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Challenge-Findable #66
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Hi! (Findable)
All the best, |
@aromanowski these are great examples. @selgebali wonder if one of these we can use for the lesson episode? @aromanowski is it fine if we use one of these examples? Thanks! |
I agree with the comment in the Google Doc that challenge 1 could be confusing when it comes to claryfiying the concept of PIDs. I wonder if it would be better to use an article that has a DOI and then an article that does not have a DOI? |
@ahvyoung that might be a clearer example TBH. arXiv has been around so long it kind of predates the big push for DOIs for preprints. The information about arXiv might be best for a callout instead, to note some of the other examples out there? |
Hi @libcce! Yes, of course you may use them. We will likely implement them on the course we are developing for biological scientists: https://github.com/carpentries-incubator/fair-bio-practice |
Hello all,
Problem: a normal URL that is out of date, data or publication can no longer be cited correctly
Problem: Publication or data are no longer accessible
Problem: the question might come up, what happens if I update my data/publication
Problem: versioning is not really wanted for PIDs (sorry, I haven't looked up any links yet. If my idea is unclear or if the links are urgently needed, I will be happy to look for some.) |
Just, if you use any of the proposed challenges, remember to acknowledge our lesson ;) https://github.com/carpentries-incubator/fair-bio-practice |
The challenges below are taken from the Sprint GoogleDoc.
Challenge 1:
arXiv is a preprint repository for physics, math, computer science and related disciplines. It allows researchers to share and access their work before it is formally published.
Go to arXiv and
Does arXiv use a DOI?
Compare these two papers:
https://arxiv.org/abs/2008.09350
https://arxiv.org/abs/2008.00287
which one of them has a persistent identifier?
Challenge 2:
Look at this paper [link]. Click on the ‘pdf’ link to download it. Do a full-text search by using control + F or command + F and search for ‘http’. Did the author use DOIs for their data and software?
Challenge 3:
What is the problem with referring to your code and software only with a URL [example] without providing a DOI?
Is anyone interested in expanding on these exercises and reviewing them? You could also add them to the main lesson under Findable. Don't forget to add the solution to the lesson.
Don't forget to check out the comments in the google doc.
Any further comments on these challenges please add them to this issue!
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