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New technologies make research data more accessible

23 August 2005

Monash University IT professionals will take a lead role in developing technologies that will provide better access to research data and encourage research collaboration.

Their project, Dataset Acquisition, Accessibility and Annotation e-Research Technologies (DART), builds on an earlier project, Australian Research Repositories Online to the World, which collated published research and made it more accessible to researchers and the general public.

DART, which has received $3.2 million from the Federal Government, will take this a step further by storing datasets as well as the published research and by making it possible to include annotations on datasets and publications. The DART project will be one of the first activities undertaken by the newly established e-Research@Monash Centre.

The bid was led by Dr Andrew Treloar from Monash's Information Technology Services division in collaboration with colleagues at James Cook University, the University of Queensland and the Cooperative Research Centre for Enterprise Distributed Systems Technology.

Dr Treloar said people had a tendency to store data on their own or departmental computers, taking up a lot of space, making it difficult to send the data on to someone else, and placing the data at risk if the computer crashes.

"It also makes it difficult for researchers to find out whether anyone else has done any work in particular areas," he said. "DART will provide a central location that can be easily searched by researchers and other interested parties. It will also facilitate general discussion by enabling people to make comments on publications and datasets."

Dr Treloar said the project would use changes in technology to benefit the research community. "We're really trying to think about how we better support data-intensive research collaborations that require high quality network access," he said. "The way in which we publish research really hasn't changed much in the past 200 years -- we haven't fully responded to the implications of the new technologies for how research is stored and made available. We still largely provide static documents, which don't allow us to easily enter into dialogue around the research."

As part of the DART project Dr Asad Khan, from the Faculty of Information Technology, will make available large datasets derived from sensors and experimental instruments.

The project has been funded by the Department of Education, Science and Training, under the Research Information Infrastructure Framework for Australian Higher Education. Initially, the DART project will focus on datasets from project member institutions but there are plans to support related activities for research undertaken across all Australian universities.

For more information contact Ms Diane Squires in the Media Communications Office on 03 9905 9315 or 0417 603 400.

 
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