Humanities and Social Sciences: Difference between revisions
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
Scholars in the Humanities and Social Sciences are using increasingly complex computational tools, methods, and techniques in their research. There are three elements of the current landscape that place the Humanities and Social Sciences in a position for rapid growth: | |||
*increasing open source data; | |||
*increased access to significant computing power; and | |||
*growing research computing competency among humanities researchers. | |||
To support researchers in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Compute Canada has a dedicated team of professionals led by Compute Canada’s Humanities and Social Sciences Specialist, Dr. John Simpson. For more information, please contact the Humanities and Social Sciences Team via email (hss@computecanada.ca) or browse the additional information below | |||
== Who We Are == | == Who We Are == | ||
== HSS Support in Compute Canada == | == HSS Support in Compute Canada == |
Revision as of 17:51, 10 September 2020
This is not a complete article: This is a draft, a work in progress that is intended to be published into an article, which may or may not be ready for inclusion in the main wiki. It should not necessarily be considered factual or authoritative.
Introduction
Scholars in the Humanities and Social Sciences are using increasingly complex computational tools, methods, and techniques in their research. There are three elements of the current landscape that place the Humanities and Social Sciences in a position for rapid growth:
- increasing open source data;
- increased access to significant computing power; and
- growing research computing competency among humanities researchers.
To support researchers in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Compute Canada has a dedicated team of professionals led by Compute Canada’s Humanities and Social Sciences Specialist, Dr. John Simpson. For more information, please contact the Humanities and Social Sciences Team via email (hss@computecanada.ca) or browse the additional information below
Who We Are
HSS Support in Compute Canada
For general support, please email the HSS National Team at hss@computecanada.ca
HSS Services for researchers
- Consultation.
- Software installation and support
- Training
- Outreach and advocacy
Resources for Research Data Management
Best Practices
- D.B. Deutz, M.C.H. Buss, J. S. Hansen, K. K. Hansen, K.G. Kjelmann, A.V. Larsen, E. Vlachos, K.F. Holmstrand (2020). How to FAIR: a Danish website to guide researchers on making research data more FAIR
- Woeber, C. A. (2017). Towards best practice in research data management in the humanities. Retrieved from http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/xmlui/bitstream/handle/10063/6620/paper_acces s.pdf?sequence=4
Data Curation
Data Licensing
Data Management Planning (DMP)
- Portage Data Management Plan (DMP) Assistant
- ACENET Presentation on Data Management Planning
- Creating a Data Management Plan (DMP) guide from Portage (English/French)
- Exemplar Data Management Plans (DMP):
Metadata
Persistent Digital Identifiers
Policy Requirements
Repositories
Sensitive Data
Terminology