Dryad Demonstrations

Materials and guidelines for demonstrating Dryad at conferences. Also see Heather Piwowar's Google doc for an outline of her Dryad demo at Science Online 2011.

Handouts

 * Sample journal articles that contain good citations to data in Dryad, and other articles useful for demonstration:
 * American Naturalist open article, with Dryad DOI under Supplements & in PDF header, [[Media:MorrisWE2011.pdf|PDF of article]]
 * Molecular Ecology article with Dryad DOI in Data Accessibility section [[Media:2010ROUGERIEMolecularEcologyarticle.pdf | Rougerie PDF]], Rougerie online
 * Vision piece in BioScience, Open Data and the Social Contract of Scientific Publishing [[Media:VisionBioscience.pdf |‎ PDF]], online
 * Piwowar article on data sharing associated with increased citation rate [[Media:Piwowar2007.pdf | PDF]], online
 * [[Media:Interested_in_knowing_more_about_Dryad.docx|Sign up sheet for more info & mailing lists]]
 * other materials relevant for the audience in question; screenshots of data packages with related journals or authors
 * Supplementary Materials vs Dryad [[Media:Dryad_vs_SupMatREVISED2011.06.14.pdf|comparison chart]]

Demonstration points

 * 1) Homepage
 * 2) The Dryad package landing page
 * 3) * shows all files in the data package
 * 4) * gives download and access statistics for each file
 * 5) * links back to journal article (example: Goldberg)
 * 6) Data and article citation policy (Using Data)
 * 7) Bookmarking/downloading citations
 * 8) DataCite DOIs
 * 9) Download a file
 * 10) Content in public domain (CC0), with embargo allowed
 * 11) Dryad is built on the DSpace framework, so it has a solid underpinning
 * 12) Files may be versioned (to correct errors, not to update with more data)
 * 13) Content is mirrored and locally supported
 * 14) Content is curated and migrated to new formats
 * 15) For specific kinds of data, see the examples listed at Sample Dryad Content.
 * 16) Other points to make:
 * 17) * Nonprofit membership organization
 * 18) * Journal-supported Partners
 * 19) * RSS feeds (and other notification mechanisms)
 * 20) Submission
 * 21) * Coupled with article submission
 * 22) * Will start charging Sept. 2013, but many journals and publishers will be covering the costs for authors
 * 23) * Straightforward data upload process lowers the author burden
 * 24) * TreeBASE handshaking (where it is in submission system, show sample item within the TB submission)
 * 25) [[Media:SimpleTestNexus.txt‎]]
 * 26) [[Media:SimpleTestNexus2.txt‎]]
 * 27) Searching -- how to find other related content
 * 28) * Simple keyword search on taxon name (examples: Drosophila, Mollusca)
 * 29) * Sample searches
 * 30) tunicate OR delsuc (retrieves all data from an international research group)
 * 31) whale
 * 32) primate aging
 * 33) piwowar
 * 34) * Faceted drill-down
 * 35) * Enables discovery of content outside the context of an article
 * 36) How to learn more
 * 37) * Blog
 * 38) * Wiki: wiki.datadryad.org
 * 39) * Twitter: @datadryad
 * 40) * Dryad source code
 * 41) * sign up for mailing lists on the sign-up sheet