Policies and Background Literature for Self-Education on Research Data Management: An Annotated Bibliography Previous Contents Next Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship Fall 2015 DOI:10.5062/F4GB222C URLs in this document have been updated. Links enclosed in {curly brackets} have been changed. If a replacement link was located, the new URL was added and the link is active; if a new site could not be identified, the broken link was removed. Policies and Background Literature for Self-Education on Research Data Management: An Annotated Bibliography Abigail Goben agoben@uic.edu Rebecca Raszewski raszewr1@uic.edu University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago, Illinois Introduction, Scope, Methods This annotated bibliography reviews U.S. federal policies, articles, and books to assist librarians who are self-educating on research data management or are seeking background reading material to gain insight into the present landscape of data management and librarianship. Librarians navigating research data management self-education have an increasing body of literature to choose from, which may become overwhelming. While an excellent and expansive bibliography of current research has been developed and is being maintained (Bailey 2015 Jul 1), those just starting to explore this area would benefit from a more targeted selection. This annotated bibliography, sorted by date of publication, addresses the policies shaping the data management landscape, provides an overview of articles to give context to the changes in libraries in the past decade, and identifies current self-education books that will provide more comprehensive insight on research data management, data information literacy, and data science topics. Librarians seeking self-education resources beyond literature are referred to the webliography "Research Data Management Self-Education for Librarians: A Webliography" (also in this issue). U.S. Federal Policies Articles Books Section A: U.S. Federal Policies As U.S. federal funding agency requirements have been changing over the past decade, it is valuable for librarians to be aware of some federal documents that have influenced data retention and management. National Science Foundation. 2010 Nov 30. Dissemination and Sharing of Research Results. U.S. NSF - About. [accessed 2015 Aug 25]. http://www.nsf.gov/bfa/dias/policy/dmp.jsp This policy update from the National Science Foundation initiated the need for a data management plan for all future grant proposals. While some areas already had this requirement in place, this policy update made it agency-wide and prompted greatly increased interest in research data.   Holdren, J.P. 2013 Feb 22. Memorandum for the heads of Executive departments and Agencies: Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research. Office of Science and Technology Policy, Executive Office of the [U.S. ] President, The White House. [accessed 2015 Jun 9]. {https://web.archive.org/web/20161020065541/https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/ostp_public_access_memo_2013.pdf} This memo from 2013 called for all large federal agencies to address the need for broader access to the research that they fund. Responses addressed both the final research products, including articles and their affiliated data, and are being released throughout 2015.   Burwell, S., VanRoekel, S., Park, T. & Mancini, D. 2013. Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies. [accessed 2015 Aug 27]. {https://web.archive.org/web/20150906083126/https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/memoranda/2013/m-13-13.pdf} Supplemental to the OSTP memo, this memo instructed agencies to improve making information, specifically including data, interoperable, accessible, and reusable.   Whitmire, A., Briney, K., Nurnberger, A., Henderson, M., Atwood, T., Janz, M., Kozlowski, W., Lake, S., Vandegrift, M. & Zilinski, L. 2015. A table summarizing the Federal public access policies resulting from the U.S. Office of Science and Technology Policy memorandum of February 2013. [accessed 2015 August 27]. http://figshare.com/articles/A_table_ summarizing_the_Federal_public_access_policies_resulting_from_the_US_Office_of_Science_and_Technology_Policy_memorandum_of_February_2013/1372041 This table, compiled and maintained by a number of data librarians, provides a visual checklist of what will be expected in data management plans from each of the federal agencies.   Section B: Articles A comprehensive review of articles on research data management and libraries would easily encompass an entire book. Selected here are a few articles to provide an overview of the trends and emerging research of the past decade and a bibliography for further reading. Gold, A. 2007. Cyberinfrastructure, data, and libraries, Part 1: a cyberinfrastructure primer for librarians. D-Lib Magazine 13(9/10). [accessed 2015 Aug 12]. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/september07/gold/09gold-pt1.html Gold, A. 2007. Cyberinfrastructure, data, and libraries, Part 2. D-Lib Magazine 13(9/10). [accessed 2015 Aug 12]. