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Getting started

6
  • Best practice for managing your outputs on Figshare
  • How can Figshare help my research?
  • How to sign up for a Figshare account
  • What is Figshare?
  • How long will Figshare host and retain my public research data for?
  • Is publishing in Figshare considered pre-publication?

Figshare account management

5
  • Maximise your research profile
  • How to change your name
  • How to delete your account
  • How to request more storage
  • Account Limits

Uploading and managing files

7
  • Options to publish without uploading files
  • File upload options
  • Folder upload and browsing
  • How to restore deleted files
  • File formats supported for in-browser preview
  • File size limits and storage
  • Upload large files and bulk upload using FTPS or the API

Adding or editing metadata

9
  • How to fill in the metadata fields (first step)
  • How to choose a licence
  • How to use Private Links
  • How to reserve a DOI
  • How to edit the publication dates on your item
  • How to edit or delete your item
  • How to edit in batch
  • How to use Figshare for thesis and dissertation outputs
  • Item types

Publishing: Embargoes, versioning, other advice

4
  • How versioning works
  • How to publish a dataset at the same time as the associated paper
  • I’ve accidentally set my data to public — what should I do?
  • Embargoes and restricted access publishing

Projects and collections

3
  • Comparing Project and Collection features
  • Projects
  • Collections

Discoverability and indexing

3
  • How discoverable is my research?
  • Are Figshare items included in Google Dataset Search results?
  • Is Figshare content indexed by Google Scholar?

Searching, sharing and reusing outputs

6
  • How to search for and reuse content on Figshare
  • How to Follow research you care about
  • How to use Advanced search in Figshare
  • Search examples
  • How to Share, Cite or Embed your items
  • Sharing private items

API and OAI-PMH

4
  • What is an API and OAI-PMH?
  • How to use Figshare’s OAI-PMH service
  • ‍How to get a Personal Token
  • How to use the Figshare API

Figshare policies

1
  • Figshare Policies

Integrations

4
  • List of Figshare Integrations
  • Figshare code repository setup and implementation: GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket
  • How to connect Figshare with your GitHub account
  • How to connect to your ORCID profile

Data sharing policy compliance

2
  • How Figshare.com meets the OSTP and NIH “Desirable Characteristics for Data Repositories”
  • US Funder user guide

Figshare plus

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  • Figshare Plus User Guide

FAQs

10
  • Claiming authorship of an item on Figshare
  • What categories are available and why?
  • What browser versions are supported?
  • How Figshare aligns with the FAIR principles
  • Figshare Metadata Schema Overview
  • Usage Metrics and Statistics
  • Complying with the TRUST Principles
  • How is my data stored, is it secure?
  • Security, Stability, and ISO27001 Certification
  • Accessibility standards
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How Figshare aligns with the FAIR principles

The FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) as described by Wilkinson et al 2016 are now the standard guidance for publishing open digital research objects. Whether you are publishing an open access paper, dataset, or other output, meeting these principles will make sure others can access and reuse the output and then give you credit through a citation.

Whether using a Figshare account on figshare.com or an account in an institutional Figshare repository, the platform helps you make outputs as FAIR as possible in the following ways.

Findable

PrinciplesFigshare Alignment
F1. (meta)data are assigned a globally unique and persistent identifierEvery record receives a persistent identifier. On figshare.com this is a DataCite DOI. At institutions it may be a DOI or a Handle.
F2. data are described with rich metadata (defined by R1 below)Figshare metadata is based on the DataCite metadata schema and the user interface encourages complete content for required fields through help tips and simplicity in layout. Additional fields provide optional ways to enhance the metadata richness.
F3. metadata clearly and explicitly include the identifier of the data it describesIn Figshare’s metadata schema, the identifier is stored in a dedicated field called ‘doi’ or ‘handle’.
F4. (meta)data are registered or indexed in a searchable resourceFigshare has highly discoverable pages indexed in major search engines and specialty indexes.

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Accessible

PrinciplesFigshare Alignment
A1. (meta)data are retrievable by their identifier using a standardized communications protocolMetadata and data are available through https and a REST API, both standard communication protocols. Metadata is also available through OAI-PMH.
A1.1 the protocol is open, free, and universally implementablehttps, REST API, and OAI-PMH are all open, free, and universally implementable.
A1.2 the protocol allows for an authentication and authorization procedure, where necessaryFigshare encourages both metadata and files to be published as openly as possible. This is not always possible depending on the nature of the content. On figshare.com authors can apply an embargo to files limiting access only to the author who can authenticate to the account. A Project can be used to provide access to other users. Published metadata is always available with no authentication. For institutions using Figshare, metadata and files may be published with embargoes or restricted access and may have a request access step for access.
A2. metadata are accessible, even when the data are no longer availableOn figshare.com any public item receives a DOI and will have its metadata stored by both Figshare and DataCite. Figshare will retain and keep available this metadata for the lifetime of the repository. For institutions using Figshare, metadata will be sent to the chosen DOI service and the institution can also back up metadata and files to a preservation system. If an institution cannot maintain its repository, Figshare has options to help keep the metadata accessible.

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Interoperable

PrinciplesFigshare Alignment
I1. (meta)data use a formal, accessible, shared, and broadly applicable language for knowledge representation.Figshare’s metadata schema uses common elements from DataCite Schema 4.4 and is documented in the API documentation. It can be mapped to standard metadata schemas. Landing pages offer citation metadata in Dublin Core, DataCite, National Library of Medicine, RIS, Endnote, BibTeX, and RefWorks formats. Additional formats are available through the OAI-PMH Endpoints.
I2. (meta)data use vocabularies that follow FAIR principlesOn figshare.com several metadata fields offer controlled lists of values including Categories (ANZSRC Fields of Research), funding (dimensions.ai), and open licenses. Institutions using Figshare can add controlled vocabularies to custom metadata fields and can include more license options.
I3. (meta)data include qualified references to other (meta)dataLinks with descriptions can be added to the Description field. Contextual options to links in the References field will be added this year.

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Reusable

PrinciplesFigshare Alignment
R1. meta(data) are richly described with a plurality of accurate and relevant attributesFigshare’s metadata schema is designed to be descriptive but also relatively easy to complete and flexible for all researchers. Help tooltips provide guidance for each field.
R1.1. (meta)data are released with a clear and accessible data usage licenseEvery item in Figshare receives a license and the landing page for the item links to the license information.
R1.2. (meta)data are associated with detailed provenanceThe Figshare system tracks posted, first online, and modified dates (institutions may have other date options). Every item is associated with an account and authors can be described with email addresses and ORCIDs, and institutions can include additional internal identifier information. Figshare records are also versioned and end users can access previous versions.
R1.3. (meta)data meet domain-relevant community standardsThe figshare.com repository is a generalist repository for use by any domain. Figshare’s metadata schema is based on the DataCite metadata schema and so is broadly applicable across domains and interoperable with other community initiatives supporting discoverability. Institutions may use custom metadata options to create metadata application profiles that align with specific domain relevant community standards.

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