Reuse: Difference between revisions

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== Engages with their Designated Community ==
=Engagement=
To ensure that data and metadata continue to be understood and used effectively into the future the ADA liaises regularly with the Designated Community – including data infrastructure and methods experts, data owners and custodians, and end users. The ADA works closely with academic colleagues in POLIS: The Centre for Social Policy Research [17] at the ANU which includes experts in research methods, design and statistical practices as well as social science subject matter experts. 


To ensure that data and metadata continue to be understood and used effectively into the future the ADA is closely involved with the Designated Community. The ADA sits in POLIS: The Centre for Social Policy Research which places its emphasis on staff who understand and value strong research methods and design and statistical practices. The ADA staff actively engages with researchers in this school and the wider POLIS. Moreover, the ADA has a presence in national and international workshops and conferences concerned with social science research, as well as archiving and digital data. Staff of the ADA are an active members of the DDI Alliance, the Dataverse User Community (for depositors and archives) and the Australian Consortium for Social and Political Research Inc. (ACSPRI) and the World Association for Public Opinion Research (WAPOR) for data users. ADA staff also regularly provide input to community activities such as the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia’s Decadal Plan for Social Science Research Infrastructure (https://socialsciences.org.au/projects/decadal-plan/). Finally, the Director and Deputy Director engage directly with users as part of ANU and disciplinary teaching and training programs, such as the ACSPRI Summer Program and biannual conferences (https://www.acspri.org.au/conferences).
The ADA staff are regularly involved in national and international workshops and conferences. And are active members of several industry groups, for example: the DDI Alliance [18], the Dataverse User Community [19], the Australian Consortium for Social and Political Research Inc. (ACSPRI) [20] and the World Association for Public Opinion Research (WAPOR) [21] for data users. The ADA staff also contribute to ANU teaching and training programs.  


== Data formats ==
The ADA access management team interacts regularly with data users via the ticketing system which functions as a request management platform and helpdesk for general enquiries. The ADA actively supports the establishment of new users in the system and acts as the first contact for queries about data in the collection and general queries about data management and end-of-life solutions for research project data.


The ADA publishes each quantitative data file in the four formats most widely used by the designated community:  
=Supporting reuse =
*.sav (SPSS)
The ADA publishes all quantitative data files in multiple formats that widely used by the designated community to support reuse:
*.sas (SAS)
*.dta (STATA)
* .csv


== Controlled Vocabularies and Ontologies ==
*.sav (SPSS)  
For better findability the ADA uses controlled vocabulary and set ontologies for certain parts of the metadata of each dataset:
* '''Keywords:''' [http://vocabularyserver.com/apais/ APAIS]
* '''Topic Classification:''' [http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/16 ANZSRC FoR codes]


== Metadata Formats ==
*.sas (SAS)
The reusability of the data is also insured by the ADA’s uses the Data Documentation Initiative (DDI) standard of metadata documentation, developed by social science data archives in collaboration with the social science community internationally, so that important aspects of a study and associated data can be understood by the community. The use of the standard includes the use of discipline-specific terms and vocabulary, and also includes the provision of links to documents, publications and similar studies to enable greater comprehension of the data.


== Changes to Data, Metadata, Documentation - Future proofing reusability ==
*.dta (STATA) 
The ADA is committed to stay aligned with the needs of the designated community. It is actively engaged with the community through conferences and committees to stay in touch with changes in technology and requirements. The chosen platform, Dataverse, is used by many other archives and repositories and is frequently updated to serve the needs of the community. Apart from that, the ADA uses active preservation strategies to future proof the data they archive [[Preservation plan]].
 
*.csv
 
=Metadata Standards=
 
The ADA requires a minimum level of DDI metadata based on ADA metadata guidelines [93]. ADA implements DDI-Codebook 2.5 for discovery and reuse in Dataverse and applies DDI-methodology elements at study and variable level for curated collections. Methodology coverage includes: study design, universe, sampling, data collection mode, fieldwork dates, weighting, cleaning operations, and instrument/question text (where provided).   
 
 
=Controlled Vocabularies & Identifiers=
 
To support consistency, discovery, and interoperability, ADA uses: 
 
:* ANZSRC Fields of Research (disciplinary classification for discovery/harvesting). 
 
:* Licences: Creative Commons (for open/recorded-access collections) or ADA licence terms (for restricted collections).  
 
:* Persistent identifiers & provenance: DOIs via DataCite; provenance captured through workflow logs with PROV-O classes in ADAPT (for SIP→AIP→DIP transitions).  
 
The Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC) Fields of Research (FoR) is one of a set of three related classifications developed for use in the measurement and analysis of research and experimental development (R&D) statistics in Australia and New Zealand.  ANZSRC FoR codes are to be completed for published datasets to enable harvesting by the Australian Research Data Australia catalogue [16].     
 