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/september07/gold/09gold-pt2.html Gold's articles outline the emerging challenges in advance of federal directives and the fascination with Big Data. This provides both an overview of areas for libraries to tackle data services including GIS and bioinformatics and looks ahead to the librarian's role with data.   Salo, D. 2010. Retooling libraries for the data challenge. Ariadne. [accessed 2015 Aug 19]; 64. http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue64/salo Salo tackles the notion of shifting librarian activities from traditional duties to data services. She identifies the areas where there is likely to be disconnect from standard librarian practice and emerging needs and bluntly states the challenges ahead.   Borgman, C.L. 2012. The conundrum of sharing research data. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 63(3):1059-1078. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1869155 Borgman provides a detailed exploration of motivations, challenges, and incentives for research data sharing. This article serves as an excellent introductory primer, reviewing data complexity and current practices where assistance might be most useful.   Wallis, J.C., Rolando, E. & Borgman, C.L. 2013. If we share data, will anyone use them? Data sharing and reuse in the long tail of science and technology. PLoS ONE 8(7):e67332. http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067332 Wallis, et al. report on the challenges of sharing data gathered over a decade from a specific research group. While the researchers show willingness to share and use others' data, their preference was to share with trusted colleagues, reinforcing a 'gift culture' based on networks and bartering rather than a more open sharing or selling model.   Erway, R. OCLC Research. 2013. Starting the conversation university-wide research data management policy. Dublin, Ohio: OCLC Research. [accessed 2015 Jan 5]. http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/research/publications/library/2013/2013-08.pdf Erway, et al. details the university concerns surrounding research data with an eye on developing an institutional policy. This article identifies the various stakeholders, including the library, and reviews the various questions that a policy may need to answer. The article can be used as a way to gain ideas on institutional collaboration and to review issues that may arise.   Antell, K., Bales Foote, J., Turner, J. & Shults, B. 2014. Dealing with data: science librarians' participation in data management at Association of Research Libraries institutions. College & Research Libraries 75(4):557-574. http://crl.acrl.org/content/early/2013/04/05/crl13-464.full.pdf+html As libraries have begun to engage in research data management activities, this article reviews the awareness and service landscape among science librarians three years after the National Science Foundation policy change. This article provides insight into what science librarians saw as immediately important and future trends.   Goodman, A., Pepe, A., Blocker, A.W., Borgman, C.L., Cranmer, K., Crosas, M., Di Stefano, R., Gil, Y., Groth, P., Hedstrom, M., et al. 2014. Ten simple rules for the care and feeding of scientific data. PLoS Computational Biology. 10(4):e1003542. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003542 Targeted at scientists looking to improve their data as a scholarly object, Goodman, et al., provide very simple techniques supplemented with a short list of recommended resources that researchers can immediately implement to better facilitate data access and reuse. This article would serve as a nice introduction for researchers and students with some familiarity, but needing specific ideas on behaviors to adopt or change.   Goben, A. & Raszewski, R. 2015. The data life cycle applied to our own data. Journal of the Medical Library Association 103(1):40-44. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4279933/ As librarians are learning about data management, it is beneficial for them to practice the skills and questions with library data. This article uses reference desk statistics as an example of a common dataset that can be used as an educational tool.   Tenopir, C., Dalton, E.D., Allard, S., Frame, M., Pjesivac, I., Birch, B., Pollock, D. & Dorsett, K. 2015. Changes in data sharing and data reuse practices and perceptions among scientists worldwide. PLOS ONE 10(8):e0134826. http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134826 In this follow-up study, Tenopir et al seek to determine changes in the previous five years on perceptions and behaviors by scientists regarding data sharing and withholding and the factors influencing their behavior. This article shows the attitude changes and emerging concerns as data sharing has become more widely expected.   Bailey, C. 2015. Research Data Curation Bibliography. [updated 2015 Jul 1; accessed 2015 Aug 19]. http://digital-scholarship.org/rdcb/rdcb.htm Bailey curates a selection of English language books and articles surrounding research data. This extensive list includes subject discipline specific articles in addition to more general topics across library, computer science, digital curation, and other subject journals.   