Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Stian Soiland-Reyes |
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Mercè Crosas |
Author | Leyla Jael Castro |
Author | Frederik Coppens |
Author | José M. Fernández |
Author | Daniel Garijo |
Author | Björn Grüning |
Author | Marco La Rosa |
Author | Simone Leo |
Author | Eoghan Ó Carragáin |
Author | Marc Portier |
Author | Ana Trisovic |
Author | RO-Crate Community |
Author | Paul Groth |
Author | Carole Goble |
URL | https://content.iospress.com/articles/data-science/ds210053 |
Volume | 5 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 97-138 |
Publication | Data Science |
ISSN | 2451-8484 |
Date | 2022/01/01 |
Extra | Publisher: IOS Press |
DOI | 10.3233/DS-210053 |
Accessed | 2023-01-12 05:05:53 |
Library Catalog | content.iospress.com |
Language | en |
Abstract | An increasing number of researchers support reproducibility by including pointers to and descriptions of datasets, software and methods in their publications. However, scientific articles may be ambiguous, incomplete and difficult to process by autom |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
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Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Nick Thieberger |
Author | Marco La Rosa |
Author | Lynch, Michael |
URL | http://ptsefton.com/2020/11/23/Arkisto/index.html |
Date | 2021 |
Accessed | 2022-01-31 01:06:38 |
Conference Name | eResearch Australasia |
Language | en-US |
Abstract | Research data from all disciplines has interest and value that extends beyond funding cycles and must continue to be managed and preserved for the long term. However much of the effort in eResearch goes into building systems which provide functionality and services that operate on data but which actually put data at risk, that is, by loading data into a particular tool so that the data is not be easily retrievable if the service cannot be sustained, or, at worst, the data is lost. The Arkisto (https://arkisto-platform.github.io/why/) approach is to work with a set of standards which make data available for long term access. Using the Oxford Common File Layout (OCFL) to organize data in a repository and Research Object Crate to describe data down to the file or even variable level Arkisto supports the safeguarding of data for the long term. A growing set of Arkisto-compatible software tools allow data ingest into repositories, and the creation of data discovery portals that connect data to analytical, visualisation and computing tools. In this presentation we will introduce the standards based platform and show a number of examples from multiple disciplines of current Arkisto deployments, including an institutional Research Data Portal, a snapshot of the Expert Nation history project, crowd-sourced data from historical criminology , and the Pacific And Regional Archive for Digital Sources in Endangered Cultures (PARADISEC). |
Short Title | An open, composable standards–based research eResearch platform |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Stian Soiland-Reyes |
URL | http://ptsefton.com/2021/06/11/or-2021-ro-crate/index.html |
Date | 2021-06-11 |
Extra | Section: Data Packaging Standards |
Accessed | 2022-01-31 01:04:43 |
Conference Name | Open Repositories |
Language | en |
Abstract | This presentation by Peter Sefton and Stian Soiland-Reyes was presented by Peter Sefton at the Open Repositories 2021 conference on 2021-06-10 (in Australia). RO-Crate has been presented at Open Repositories several times, including a workshop in 2019, so we won’t go through a very detailed introduction but we WILL … |
Proceedings Title | ptsefton.com |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Marco La Rosa |
Author | MIchael Lynch |
URL | http://ptsefton.com/2021/06/11/or-2021-arkisto/index.html |
Date | 2021-06-11 |
Extra | Section: Repositories |
Accessed | 2022-01-31 01:03:10 |
Conference Name | Open Repositories |
Language | en |
Abstract | University of Technology Sydney The University of Melbourne ' title='0' border='1' width='85%'/> This presentation by Peter Sefton, Marco La Rosa and Michael Lynch was delivered at Open Repositories 2021 conference on 2021-06-10 (Australian time) - Marco La Rosa did most of the talking, with help from Michael Lynch. We want to emphasise that this presentation is based on the FAIR principles that data … |
Proceedings Title | ptsefton.com |
Short Title | Arkisto |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Moises Sacal Bonequi |
URL | http://ptsefton.com/2021/10/12/ldaca2021/index.html |
Date | 2021 |
Accessed | 2022-01-30 23:50:14 |
Language | en-US |