=Expected Documentation for Reuse= 
 
Depositors are expected to provide project metadata and supporting documents where applicable, including the survey instrument, data dictionary, code book, data user guide, and technical report. The ADA archivists actively assess deposits for reuse and include usability recommendations in their data processing report for the depositor. Recommendations can include requests for additional metadata or documentation. The ADA supports updates and revisions to published data, metadata, and documentation outlined in Workflows [34]. 
 
 
 
=References =
 
[17] The Centre for Social Policy Research (POLIS) – (https://csrm.cass.anu.edu.au/)
 
[19] Dataverse User Community – (https://groups.google.com/g/dataverse-community?pli=1)
 
[20] Australian Consortium for Social and Political Research Inc. (ACSPRI) – (https://www.acspri.org.au/)
 
[21] World Association for Public Opinion Research (WAPOR) – (https://wapor.org/)
 
[18] Data Documentation Initiative (DDI) – (https://ddialliance.org/)
 
[93] Metadata guidelines for ADA Dataverse - (https://docs.ada.edu.au/index.php/Metadata_guidelines_for_ADA_Dataverse)
 
[16] Research Data Australia - (https://researchdata.edu.au/)
 
[34] Workflows - (https://docs.ada.edu.au/index.php/Workflows)

Latest revision as of 00:01, 4 December 2025

Engagement

To ensure that data and metadata continue to be understood and used effectively into the future the ADA liaises regularly with the Designated Community – including data infrastructure and methods experts, data owners and custodians, and end users. The ADA works closely with academic colleagues in POLIS: The Centre for Social Policy Research [17] at the ANU which includes experts in research methods, design and statistical practices as well as social science subject matter experts.

The ADA staff are regularly involved in national and international workshops and conferences. And are active members of several industry groups, for example: the DDI Alliance [18], the Dataverse User Community [19], the Australian Consortium for Social and Political Research Inc. (ACSPRI) [20] and the World Association for Public Opinion Research (WAPOR) [21] for data users. The ADA staff also contribute to ANU teaching and training programs.

The ADA access management team interacts regularly with data users via the ticketing system which functions as a request management platform and helpdesk for general enquiries. The ADA actively supports the establishment of new users in the system and acts as the first contact for queries about data in the collection and general queries about data management and end-of-life solutions for research project data.

Supporting reuse

The ADA publishes all quantitative data files in multiple formats that widely used by the designated community to support reuse:

  • .sav (SPSS)
  • .sas (SAS)
  • .dta (STATA)
  • .csv

Metadata Standards

The ADA requires a minimum level of DDI metadata based on ADA metadata guidelines [93]. ADA implements DDI-Codebook 2.5 for discovery and reuse in Dataverse and applies DDI-methodology elements at study and variable level for curated collections. Methodology coverage includes: study design, universe, sampling, data collection mode, fieldwork dates, weighting, cleaning operations, and instrument/question text (where provided).


Controlled Vocabularies & Identifiers

To support consistency, discovery, and interoperability, ADA uses:

  • ANZSRC Fields of Research (disciplinary classification for discovery/harvesting).
  • Licences: Creative Commons (for open/recorded-access collections) or ADA licence terms (for restricted collections).
  • Persistent identifiers & provenance: DOIs via DataCite; provenance captured through workflow logs with PROV-O classes in ADAPT (for SIP→AIP→DIP transitions).

The Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC) Fields of Research (FoR) is one of a set of three related classifications developed for use in the measurement and analysis of research and experimental development (R&D) statistics in Australia and New Zealand. ANZSRC FoR codes are to be completed for published datasets to enable harvesting by the Australian Research Data Australia catalogue [16].

Expected Documentation for Reuse

Depositors are expected to provide project metadata and supporting documents where applicable, including the survey instrument, data dictionary, code book, data user guide, and technical report. The ADA archivists actively assess deposits for reuse and include usability recommendations in their data processing report for the depositor. Recommendations can include requests for additional metadata or documentation. The ADA supports updates and revisions to published data, metadata, and documentation outlined in Workflows [34].


References

[17] The Centre for Social Policy Research (POLIS) – (https://csrm.cass.anu.edu.au/)

[19] Dataverse User Community – (https://groups.google.com/g/dataverse-community?pli=1)

[20] Australian Consortium for Social and Political Research Inc. (ACSPRI) – (https://www.acspri.org.au/)

[21] World Association for Public Opinion Research (WAPOR) – (https://wapor.org/)

[18] Data Documentation Initiative (DDI) – (https://ddialliance.org/)

[93] Metadata guidelines for ADA Dataverse - (https://docs.ada.edu.au/index.php/Metadata_guidelines_for_ADA_Dataverse)

[16] Research Data Australia - (https://researchdata.edu.au/)

[34] Workflows - (https://docs.ada.edu.au/index.php/Workflows)