Excursus: Finding and selecting repositories

Researchers looking for existing research data in the context of their work can find what they need in research data repositories and data portals. Data producers who want to make their research data available to the public or a limited group of users will also encounter the topic of repositories when publishing their research data. There are repositories that are specifically designed for storing either publications or research data, but there are also repositories that allow both types of objects to be stored.

In many cases, there are relevant repositories for specific subject areas that are well known to the respective specialist community. Researchers should therefore first find out whether such repositories exist for their subject area. In addition to subject-specific repositories, there are also generic repositories that are not assigned to a specific subject area, such as Zenodo or GRO.data. These may be limited to the research data of one or more research institutions or may be usable by all data producers, regardless of their research institution.

    Joint repository for FDM-ndsHAW

    As part of the FDM-ndsHAW project, the six participating universities have agreed to jointly operate a joint repository. The main purpose of this repository is to support researchers who cannot find a suitable subject-specific repository, giving them the opportunity to store their research data in an institutional context. For further information on the joint repository, please contact the relevant contact person at your university.

    If no subject-specific repository is known, a suitable repository must first be found. Special directories of repositories, such as the Registry of Research Data Repositories (re3data), are useful for this purpose. These directories list both subject-specific and interdisciplinary repositories. When selecting a repository, the following prioritization is generally recommended. [1]

    1. Subject-specific repository
    2. Institutional repository
    3. Generic repository

      In addition, various quality characteristics, such as the assignment of persistent identifiers, certification, or supported metadata profiles, should be taken into account when making a selection.

      In addition to searching repositories, it is also advisable to search for existing research data via data portals or index services. These enable a cross-repository search for research data. A generic example of this is Data Cite. There are also various subject-specific services. Further information on searching for and finding research data and research data repositories can be found, for example, at forschungsdaten.info.

      [1] Lilian Sophie Zappone: Onlineworkshop „FDMontag: Suchen und Finden von Repositorien“, 06.05.2024.

      Further information

      Guide to searching repositories

      Zappone L (2024): Handreichung: Repositoriensuche. Link

      Guide to choosing a repository

      Zappone L (2024): Handreichung: Repositorienwahl. Link

      Searching for and finding research data and research data repositories

      Forschungsdaten.info: Find and reuse. Link

      Search for repositories

      DFG digital portal for information and access to research infrastructures worldwide: RIsources

      German Research Foundation (DFG): Portal for Research Infrastructures: RIsources. Link

      Global directory of research data repositories: re3data
      Directory of open access repositories for text publications worldwide: Open DOAR

      OpenDOAR: Global Direcrory of open Access Repositories

      https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/opendoar

      Directory of institutional open access repositories and their contents: ROAR

      ROAR: Registry of open Access Repositories

      https://roar.eprints.org

      Examples of data portals and (subject-specific) data services

      Data search, publication, and archiving for the natural sciences: PANGEA

      PANGAEA: Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science

      https://www.pangaea.de

      Data search, publication, and archiving for social sciences: GESIS

      GESIS Leibniz Institute for Social Sciences

      Research data centers: Link

      gesisDataSearch: Link

      Interdisciplinary research data services: DataCite

      International consortium offering various interdisciplinary services in the field of research data (e.g., DOI and metadata management, search functions).

      Search function: Link

      Services: Link

      Research data services for biodiversity research: GFBio

      A merger of data centers and scientific collections and archives that offers various research data services.

      https://www.gfbio.org