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This guide is meant to help you navigate some common best practices when managing your research. Research data management (RDM) is the process of managing the way data is collected, processed, analyzed, preserved, and published for greater reuse by the community and the original researcher. It’s about making research materials findable, organized, documented, and safe, while also making the research process as efficient as possible.
If you need some convincing that data management is worth your while, check out this video by our colleagues at the Data Services department in NYU's Health Sciences Library:
That list is not exhaustive, so if you have a data management topic or question that you don't see listed above, please reach out to us anyway! The format of service offerings include:
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Nick Wolf (he/him) |
Vicky Rampin (she or they) |
Please refer to our consultation guidelines for an overview of our services and service expectations.
NYU defines research data as "any recorded, retrievable information necessary for the reconstruction and evaluation of reported results created in connection with the design, conduct or reporting of research performed or conducted at or under the auspices of the University and the events and processes leading to those results, regardless of the form or the media on which they may be recorded. Research data include both intangible data (statistics, finding, conclusions, etc.) and tangible data (notebooks, printouts, etc.), but not tangible research property, which is subject to a separate NYU policy."
The United States Code of Federal Regulations offers a definition researchers with federal funding should keep in mind. According to the Code of Federal Regulations, research data is, "... defined as the recorded factual material commonly accepted in the scientific community as necessary to validate research findings, but not any of the following: Preliminary analyses, drafts of scientific papers, plans for future research, peer reviews, or communications with colleagues."
You might also want to consider the following as relevant research data:
Lab and field notebooks
Audio interviews and transcripts
Code books
Spreadsheets
Documents (text, pdf, Word)
Photographs (digital or analog)
Scripts and algorithms
Workflow and methodology
Database and database content
Protein or gene sequences
Specialized software
You can view a glossary of data-related terms via Cornell's guide.
NYU Data Services
A joint service of New York University's Division of Libraries and Information Technology Services to support quantitative, qualitative, and geographical research at NYU.
NYU UltraViolet (UV)
UltraViolet provides long-term open access to a broad range of digital materials, including data, software, lesson plans, journal articles, book chapters, and the many more types of output the NYU community creates and/or uses in the course of their work at the University. NYU community members can deposit materials here for free, to be curated and preserved in the long-term.
NYU Office of Sponsored Programs (OSP)
OSP can help you identify appropriate potential sponsors, interpret guidelines, develop budgets, and fulfill application requirements. OSP also provides institutional sign off on proposal submissions, negotiates awards with sponsors and guides investigators in funded project administration.
NYU Policy on Retention of and Access to Research Data
A policy that establishes University policy to assure that Research Data are appropriately recorded, archived for the required time, and available for review under the appropriate circumstances.
NYU Statement of Policy on Intellectual Property
This Statement of Policy on Intellectual Property includes a Patent Policy, a Copyright Policy, and a Tangible Research Property Policy.
NYU Digital Library Technology Services (DLTS)
DLTS processes, enables access to, and preserves digital materials that come from both the NYU community and from collaborating partner organizations. Methods include digitization, software development, research, project coordination, and the articulation of best practices.
NYU High Performance Computing (HPC)
NYU Information Technology Services (ITS) supports high performance computing and networking for researchers and scholars. It is home to several high performance clusters and high-speed networks equipped with a wide variety of research software packages.