Open Science for Arts, Design and Music/Guidelines/Teacher
Why
editOpen Science allows you to have open workflows and materials at your disposal and it contributes to open a much broader window on your field of inquiry, or phenomenon you are passionate about.
All openly shared scholarly or educational resources contribute to a more sustainable, more connected and community-driven models of scholarly production that goes far beyond the traditional paper-based ways of doing research and as such, powerfully mitigate social, geographical, disciplinary etc. disparities in access to knowledge.
Implementing Open Access and Open Science in your work
editSustaining and openly sharing training materials
edit- accredit all the contributors
- use open formats
- add license
- add DOI
- archive in a repository (usually comes with a DOI)
- add contact info
- add rich metadata/contextual information to capture the training (date and circumstances of delivery, notes, instructions, aim, target groups, how to cite it etc., see an example here)
- where to make training materials available? → DARIAH Campus/Moodle/institutional website?
Using open content in your practice
editWhere to find open content (content you can freely use)
editOpen repositories
editOpen-access and free resources can be found in open repositories.
Repositories of research data
edit- https://dh-ch.openaire.eu/ (a discovery environment, bringing together content from different repositories from across Europe)
- https://textgrid.de/en/digitale-bibliothek
- https://www.dasch.swiss/
Repositories of art
editRepositories for art works (in general)
- https://www.europeana.eu/en
- https://www.archivesportaleurope.net/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:GLAM
- https://www.worldcat.org/
- http://viaf.org/
- https://www.dri.ie/
- https://www.programmableweb.com/news/top-10-apis-museums/brief/2020/12/26
- http://miriamposner.com/classes/dh201w19/final-project/datasets/
- https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/research/collection-catalogues
- https://www.nga.gov/open-access-images.html
- https://gallica.bnf.fr/accueil/en/
- See a full list of music-related repositories here: https://www.re3data.org/search?query=art (the search results can be further refined to countries and repository features)
Repositories for images
- https://piprod.getty.edu/starweb/pi/servlet.starweb?path=pi/pi.web
- http://pharosartresearch.org/
- https://www.getty.edu/about/whatwedo/opencontent.html
- https://www.publicartarchive.org/
- See a full list of music-related repositories here: https://www.re3data.org/search?query=image (the search results can be further refined to countries and repository features)
Repositories of music
editCatalogs (collections of databases):
- The MusoW database brings together openly available music and musicology resources from across the Internet. It serves as a catalogue of databases. You can browse it along different search criteria here: https://projects.dharc.unibo.it/musow/records
- You can use the Audio, Video search of the ProQuest database
- See a full list of music-related research data repositories here_ https://www.re3data.org/search?query=music (the search results can be further refined to countries and repository features)
Databases, collections (a small selection of MusoW resources):
Open-upon-request music resources from proprietary providers