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The State of Open Data 2018 – Global Attitudes towards Open Data

By Alex Jackson October 22, 2018

Open data has become more embedded in the research community – 64% of survey respondents reveal they made their data openly available in 2018. However, a surprising number of respondents (60%) had never heard of the FAIR principles, a guideline to enhance the reusability of academic data.

Today Figshare, an online digital repository for academic research, has launched its annual report, The State of Open Data 2018, to coincide with global celebrations around Open Access Week. The report is the third in the series and includes survey results and a collection of articles from global industry experts, as well as a foreword from Ross Wilkinson, Global Strategy at the Australian Research Data Commons.

Two years on from the first report in 2016, which was created to examine attitudes and experiences of researchers working with open data – sharing it, reusing it, redistributing it – survey results continue to show encouraging progress, that open data is becoming more embedded in the research community.

For this year’s survey, as with previous years, Figshare partnered with Springer Nature, to ensure as diverse an audience as possible.

Key findings include:

  • 64% of respondents revealed they made their data openly available in 2018, a 7% rise on 2016.
  • Data citations are motivating more respondents to make data openly available, increasing 7% from 2017 to 46%
  • 60% of respondents had never heard of FAIR principles (Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability and Reusability – provide a guideline for data producers and publishers to enhance the reusability of academic data.)
  • The percentage of respondents in support of national mandates for open data is higher at 63% than in 2017 (55%)
  • Respondents who revealed that they had reused open data in their research continues to shrink. In 2018 48% said they had done this, whereas in 2017 50% had done so, with 2016 57% in 2016.
  • Most researchers felt that they did not get sufficient credit for sharing data (58%), compared to 9% who felt they do.
  • Respondents having lost research data has decreased from 2017 (36% versus 30% in 2018).

We asked a number of questions about FAIR principles this year with some surprising results. The percentage of respondents who reported being familiar with the principles was just 15% with 25% having previously heard of FAIR and 60% never having heard of them.

The results confirmed that despite publishers, funders and institutions rapidly adopting these principles, there remains a crucial gap in educating researchers. They further show the need for initiatives like Go Fair, which gives researchers clear instructions on how to be FAIR compliant.

Mark Hahnel, CEO and Founder, Figshare, said: “In recent years we’ve seen the conversation move from data not only being open but being FAIR. This is a major shift considering we spent the early years of Figshare trying to convince researchers to share their data full stop.

“For every new feature we build at Figshare, we have one eye on the FAIR principles, so as a repository we are doing as much of the heavy lifting as possible for researchers. There is still a lot work to be done to educate researchers on what is expected of them but the report highlights many new initiatives from across the research ecosystem, all pulling together in the same direction.”

The report contributions include:

Foreword

Ross Wilkinson, Director, Global Strategy at Australian Research Data Commons

Fundamental Change in Academia Without Anyone Needing to Die

Mark Hahnel, Founder and CEO, Figshare

The FAIR Future of Repositories as a Critical Component of the Internet

for Machines (and People)

Barend Mons, Leiden University Medical Center, Erik Schultes, Leiden University Medical Center & Luiz Olavo Bonino da Silva Santos, GO FAIR International Support and Coordination Office

The State of Open Data Survey – Findings and Comparisons with 2016 & 2017

Briony Fane, Digital Science, & Jon Treadway, Digital Science

From Green Shoots to “Grassroots”: How Can We Accelerate Data Sharing?

Grace Baynes, VP, Research Data and New Product Development, Open Research, Springer Nature

Download the report on Figshare now and you can share online using #stateofopendata

For press enquiries, please contact
Alex Jackson
Head of Press, Digital Science
a.jackson@digital-science.com

Notes for editors

Figshare is a repository where users can make all of their research outputs available in a citable, shareable and discoverable manner. Figshare’s aim is to become the place where all academics make their research openly available. It provides a secure cloud based storage space for research outputs and encourages its users to manage their research in a more organized manner, so that it can be easily made open to comply with funder mandates. Openly available research outputs will mean that academia can truly reproduce and build on top of the research of others. Visit www.figshare.com

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