Federally sponsored project requirements increasingly call for the results of funded research to be made publicly available. However, the benefits of sharing your research and data go beyond compliance. The increasingly collaborative research
environment, the need for accessible research data to use in teaching, and the development of advanced tools to enable sharing have all increased the appeal of open research and data. Join us for a faculty roundtable to discuss how and why we share our research.
Through sharing our expertise, experiences, interests, and ideas on open data we can discover the benefits, challenges, and next steps of making our research and scholarship accessible to the public. Faculty panel leading the discussion: Robyn Millan - Associate
Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Mark McPeek - Professor of Biological Sciences, and Deborah Nichols - Professor of AnthropologyThis roundtable is the first part of our two part series. The second session will focus on the specific sharing requirements
from various agencies and the tools that enhance the public access components of grant proposals and research, specifically the DMPTool and EZID, a tool to create a unique, long-term identifier to manage and cite your shared research data.
Register for this session: http://libcal.dartmouth.edu/event.php?id=951059