Abstract | The Language Data Commons of Australia Data Partnerships (LDaCA) and the Australian Text Analytics Platform (ATAP) are building towards a scalable and flexible language data and analytics commons. These projects will be part of the Humanities and Social Sciences Research Data Commons (HASS RDC). The Data Commons will focus on preservation and discovery of distributed multi-modal language data collections under a variety of governance frameworks. This will include access control that reflects ethical constraints and intellectual property rights, including those of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, migrant and Pacific communities. The platform will provide workbench services to support computational research, starting with code-notebooks with no-code research tools provided in later phases. Research artefacts such as code and derived data will be made available as fully documented research objects that are re-runnable and rigorously described. Metrics to demonstrate the impact of the platform are projected to include usage statistics, data and article citations. In this presentation we will present the proposed architecture of the system, the principles that informed it and demonstrate the first version. Features of the solution include the use of the Arkisto Platform (presented at eResearch 2020), which leverages the Oxford Common File Layout. This enables storing complete version-controlled digital objects described using linked data with rich context via the Research Object Crate (RO-Crate) format. The solution features a distributed authorization model where the agency archiving data may be separate from that authorising access. |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
URL | http://ptsefton.com/2019/07/01/DataCrate-OR2019/index.html |
Place | Hamburg |
Date | 2019 |
Conference Name | Open Respositories |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Eoghan Ó Carragáin |
Author | Carole Goble |
Author | Stian Soiland-Reyes |
URL | http://ptsefton.com/2019/11/05/RO-Crate%20eResearch%20Australasia%202019/ |
Place | Brisbane |
Date | 2019 |
Conference Name | eResearch Australasia |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Eoghan Ó Carragáin |
Author | Carole Goble |
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Stian Soiland-Reyes |
URL | https://f1000research.com/slides/8-1196 |
Volume | 8 |
Publication | F1000Research |
Date | 2019-07-26 |
DOI | 10.7490/f1000research.1117129.1 |
Accessed | 2019-08-02 08:13:48 |
Library Catalog | f1000research.com |
Abstract | Read this work by Ó Carragáin E et al., at F1000Research. |
Short Title | RO-Crate |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Gavin Kennedy |
Author | Peter Sefton |
URL | http://ptsefton.com/2018/07/06/RedBoX-Provisioner-OR2018.htm |
Place | Bozeman Montana |
Date | 2018 |
Accessed | 2019-05-24 02:53:12 |
Conference Name | Open Repositories 2018 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Gavin Kennedy |
Author | Peter Sefton |
URL | http://eresearch2018.org.nz/ |
Place | Queenstown |
Date | 2018 |
Conference Name | eResearch New Zealand 2018 |
Abstract | ReDBox (Research Data Box) is a mature open source metadata registry application used for describing research data and for data management planning. It is in use by 13 Australian universities, primarily to support the capture of research data collection metadata and provide the workflows for publishing this metadata to Research Data Australia, the Australian national research data registry. ReDBox is a community project managed by the Queensland Cyber Infrastructure Foundation (QCIF), Queensland’s provider of eResearch infrastructure and services. |
Proceedings Title | eResearch New Zealand 2018 |
Item Type | Report |
---|---|
Author | Liza Daly |
Contributor | Theo Andrew |
Contributor | Peter Sefton |
Contributor | Emma Tonkin |
Contributor | Harsh Khatri |
Contributor | David F. Flanders |
URL | http://jiscpub.blogs.edina.ac.uk/final-report/ |
Rights | This report by JISC is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 UK: Scotland License. |
Place | Edinburgh, Scotland |
Date | 2011 |
Institution | Edina, for JISC |
Abstract | The Digital Monograph Technical Landscape study (a.k.a. jiscPUB) was a six month thinktank set up by the JISC in the first half of 2011 to explore the potential value that the use of the ePUB specification could bring to the Higher and Further Education sector if further adopted in UK Universities. |
Item Type | Web Page |
---|---|
Author | Sam Adams |
Author | Alex Bilbie |
Author | Steve Lee |
Author | Mark MacGillivray |
Author | Qingqi Wang |
Author | Stephen Gray |
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | web-support@bath.ac.uk |
URL | http://opus.bath.ac.uk/32878/ |
Rights | (c) University of Bath |
Date | 2012 |
Accessed | 2017-03-27 06:44:05 |
Website Type | Reports/Papers |
