Figshare

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figshare
Figshare logo.svg
Web address figshare.com
Slogan credit for all your research
Commercial? Yes
Launched 2011
Current status Active

Figshare is an online digital repository where researchers can preserve and share their research outputs, including figures, datasets, images, and videos.[1] It is free to upload content and free to access, in adherence to the principle of open data. Figshare is a portfolio company of Digital Science, operated by Macmillan Publishers.

History

Figshare was launched in January 2011 by Mark Hahnel[2] and has been supported by Digital Science since a January 2012 relaunch.[3][4] Hahnel first developed the platform as a personal custom solution for the organization and publication of diverse research products generated in support of his PhD in stem cell biology.[4] In January 2013 Figshare announced a partnership with PLOS to integrate Figshare data hosting, access, and visualization with their associated PLOS articles.[5] In September 2013, the service launched an institutional repository service, which offers organizations a pre-developed infrastructure for hosting academic materials generated by their member communities.[1] In December 2013, they announced integration with ImpactStory to support the collection of altmetrics.[6] Figshare made 200,000 files publicly available in its first year, which grew to approximately one million objects by September 2013.[1] Figshare also hosts the Reproducibility Collection as a founding member of The Reproducibility Initiative, which acts as an independent and blinded validator for replication of submitted data.[7]

Concept

Researchers can upload all of their research outputs to Figshare, thus making them publicly available. Users can upload files in any format[8] and items are attributed a DOI. The current 'types' that can be chosen are figures, datasets, media (including video), papers (including pre-prints), posters, code and filesets (groups of files).[9] All files are released under a Creative Commons license, CC-BY for most files and CC0 (public domain) for datasets.[1][10] Figshare allows researchers to publish negative data.[2][8] The withholding of negative publications is a widely known phenomenon that leads to a significant bias, often referred to as the file drawer effect.[11] By encouraging publishing of figures, charts, data rather than being limited to the traditional entire 'paper' knowledge can be shared more quickly and effectively. Figshare also tracks the download statistics for hosted materials, acting in turn as a source for altmetrics.[4] The main hosting mechanism for the platform is Amazon S3, with CLOCKSS serving as an additional host for public content.[1] Both of these resources support backup and preservation via a distributed cloud computing network.

Figshare features integration with ORCID.[12]

References

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