{ "access": { "embargo": { "active": false, "reason": null }, "files": "public", "record": "public", "status": "open" }, "created": "2019-09-24T18:07:42.456808+00:00", "custom_fields": {}, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "files": { "count": 3, "enabled": true, "entries": { "RO2019_formattedPreprint.pdf": { "checksum": "md5:638d494f2e48a55670632f252065fd6a", "ext": "pdf", "id": "a758052b-71a5-4a9e-aea2-d639088be9a8", "key": "RO2019_formattedPreprint.pdf", "metadata": null, "mimetype": "application/pdf", "size": 78467 }, "fenlon_RO2019_preprintSubmission.pdf": { "checksum": "md5:5f2be0ce780fdb22920dc3cc0dfd1aee", "ext": "pdf", "id": "83e861ee-fb29-4ff1-a28c-884493709819", "key": "fenlon_RO2019_preprintSubmission.pdf", "metadata": null, "mimetype": "application/pdf", "size": 106949 }, "ro2019_fenlon_RODH.pdf": { "checksum": "md5:c5580911acfd5753cee7aa6d5f1aee69", "ext": "pdf", "id": "f0fe0ad6-03b2-4d63-bc1b-6e61a41fc47a", "key": "ro2019_fenlon_RODH.pdf", "metadata": null, "mimetype": "application/pdf", "size": 34494915 } }, "order": [], "total_bytes": 34680331 }, "id": "3459770", "is_draft": false, "is_published": true, "links": { "access": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/access", "access_links": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/access/links", "access_request": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/access/request", "access_users": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/access/users", "archive": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/files-archive", "archive_media": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/media-files-archive", "communities": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/communities", "communities-suggestions": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/communities-suggestions", "doi": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3459770", "draft": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/draft", "files": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/files", "latest": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/versions/latest", "latest_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/3459770/latest", "media_files": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/media-files", "parent": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3268808", "parent_doi": "https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.3268808", "parent_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/3268808", "requests": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/requests", "reserve_doi": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/draft/pids/doi", "self": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770", "self_doi": "https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.3459770", "self_html": "https://zenodo.org/records/3459770", "self_iiif_manifest": "https://zenodo.org/api/iiif/record:3459770/manifest", "self_iiif_sequence": "https://zenodo.org/api/iiif/record:3459770/sequence/default", "versions": "https://zenodo.org/api/records/3459770/versions" }, "media_files": { "count": 0, "enabled": false, "entries": {}, "order": [], "total_bytes": 0 }, "metadata": { "additional_descriptions": [ { "description": "Preprint submission for consideration for RO2019 at IEEE International Conference on eScience 2019.", "type": { "id": "notes", "title": { "de": "Anmerkungen", "en": "Notes" } } } ], "creators": [ { "affiliations": [ { "name": "University of Maryland, College Park" } ], "person_or_org": { "family_name": "Fenlon", "given_name": "Katrina", "identifiers": [ { "identifier": "0000-0003-1483-5335", "scheme": "orcid" } ], "name": "Fenlon, Katrina", "type": "personal" } } ], "description": "
Despite the rapid growth of digital scholarship in the humanities, most existing research infrastructures lack adequate support for the creation, management, sharing, maintenance, and preservation of complex, networked digital objects. While Research Objects (ROs) have primarily been oriented toward scientific research workflows, the RO model and parallel approaches have gained some uptake in the humanities, enough to suggest their potential to undergird sustainable, networked humanities research infrastructures. This paper reviews several compelling applications in the humanities of the RO and closely related models, in platforms for data sharing, computational workflows, collaborative annotation, digital and semantic publishing, and repositories in several domains. The goal of this paper is to elaborate challenges confronting the application of ROs to digital humanities scholarship, and suggest implications for the implementation of ROs and related models in humanities cyberinfrastructure.
", "languages": [ { "id": "eng", "title": { "en": "English" } } ], "publication_date": "2019-07-04", "publisher": "Zenodo", "resource_type": { "id": "publication-preprint", "title": { "de": "Preprint", "en": "Preprint" } }, "rights": [ { "description": { "en": "The Creative Commons Attribution license allows re-distribution and re-use of a licensed work on the condition that the creator is appropriately credited." }, "icon": "cc-by-icon", "id": "cc-by-4.0", "props": { "scheme": "spdx", "url": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode" }, "title": { "en": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International" } } ], "title": "Interactivity, Distributed Workflows, and Thick Provenance: A Review of Challenges Confronting Digital Humanities Research Objects", "version": "1" }, "parent": { "access": { "owned_by": { "user": 70204 } }, "communities": { "default": "23d53652-d7fb-467a-9e6e-3c0714cc35c9", "entries": [ { "access": { "member_policy": "open", "members_visibility": "public", "record_policy": "open", "review_policy": "open", "visibility": "public" }, "children": { "allow": false }, "created": "2018-02-26T13:21:51.113075+00:00", "custom_fields": {}, "deletion_status": { "is_deleted": false, "status": "P" }, "id": "23d53652-d7fb-467a-9e6e-3c0714cc35c9", "links": {}, "metadata": { "curation_policy": "This Zenodo community welcomes submissions of preprints, Open Access articles and presentation and any FAIR Research Data packing formats (e.g. Research Objects, RO-Crate, BagIt, COMBINE archive), covering topics including, but not limited to:
Research Object publication, archiving and curation
Research Object creation and manipulation
Research Object exploration and visualization
Research Object evolution, derivation and provenance
Handling Big Data in Research Objects
Data Archive packaging and formats
Rich metadata of research data and software
Alignments with community efforts
Citation and attribution of research data and software
Annotation and peer review of research data
Distributed data publication (blockchain, nanopublication)
Driving adoption within current scholarly communications ecosystem
Research Object model domain extensions
Research Object granular access control approaches
Research Object social impact metrics
Self-contained executable Research Objects (i.e., including execution environment description)
Submissions must use an open license, if you are not sure use Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (for text, figures, data, metadata) or Apache License 2.0 (for software, workflows, scripts).
", "description": "For and about Research Objects using the RO-Crate standard, classic RO ontologies and other related work on scholarly communication.", "organizations": [ { "id": "027m9bs27" }, { "id": "00rqy9422" } ], "page": "Scholarly Communication has evolved significantly in recent years, with an increasing focus on Open Research, data sharing and community-developed open source methods. The concepts of authorship and citation are changing, as researchers are increasingly reusing and evolving common software tools and datasets. Yet with a growing amount of cloud compute power and open platforms available, reproducibility of computational analyses becomes more challenging, and often overlooked in peer review. While recent advances in scientific workflows and provenance capture systems have improved on this situation, a question remains on how to publish, archive and explore digital research outputs, as academic authors and publishers remain focused on PDFs and the occasional CSV file, with the Web and Open Research often left to \"best effort\" rather than being the expected norm.
To this mean the community initiative Research Object (RO) have been proposed as a way to package and describe research outputs, data, methods, workflows, provenance and structured metadata, reusing existing Web standards and formats.