A third digital repository has been added to the two I described before. Chempound is a free open-source repository which (unlike DSpace and Figshare) was developed specifically for chemistry.
It carries more semantic information (in the form of an RDF triple declaration), which allows SPARQL queries on the entry to be performed.
Our original DSpace repository is also being tweaked to allow additional information to be added to existing entries; in particular if an entry is linked to in a journal publication, the DOI of that article is inserted into the DSpace descriptions. It is also relatively simply to duplicate the information in one repository by re-depositing it into another. Thus it becomes feasible to clone the information about the 600+ entries in our DSpace that have been subsequently published in peer-reviewed journal articles, thus adding a measure of confidence to their provenance.
To compare how the three repositories carry information about the same molecule, invoke any of the links below:
I blogged about this two years ago and thought a brief update might be in order now. To support the discussions here, I often perform calculations, and most of these are then deposited into a DSpace digital repository, along with metadata. Anyone wishing to have the full details of any calculation…
The Amsterdam manifesto espouses the principles of citable open data. It is a short document, and it is worth re-stating its eight points here: Data should be considered citable products of research. Such data should be held in persistent public repositories. If a publication is based on data not included with…
In this previous blog post I wrote about one way in which we have enhanced the journal article. Associated with that enhancement, and also sprinkled liberally throughout this blog, are links to a Digital Repository (if you want to read all about it, see DOI: 10.1021/ci7004737). It is a fairly…
This entry was posted on Monday, August 13th, 2012 at 6:33 pm and is filed under Chemical IT. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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2 Responses to “Digital repositories. An update to the update.”
I just received an email from James Moses. It summarises a report on Institutional Digital Repositories (you have to pay to get this). Two of the conclusions sent to me in the email (no disclaimer says I cannot include this here) are:
“• The mean annual budget of the (38) repositories in the sample is $84,240.
• The mean number of man-hours of librarian and librarian technician labor required per year to operate and market the digital repository is 3,186.5”
Wow, if that were indeed the true cost of running a repository for chemistry, then I think the small number we have would continue to be just that, small!
It would nevertheless be interesting to see what the cost of say starting up and operating a Chempound repository would be. I fancy very significantly less than the figures above might suggest.
I just received an email from James Moses. It summarises a report on Institutional Digital Repositories (you have to pay to get this). Two of the conclusions sent to me in the email (no disclaimer says I cannot include this here) are:
“• The mean annual budget of the (38) repositories in the sample is $84,240.
• The mean number of man-hours of librarian and librarian technician labor required per year to operate and market the digital repository is 3,186.5”
Wow, if that were indeed the true cost of running a repository for chemistry, then I think the small number we have would continue to be just that, small!
It would nevertheless be interesting to see what the cost of say starting up and operating a Chempound repository would be. I fancy very significantly less than the figures above might suggest.
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