<p>In April 2018, at the Society for American Archaeology’s 83rd Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., Sarah Whitcher Kansa, Julian Richards and Willeke Wendrich hosted a forum entitled ‘Making Archaeology Fair’ (see abstract below). The forum responded to a recently published <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/sdata201618">article by Wilkinson et al.</a> outlining FAIR data principles, centred on avenues for making scientific data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable. In preparation for this forum, I produced this illustrated graphic. </p
The last few years have seen considerable progress in terms of integrating individual elements of th...
This presentation was given at the European Assocation of Archaeologists (EAA) conference on 3rd Sep...
In this review, we discuss FAIR Data, why it exists, and who it applies to. We further review the pr...
Archaeology is one of the leading proponents of Open Data in the arts and humanities, and already ex...
Invited lecture on making data FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) at the May 8t...
The main interest in the publication of spatial indexed archaeological data is to offer users the po...
In recent years the principles of open and FAIR data have been adopted by ever more research funders...
In the current trend for e-Science, i.e. collaborative, computationally- or data-intensive research,...
This presentation was given at the 2nd Virtual Conference for Women Archaeologists and Palaeontologi...
Building on previous summaries of the attributes that make research data most usable by other scient...
The FAIR Expertise Hub for the Social Sciences, funded by PDI-SSH, is being established to support d...
Findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR) data are an increasingly important aspect of...
This is a contribution (slides at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1299252 ) to the FAIR Data Panel at...
The purpose of the conference is to bring together multiple research communities and stakeholders wo...
Context: This talk was held on June 28th 2023 online as part of the Research Data Series of the Leib...
The last few years have seen considerable progress in terms of integrating individual elements of th...
This presentation was given at the European Assocation of Archaeologists (EAA) conference on 3rd Sep...
In this review, we discuss FAIR Data, why it exists, and who it applies to. We further review the pr...
Archaeology is one of the leading proponents of Open Data in the arts and humanities, and already ex...
Invited lecture on making data FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) at the May 8t...
The main interest in the publication of spatial indexed archaeological data is to offer users the po...
In recent years the principles of open and FAIR data have been adopted by ever more research funders...
In the current trend for e-Science, i.e. collaborative, computationally- or data-intensive research,...
This presentation was given at the 2nd Virtual Conference for Women Archaeologists and Palaeontologi...
Building on previous summaries of the attributes that make research data most usable by other scient...
The FAIR Expertise Hub for the Social Sciences, funded by PDI-SSH, is being established to support d...
Findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR) data are an increasingly important aspect of...
This is a contribution (slides at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1299252 ) to the FAIR Data Panel at...
The purpose of the conference is to bring together multiple research communities and stakeholders wo...
Context: This talk was held on June 28th 2023 online as part of the Research Data Series of the Leib...
The last few years have seen considerable progress in terms of integrating individual elements of th...
This presentation was given at the European Assocation of Archaeologists (EAA) conference on 3rd Sep...
In this review, we discuss FAIR Data, why it exists, and who it applies to. We further review the pr...