barrington
Where should you publish your paper?
Georgina Parsons2023-02-20T20:31:33+00:0028/09/2017|Tags: barrington, journals, knl, mirc, OA, open access, paper, publication, SOMLibrary|
That's not an easy question as there are lots of factors to take into consideration when choosing where to publish, but let's take a look at a few aspects. Firstly, you probably need or want ...
Confused by copyright?
Georgina Parsons2023-02-20T20:32:39+00:0002/08/2017|Tags: barrington, copyright, knl, licensing, mirc, publication, publishing, rdm, research data management, SOMLibrary|
As researchers are increasingly expected to publish research outputs online, including data, the question of copyright and licensing often arises. Are they different, and how do they affect each other? Because they have legal implications, ...
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 ...
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 ...
The biggest lie on the internet
Georgina Parsons2023-02-20T20:34:58+00:0027/04/2017|Tags: barrington, cloud, google, knl, mirc, rdm, research data, SOMLibrary, storage, terms and conditions, ts & cs|
It is said that the biggest lie on the internet is "I have read and understood the terms and conditions". Can you honestly say that when presented with terms online, you read them carefully and ...