Libraries
You can now analyse consumer spending by income bands in Passport
Helen Beton2023-02-20T20:33:12+00:0017/07/2017|Tags: barrington, knl, mirc, muscat, passport, SOMLibrary, web-mirc-industry|
It is now possible to analyse consumer spending by income bands in Passport. You can find the new analysis tool via the ‘Consumers’ – ‘Income and Expenditure’ links on the site. The tool allows you ...
An open science checklist
Georgina Parsons2023-02-20T20:33:21+00:0005/07/2017|Tags: barrington, knl, mirc, open research, open science, rdm, research data management, SOMLibrary|
One reason that research data management has advanced in the priorities of the higher education sector in recent years is the "reproducibility crisis" in science. This has led many researchers and organisations to support a ...
Researching… the travel and tourism industry
Sheila Chudasama2023-06-13T12:08:44+01:0028/06/2017|Tags: bmi, FitchConnect, ibisworld, industries, knl, mirc, muscat, passport, SOMLibrary, tourism, travel, web-mirc-industry|
With summer approaching, what better time is there to research the travel and tourism market! In this post we gather together the best of our resources on the topic. FitchConnect FitchConnect's BMI service includes reports ...
Five reasons to reconsider submitting primary data to your journal publisher
Georgina Parsons2023-02-20T20:33:47+00:0006/06/2017|Tags: barrington, cord, data, knl, mirc, rdm, research, SOMLibrary|
When you submit a paper for publication, you often provide supplementary information including the data used in the research. It's important to make this data available for the paper's readers, to provide the evidence for ...
Using ‘et al’ in Cranfield Author-date style referencing
Sheila Chudasama2023-02-20T20:33:57+00:0030/05/2017|Tags: et al, harvard referencing, knl, mirc, muscat, referencing, SOMLibrary|
Academic writing is full of idiosyncrasies, one of which being the Latin abbreviation ‘et al’. The term et al means ‘and others’ and is often used in academic literature to abbreviate a list of authors' ...
How do I reference financial reports and data… in the Cranfield Author-date style?
Sheila Chudasama2023-02-20T20:34:12+00:0023/05/2017|Tags: data, financials, harvard referencing, knl, mirc, muscat, referencing, SOMLibrary|
We all know how to cite and reference from books, journals, the internet and even blog posts, but what about financials? Just as you would do with information from other sources, data retrieved from a ...