The data management plan (DMP) in your grant proposal should include information on the repository where you will share your datasets. If you do not know which repository meets your project and funder need you can search the R3Data.org repository index to find the apt repository to share your research data. In cases where you do not have a disciplinary or funder/journal mandated repository ASU Dataverse may be an option for sharing your research datasets. Dataverse facilitates the reuse phase of your project and should not be confused with active storage and management. Your Research Advancement team member and Research Data Managers can work with you on the details of your plan.
Before developing your proposal, contact ASU's Office of Research Data Management. You can also use the DMPTool to help draft your proposal which includes direct funder guidance and institutional recommendations. The DMPTool has options for indicating repositories and if appropriate, you can select ASU Dataverse Research Data Repository. Learn how to use the DMPTool.
Please notify us when writing your proposal so we can work with you to confirm ASU Dataverse is the best resource for your project and prepare you for the dataset publication process.
Proposal data management plans are typically 1 to 2 pages and should not be confused with the entire project DMP you will refer to and update throughout your project. Proposal DMPs are summaries of your plan and not exhaustive explanations. You can add and manage your whole plan in your research or lab notebook.
Boilerplate language
There are no one size fits, and the exact language you use in the proposal will be specific to your project needs, sharing and use restrictions, and other elements. Below is some suggested text that can be adopted and integrated into your plan's 'sharing and preservation components.
Repository information
Datasets will be released to the public as soon as possible upon completing the data gathering and analysis in Arizona State University's Research Data Repository powered by the Harvard Dataverse platform. The institutional repository allows ASU-affiliated, interdisciplinary researchers to share, store, preserve, cite, explore, and make research data accessible and discoverable. Upon publication, the ASU Library assigns each dataset a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) to provide a persistent and citable reference point registered through Datacite. We will systematically copy the dataset files and their respective structure and provide metadata that describes the software coding information so that others may understand and make use of the files. We will also work with ASU research data managers and library research data curators to organize and describe our data so that it is findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable.
Licensing
We will assign a CC0 - "Public Domain Dedication" license for Datasets to facilitate the reuse of the files, and the platform provides a suggested citation.
See the FAQ on determining the best license for your dataset.
If there is human subject information:
We will strip human subject datasets of identifying sensitive information before publication.