The following are some best practices that should be considered prior to starting a data project and provide guidance for managing data in the Research Data Lifecycle's post-active research stage.
To prevent data from being lost to incompatibility, store it as formats and on hardware that are open standard, not proprietary.
In your documentation, use metadata to record details about the data collection process (e.g., a study) such as:
its context
the dates of data collections
data collection methods, etc.
Sharing data makes it possible for researchers to validate research results and to reuse data for teaching and further research. Sharing is also required by an increasing number of funders and publishers. Funders seek to maximize the impact of the research they fund by encouraging or requiring data sharing.
Depositing to an established repository will help to ensure that data are consistently available and accessible, and preserved for future use. Choosing a data repository can be determined by various factors, such as discipline, accepted data format, data sharing policies and etc. You can obtain assistance from Data Services to identify a repository to publish your research data.
Type of Data
Recommended Formats
Formats Acceptable
Plain Text
txt, pdf/A xml
docx, doc, rtf
Tabular Text
csv, tsv
xlsx, xls, sav, dta
Image
tiff, JPEF2000
jpg, psd, png, gif, bmp
Audio
wave, aiff
mp3, wma, aac, ogg
Archiving
zip
rar
Video
motion jpg 2000, mov, avi
mpeg-4
Subject/Discipline
Example Archive/Repository
Ecology
DNA Sequences
Chemistry
Social Sciences