STARDIT
Standardised Data on Initiatives (STARDIT) is a standardised way to share information about who was involved in an initiative, what was done, what was learned and any impacts which occurred.[1][2]
It is designed to be flexible, so it can be easily adapted to be useful across all disciplines, including health, environment, basic science, policy and international development. STARDIT reports will be shared open access (in the public domain), using machine readable linked-data.[1]
Fill in a STARDIT form
- Example items
Name | Human-readable | Machine-readable | PDF of report | DOI of resulting publication |
---|---|---|---|---|
ASPREE-XT | STARDIT/Q98539361 | Q98539361 | AdditionalFile5 | 10.21203/rs.3.rs-54058/v1 |
Rare condition genomics | STARDIT/Q100403236 | Q100403236 | AdditionalFile2 | 10.21203/rs.3.rs-62242/v1 |
What are Systematic Reviews? | STARDIT/Q101116128 | Q101116128 | - | 10.15347/WJM/2020.005 |
Co-designing genomics research with donor-conceived siblings | STARDIT/Q108618394 | Q108618394 | 10.1186/s40900-021-00325-7 |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Nunn, Jack; Shafee, Thomas; Chang, Steven; Stephens, Richard; Elliott, Jim; Oliver, Sandy; John, Denny; Smith, Maureen et al. (2019-09-20), Standardised Data on Initiatives - STARDIT: Alpha Version, doi:10.31219/osf.io/5q47h, https://osf.io/5q47h, retrieved 2020-10-21
- ↑ Nunn, Jack; Shafee, Thomas; Chang, Steven; Stephens, Richard; Elliott, Jim; Oliver, Sandy; John, Denny; Smith, Maureen et al. (2021-02-10), Standardised Data on Initiatives - STARDIT: Beta Version, doi:10.31219/osf.io/w5xj6, https://osf.io/w5xj6, retrieved 2021-04-29