingShingle Hailey Mooney
Mark P. Newton
The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit
Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication
author_facet Hailey Mooney
Mark P. Newton
author_sort Hailey Mooney
title The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit
title_short The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit
title_full The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit
title_fullStr The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit
title_full_unstemmed The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit
title_sort anatomy of a data citation: discovery, reuse, and credit
publisher Iowa State University Digital Press
series Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication
issn 2162-3309
publishDate 2012-05-01
description INTRODUCTION Data citation should be a necessary corollary of data publication and reuse. Many researchers are reluctant to share their data, yet they are increasingly encouraged to do just that. Reward structures must be in place to encourage data publication, and citation is the appropriate tool for scholarly acknowledgment. Data citation also allows for the identification, retrieval, replication, and verification of data underlying published studies. METHODS This study examines author behavior and sources of instruction in disciplinary and cultural norms for writing style and citation via a content analysis of journal articles, author instructions, style manuals, and data publishers. Instances of data citation are benchmarked against a Data Citation Adequacy Index. RESULTS Roughly half of journals point toward a style manual that addresses data citation, but the majority of journal articles failed to include an adequate citation to data used in secondary analysis studies. DISCUSSION Full citation of data is not currently a normative behavior in scholarly writing. Multiplicity of data types and lack of awareness regarding existing standards contribute to the problem. CONCLUSION Citations for data must be promoted as an essential component of data publication, sharing, and reuse. Despite confounding factors, librarians and information professionals are well-positioned and should persist in advancing data citation as a normative practice across domains. Doing so promotes a value proposition for data sharing and secondary research broadly, thereby accelerating the pace of scientific research.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.1035
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