Abstract | This document provides an introduction to a series of HTML5 case studies which were commissioned by the JISC. The document gives an introduction to HTML5 and related standards developed by the W3C and explains why these developments represent a significant development to Web standards, which is of more significance than previous incremental developments to HTML and CSS. |
Short Title | HTML5 Case Studies |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Steve Cassidy |
Author | Dominique Estival |
Author | Tim Jones |
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Denis K. Burnham |
Author | Jared Burghold |
URL | http://researchdirect.uws.edu.au/islandora/object/uws%3A28985/ |
Place | Reykjavik, Iceland |
Date | 2014 |
Accessed | 2017-03-27 00:21:14 |
Library Catalog | researchdirect.uws.edu.au |
Conference Name | 9th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2014) |
Proceedings Title | Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2014), 26-31 May 2014, Reykjavik, Iceland |
Short Title | The Alveo Virtual Laboratory |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | D. Burnham |
Author | D. Estival |
Author | S. Cassidy |
Author | P. Sefton |
Author | K. Verspoor |
Pages | 1-6 |
Date | 2014 |
DOI | 10.1109/ICSDA.2014.7051412 |
Library Catalog | IEEE Xplore |
Conference Name | 17th Oriental Chapter of the International Committee for the Co-ordination and Standardization of Speech Databases and Assessment Techniques (COCOSDA) |
Abstract | Over the last 4 years we have built two platforms that are pivotal for Human Communication Science research: AusTalk, a 3000 hour auditory-visual corpus of Australian English, and Alveo, an extensible Virtual Laboratory housing corpora and analysis tools glued together by a versatile workflow engine. This paper describes the genesis and operation of each of these in some detail and sets out the advantages they provide (i) for Human Communication Science in their present form, and (ii) the maieutic role they can play in research collaboration across disciplines, across institutions, and across languages and national boundaries, especially in our region. |
Proceedings Title | 17th Oriental Chapter of the International Committee for the Co-ordination and Standardization of Speech Databases and Assessment Techniques (COCOSDA) |
Short Title | Two platforms for research in Human Communication Science |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Wise, Sharyn |
Author | Katrina Trewin |
Author | Peter Bugeia |
Place | Indianapolis |
Date | 2015 |
Conference Name | Open Repositories 2015 |
Proceedings Title | Open Repositories 2015 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Malcolm Sefton |
Author | Dominique Estival |
Author | Steve Cassidy |
Author | Denis Burnham |
Author | Jared Berghold |
URL | http://www.doria.fi/handle/10024/97740 |
Place | Helsinki |
Date | 2014 |
Accessed | 2016-07-18 21:53:59 |
Library Catalog | Google Scholar |
Conference Name | Open Repositories 2014 |
Proceedings Title | Open Repositories 2014 |
Short Title | The Human Communication Science Virtual Lab (HCS vLab) |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Peter Bugeia |
Author | Vicki Picasso |
URL | http://eresearchau.files.wordpress.com/2014/07/eresau2014_submission_30.pdf |
Place | Melbourne |
Date | 2014-10 |
Conference Name | eResearch Australasia 2014 |
Abstract | This presentation is about two complementary open source software products that have been produced by a consortium of partners including the University of Western Sydney, the University of Newcastle and Intersect Australia. These products are designed to bridge the gap between easilyaccessible dropbox.comstyle workingdata filesharing and synchronization and the publishing and archiving of mature research data sets. Cr8it (crateit) is a file packaging and publishing application that lets users package data together with metadata in order to maximise its future potential for reuse using Data Crates the crate format is designed to include as much metadata as possible to maximise data usefulness, plus the actual data payload. Cr8it is a plugin for the open source filesynchronization and sharing platform ownCloud, becoming familiar to Australian researchers from the AARNet Cloudstor+ product. Of The Web (OTW) is a toolkit for extracting metadata from generic and domainspecific file formats, and creating webpreviews, for example extracting time series data from proprietary formats, and creating summary webpages with. Both products are built on a wide range of open source componentry. |
Proceedings Title | eResearch Australasia 2014 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Peter Bugeia |
URL | http://or2013.net/sessions/4a-data-management-acquiring-acting-archiving-and-advertising-research-data-university-west |
Place | Prince Edward Isaland, Canada |
Date | 2013-07-11 |
Conference Name | Open Repositories 2013 |
