CESSDA ID: crd-3337
Published: 2021-11-11
Publisher: CESSDA

Author(s)

Bezjak, Sonja, Masten, Sergeja, Glavica, Marijana, Vlašiček, Denis, Ramthun, Roland, Doorn, Peter, Breure, Leen, Recker, Jonas, Heuberger, Simon, & Cannon, Matt

Description

High-quality data have the potential to be reused in many ways. Archiving and publishing your data properly is at the core of making your data FAIR and will enable both your future self as well as others to get the most out of your data. Recently, more and more scientific journals are implementing open data policies, leading to researchers' dilemmas about where, when and how to publish the data.

Replicability, reproducibility, questionable research practices, and related issues are becoming increasingly important in the social sciences. Consequently, the way that social science research is conducted and disseminated is gradually changing. A crucial element of that change is research transparency. This entails, among other things, making research data, analysis code, and study materials openly available. In this talk, we will present a short overview of some of the elements of research transparency, and their contribution to an open, and credible body of scientific knowledge.

In the second part, we will present in-depth the processes, policies and tools implemented for facilitating transparent research in the social sciences. The presenters will discuss the processes that need to be in place for an open research cycle, the role of data archives and repositories in sharing research data and materials, tools for reproducing research findings in practice, collaborations between archives and social science journals, and implementing Transparency and Openness Promotion Guidelines in different social science disciplines. The event will conclude with wider reflections on the progress of social science research transparency and the way forward.

Programme:

13.30 - 14.30. Part 1: Introduction. Conceptual basis

Introduction to Research Data Publishing

Speakers: Sonja Bezjak and Sergeja Masten (Slovenian Social Science Data Archives - ADP)

Elements of research transparency

Speakers: Marijana Glavica and Denis Vlašiček (Croatian Social Science Data Archives - CROSSDA)

14.30 - 14.45. Break

14.45 - 16.45. Part 2: Transparency in practice

Speakers:

  • Roland Ramthun, Leibniz-Institut für Psychologie (ZPID)
  • Peter Doorn and Leen Breure, Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
  • Jonas Recker, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences
  • Simon Heuberger, American University
  • Matt Cannon, Head of Open Research, Taylor & Francis

Moderator: Serafeim Alvanides, Data Services for the Social Sciences (GESIS)

Audience

  • Researchers

Discipline

  • Social Sciences

Skill levels

  • Intermediate

Type

  • Webinar
  • Presentation

Format

  • Slides

Persistent Identifiers (PIDs)

Licence and contact

Licence: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Access cost: no