Section C: Books A number of texts have been written recently to address the data management self-education needs of librarians. Along with providing broader context of the changing scholarly landscape, these books identify suggestions for implementing programs and several provide case study examples. Borgman, C.L. 2010. Scholarship in the Digital Age: Information, Infrastructure, and the Internet. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Borgman examines infrastructural needs as research and scholarly communication transitions in the early 21st century. She outlines emerging social challenges as well as policy, legal, community, and technological issues. Borgman also discusses issues with collaboration and data sharing, describing the new tools researchers are likely to need. Overall, the book serves as a call to action for librarians, information professionals, scholars, and information technology specialists and provides a framework for opportunities and challenges ahead.   Krier, L. & Strasser, C.A. 2014. Data Management for Libraries: A LITA Guide. Chicago, IL: ALA Techsource. This guide provides a succinct overview of data management opportunities for librarians. With an emphasis on collaboration with units beyond the library, Krier and Strasser develop a framework to allow for success of these new activities and is targeted specifically at librarians looking to create new services. Importantly, Krier and Strasser highlight the need for a team effort from the library, not just the hiring or appointing of a solo librarian to address data services.   Roy, J.M. 2014. Research Data Management: Practical Strategies for Information Professionals. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press. This text offers a comprehensive insight into research data management as a library concern. Each chapter frames a different data management challenge, such as assessing services, and provides guidance specifically intended for researchers working in a specific area. Four case studies examining successes and challenges provide a view into robust library data management programs at research institutions.   Briney, K. 2015. Data Management for Researchers: Organize, maintain and share your data for research success. Exeter, United Kingdom: Pelagic Publishing. Briney outlines practical strategies for researchers in tackling and managing research data. She guides researchers through a variety of data problems including storage, documentation, organization, and preservation, clearly explaining pitfalls and best practices. While written for the individual researcher, it provides a detailed roadmap for librarians tackling services beyond data management plans.   Carlson, J. & Johnston, L.R., editors. 2015. Data Information Literacy: Librarians, Data and the Education of a New Generation of Researchers. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press. http://www.datainfolit.org Going beyond the self-education for librarians and on to developing data information literacy for students and research faculty, the authors provide extensive case studies that explore different techniques for developing and assessing data information literacy in the classroom. This book provides a framework for establishing and evaluating instruction to meet an emergent educational need. Ongoing additions to this project are available at the project web site.   Afflet, A. 2015. The Accidental Data Scientist: Big Data Applications and Opportunities for Librarians and Information Professionals. Medford, NJ: Information Today, Inc. Affelt tackles data science terms and frameworks, providing real world examples and ideas for where librarians can evolve into this new field with skill adaption and education, instead of focusing solely on research data management. This text transitions from the internal library focus to the broader area of data science.   O'Neil, C. & Schutt, R. 2013. Doing Data Science: Straight Talk from the Frontline. Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly Media. Schutt and O'Neil give an overview of data science and Big Data, algorithms, data visualization, data journalism, and data engineering. Targeted as a reference text for those going into data science, this is particularly recommended for those interested in further exploring the field and goes far beyond research data management.   Borgman, C.L. 2015. Big data, little data, no data: scholarship in the networked world. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Borgman explores the current landscape of challenges for data. She details the present issues including the inaccessibility of data, scholars' unwillingness to share, and datasets that are unusable even if shared. She also reviews how having a large volume of data does not sort out the problem of not having the correct data. Borgman provides excellent case studies detailing what data looks like in sciences, social sciences, and the humanities. Finally, Borgman tackles the infrastructure issues including policy, citation, and discovery of data.   References Bailey C. 2015 Jul 1. Research data curation bibliography. [accessed 2015 Aug 19]. http://digital-scholarship.org/rdcb/rdcb.htm Previous Contents Next This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.