Improving software citation and credit continues to be a topic of interest across and within many disciplines, with numerous efforts underway. In this Birds of a Feather (BoF) session, we started with a list of actionable ideas from last year's BoF and other similar efforts and worked alone or in small groups to begin implementing them. Work was captured in a common Google document; the session organizers will disseminate or otherwise put this information to use in or for the community in collaboration with those who contributed
An interactive session to explore next steps for the CRediT taxonomy. CRediT is a linked data initi...
This talk is part of the panel session "Deep Dive: Software Citation" at FORCE2021, 7 December 2021....
In 2014, a set of data citation principles (https://doi.org/10.25490/a97f-egyk) were published, foll...
Improving software citation and credit continues to be a topic of interest across and within many di...
Introducing the Software Citation: Giving Credit Where Credit is Due Research is commonly intense an...
The past year has seen movement on several fronts for improving software citation, including the Cen...
Software is fundamental to research. From short, thrown-together temporary scripts, through an abund...
Software is a critical part of modern research and yet there is little support across the scholarly ...
Presentation given at 11th HiRSE Seminar on 2023-01-23. As RSEs, we create and maintain the softwar...
Software is a copyrightable creative work that is foundationally important to the future of scholarl...
The main output of the FORCE11 Software Citation working group (https://www.force11.org/group/softwa...
Plan, curate, and connect your software. Use this checklist to improve your software citation, disc...
Open Science contributes in many ways to a Knowledge Ecology. Opening research data and software to ...
The software that supports your research needs to be preserved in a repository with robust metadata ...
<p>The traditional model of scientific credit is based on publication from a time when reproduction ...
An interactive session to explore next steps for the CRediT taxonomy. CRediT is a linked data initi...
This talk is part of the panel session "Deep Dive: Software Citation" at FORCE2021, 7 December 2021....
In 2014, a set of data citation principles (https://doi.org/10.25490/a97f-egyk) were published, foll...
Improving software citation and credit continues to be a topic of interest across and within many di...
Introducing the Software Citation: Giving Credit Where Credit is Due Research is commonly intense an...
The past year has seen movement on several fronts for improving software citation, including the Cen...
Software is fundamental to research. From short, thrown-together temporary scripts, through an abund...
Software is a critical part of modern research and yet there is little support across the scholarly ...
Presentation given at 11th HiRSE Seminar on 2023-01-23. As RSEs, we create and maintain the softwar...
Software is a copyrightable creative work that is foundationally important to the future of scholarl...
The main output of the FORCE11 Software Citation working group (https://www.force11.org/group/softwa...
Plan, curate, and connect your software. Use this checklist to improve your software citation, disc...
Open Science contributes in many ways to a Knowledge Ecology. Opening research data and software to ...
The software that supports your research needs to be preserved in a repository with robust metadata ...
<p>The traditional model of scientific credit is based on publication from a time when reproduction ...
An interactive session to explore next steps for the CRediT taxonomy. CRediT is a linked data initi...
This talk is part of the panel session "Deep Dive: Software Citation" at FORCE2021, 7 December 2021....
In 2014, a set of data citation principles (https://doi.org/10.25490/a97f-egyk) were published, foll...