Abstract | There has been significant Government investment in Australia in repository and eResearch infrastructure over the last several years, to provide all universities with an institutional repository for publications, and via the Australian National Data Service to encourage the creation of institution-wide Research Data Catalogues, and research Data Capture applications. Further rounds of funding have added physical data storage and cloud computing services. This presentation looks at an example of how these streams of money have been channeled together at the University of Western Sydney to create a joined-up vision for research data management across the institution and beyond, creating an environment where data may be used by research teams within and outside of the institution. Alongside of the technical services, we report on early work with researchers to create a culture of replicable use of data, towards the vision of truly reproducible research. This presentation will show a proven end-to-end design for research data flows, starting from a research group, The Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, where a large sensor network gathers data for use by institute researchers, in-situ, with data flowing-through to an institutional data repository and catalogue, and thence to Research Data Australia - a national data search engine. We also discuss a parallel workflow with a more generic focus - available to any researcher. We also report on work we have done to improve metadata capture at source, and to create infrastructure that will support the entire research data lifecycle. We include demonstrations of two innovations which have emerged from the associated project work: the first is of a new tool for researchers to find, organize, package and publish datasets; the second is of a new packaging format which has both human-readable and machine-readable components. |
Proceedings Title | Open Repositories 2013 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Dominique Estival |
Author | Steve Cassidy |
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Denis Burnham |
URL | http://eresearchau.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/eresau2013_submission_16-2.pdf |
Place | Brisbane, Australia |
Date | 2013 |
Conference Name | eResearch Australasia 2013 |
Abstract | Administered by MARCS Institute at the University of Western Sydney, and in partnership with Intersect, Macquarie University, the Australian National University, University of Canberra, Flinders University, University of Melbourne, University of Sydney, University of Tasmania, University of New South Wales, University of Western Australia, RMIT, University of New England, LaTrobe University, NICTA (National ICT Australia, ASSTA (Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association), AusNC (Australian National Corpus), the Human Communication Science Virtual Laboratory HCS vLab project [1] started in December 2012 and is expected to be completed and operational by January 2014. The HCS VLab builds upon collaborations set up during the very successful ARC (Australian Research Council)-funded HCS Network project[2]; it is the first time such a project has been conducted in Australia and will benefit researchers from myriad disciplines encompassed by Human Communication Science (HCS). Research conducted in isolation entails inefficient repetition of analysis of local data sets. HCS research in Australia, and successful real-life applications, requires going beyond the isolated desk-PC-lab-university-bound model of research into a new research environment. Such an environment will eradicate the waste involved in repeated unshared analyses; ignite the research spark that affords the serendipity of new tool-corpus combinations; and dramatically improve scientific replicability by moving corpora and tools and the analyses conducted with these into an easy access, shared, in-the-cloud, public, replicable environment. The HCS vLab is funded by NeCTAR, a body set up by the Australian Government as part of the Super Science initiative and financed by the Education Investment Fund. |
Proceedings Title | eResearch Australasia 2013 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Peter Bugeia |
URL | http://eresearchau.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/eresau2013_submission_57.pdf |
Place | Brisbane, Australia |
Date | 2013 |
Library Catalog | CTX |
Conference Name | eResearch Australasia |
