Litcius/Paper detail

Minimum Information Standards in Chemistry: A Call for Better Research Data Management Practices

Sonja Herres‐Pawlis, Felix Bach, Ian Bruno, Stuart Chalk, Nicole Jung, Johannes C. Liermann, Leah McEwen, Steffen Neumann, Christoph Steinbeck, Matthias Razum, Oliver Koepler

2022Angewandte Chemie International Edition38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Research data management (RDM) is needed to assist experimental advances and data collection in the chemical sciences. Many funders require RDM because experiments are often paid for by taxpayers and the resulting data should be deposited sustainably for posterity. However, paper notebooks are still common in laboratories and research data is often stored in proprietary and/or dead-end file formats without experimental context. Data must mature beyond a mere supplement to a research paper. Electronic lab notebooks (ELN) and laboratory information management systems (LIMS) allow researchers to manage data better and they simplify research and publication. Thus, an agreement is needed on minimum information standards for data handling to support structured approaches to data reporting. As digitalization becomes part of curricular teaching, future generations of digital native chemists will embrace RDM and ELN as an organic part of their research.

Topics & Concepts

RDMData managementResearch dataContext (archaeology)Computer scienceData scienceData curationWorld Wide WebEngineering managementEngineeringDatabaseComputer networkPaleontologyBiologyResearch Data Management PracticesScientific Computing and Data Managementscientometrics and bibliometrics research