Abstract | In this paper we look at existing generic options available for storing research data in a way that encourages reuse and discoverability, both at the level of data files, and sets of data files, and describe some original work bringing together existing standards and metadata schemas to make well-described, reusable data sets that can be distributed as single files (’crates’). We focus on both formats for individual files and packaging formats, looking at how to best represent research data so that it can be disseminated and archived with as much context and provenance as possible. We look at some of the issues in choosing a file format in which to archive and disseminate data, and discuss techniques for adding contextual information which is both human-readable and machine-readable. |
Proceedings Title | eResearch Australasia 2013 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Duncan Dickinson |
URL | https://conferences.tdl.org/or/OR2011/OR2011main/paper/view/408 |
Place | Austin, Texas |
Date | 2011 |
Accessed | 2011-07-04 12:51:58 |
Conference Name | Open Repositories 2011 |
Proceedings Title | Open Repositories 2011 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Caroline Drury |
Author | Kate Watson |
Author | Peter Sefton |
URL | https://conferences.tdl.org/or/OR2011/OR2011main/paper/view/405 |
Place | Austin, Texas |
Date | 2011 |
Accessed | 2011-07-04 12:49:06 |
Conference Name | Open Repositories |
Proceedings Title | Open Repositories 2011 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Vicki Picasso |
Author | Teula Morgan |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1333156 |
Rights | Authors who submit to this conference agree to the following terms: a) Authors retain copyright over their work, while allowing the conference to place this work under a Creative Commons Attribution License , which allows others to freely access, use, and share the work, with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and its presentation at this conference. b) Authors are able to waive the terms of the CC license and enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution and subsequent publication of this work. c) In addition, authors are encouraged to post and share their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) at any point before and after the conference. |
Place | Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia |
Date | 2010 |
Extra | This presentation discusses the implementation of a research data management system at two Australian Universities with a strong background in running effective institutional repositories (IRs). We demonstrate how leveraging existing repository infrastructure to implement an institutional metadata store can provide a solution to research data management to underpin new services. Lessons from the IR implementation experience in Australia have influenced our approach and driven the development of the technical architecture to support research data management. On the technical side, we describe an architecture which has been developed to build on the digital library services provided by the Institutional Repository. Of particular interest is the way in which research data descriptions can flow from the data owners, to university administrators, to the Australian Research Data Commons. We also identify the challenges associated with data quality and information architecture. In addition, implementation models for the University of Newcastle and Swinburne University of Technology are outlined. Reporting on progress to date, strategic drivers and internal resourcing including building capability and utilising existing knowledge and expertise are discussed. |
Accessed | 2011-06-22 03:30:26 |
Conference Name | eResearch Australasia |
Proceedings Title | eResearch Australasia 2010 |
Short Title | Balancing business imperatives and leveraging capability |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Caroline Drury |
Author | Peter Sefton |
Author | Kate Watson |
Place | Madrid |
Date | 2010, July |
Conference Name | Open Repositories 2010 |
Abstract | Australian institutional research repositories are now facing a new challenge: datasets and their associated metadata. Whereas priority has previously been focused on the research outputs, repository managers are now involved in a new phase of repository re-purposing – curation of datasets and their associated metadata, and provision of this metadata to a national data commons through the ANDS (Australian National Data Service) project. Through a series of surveys conducted by the national repository support service CAIRSS (the CAUL Australian Institutional Repository Support Service), this paper will examine the challenges facing research repository managers along with the readiness of the data within institutions and the readiness of the traditional institutional research repositories to either curate or work alongside this data. |
Proceedings Title | Open Repositories 2010 |
Item Type | Conference Paper |
---|---|
Author | Peter Sefton |
Place | Sydney |
Date | 2000 |
Conference Name | XML Asia Pacific Conference |
Proceedings Title | XML Asia Pacific Conference |