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Linking data to publications

Todd Vision

Assoc Prof, Dept of Biology & School of Inform and Lib Science

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6133-2581

@tjvision, @datadryad

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

1

You may reuse any of the

original

content in these

slides as you wish, provided

you attribute the source

(2)

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

2

(3)

Types of publication-data links

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

3

Original publication

Data

(4)

Data-publication linking workshop

4

5 Jan 2016

Link from data to

original publication:

(5)

Link from DataCite to original article

(6)

Link from original article to data:

usually discoverable but variable in form;

redundant mechanisms

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

6

Responsible party

Mechanism

Author

Bibliography, data availability section, or

elsewhere in the body of the article

Journal/production

Data availability section, article metadata (JATS)

Publisher/discovery

Harvest DataCite (T&F), query on-the-fly

(Elsevier)

Indexers

Harvest DataCite (EuropePMC,

CrossRef

),

(7)

Integrated submission of

manuscript & data

7

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

• 

Reduces manual

metadata entry

• 

incl. CrossRef &

DataCite DOIs

• 

Data deposit can

occur before:

• 

manuscript

submission

• 

manuscript

review

• 

or

publication

(8)

Link via data availability statement

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

8

RESEARCH ARTICLE

Religion Does Matter for Climate Change

Attitudes and Behavior

Mark Morrison1,2‡, Roderick Duncan3☯, Kevin Parton1,2☯*

1School of Management and Marketing, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia,

2Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia,

3School of Accounting and Finance, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia

☯These authors contributed equally to this work.

‡MM is the senior author.

*[email protected]

Abstract

Little research has focused on the relationship between religion and climate change atti-tudes and behavior. Further, while there have been some studies examining the relation-ship between environmental attitudes and religion, most are focused on Christian denominations and secularism, and few have examined other religions such as Buddhism. Using an online survey of 1,927 Australians we examined links between membership of four religious groupings (Buddhists, Christian literalists and non-literalists, and Secularists) and climate change attitudes and behaviors. Differences were found across religious groups in terms of their belief in: (a) human induced climate change, (b) the level of consen-sus among scientists, (c) their own efficacy, and (d) the need for policy responses. We show, using ordinal regression, that religion explains these differences even after taking into account socio-demographic factors, knowledge and environmental attitude, including belief in man’s dominion over nature. Differences in attitude and behavior between these religious groups suggest the importance of engaging denominations to encourage change in attitudes and behavior among their members.

Introduction

Views on climate change and policy relating to climate change in the Australian population are extremely diverse [1]. In forming their views, people are influenced by many factors, including both situational variables and their own socio-economic and socio-political status [2]. In this paper we focus on religious affiliation as a potential determinant of attitudes to climate change and climate change policy.

Research conducted, principally in the United States (US) and Europe, has indicated that religious affiliation is a key factor to take into account in developing climate change policy and designing messages about policy [3]. Based on an examination of teachings of nine major reli-gions, covering issues such as other-person centeredness and environmental stewardship, Posas [4] argued strongly that religions from Bahá’í to Buddhism and from Islam to

PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0134868 August 6, 2015 1 / 16

OPEN ACCESS

Citation:Morrison M, Duncan R, Parton K (2015) Religion Does Matter for Climate Change Attitudes and Behavior. PLoS ONE 10(8): e0134868. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0134868

Editor:Kristie L Ebi, University of Washington, UNITED STATES

Received:March 10, 2015

Accepted:July 14, 2015

Published:August 6, 2015

Copyright:© 2015 Morrison et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the

Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Data Availability Statement:The data for this study are available from Dryad with the following DOI:10. 5061/dryad.vr315.

Funding:The authors have no support or funding to report.

Competing Interests:The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

RESEARCH ARTICLE

Religion Does Matter for Climate Change

Attitudes and Behavior

Mark Morrison

1,2

, Roderick Duncan

3

, Kevin Parton

1,2

*

1

School of Management and Marketing, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia,

2

Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia,

3

School of Accounting and Finance, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia

These authors contributed equally to this work.

MM is the senior author.

*

[email protected]

Abstract

Little research has focused on the relationship between religion and climate change

atti-tudes and behavior. Further, while there have been some studies examining the

relation-ship between environmental attitudes and religion, most are focused on Christian

denominations and secularism, and few have examined other religions such as Buddhism.

Using an online survey of 1,927 Australians we examined links between membership of

four religious groupings (Buddhists, Christian literalists and non-literalists, and Secularists)

and climate change attitudes and behaviors. Differences were found across religious

groups in terms of their belief in: (a) human induced climate change, (b) the level of

consen-sus among scientists, (c) their own efficacy, and (d) the need for policy responses. We

show, using ordinal regression, that religion explains these differences even after taking

into account socio-demographic factors, knowledge and environmental attitude, including

belief in man

s dominion over nature. Differences in attitude and behavior between these

religious groups suggest the importance of engaging denominations to encourage change

in attitudes and behavior among their members.

Introduction

Views on climate change and policy relating to climate change in the Australian population are

extremely diverse [

1

]. In forming their views, people are influenced by many factors, including

both situational variables and their own socio-economic and socio-political status [

2

]. In this

paper we focus on religious affiliation as a potential determinant of attitudes to climate change

and climate change policy.

Research conducted, principally in the United States (US) and Europe, has indicated that

religious affiliation is a key factor to take into account in developing climate change policy and

designing messages about policy [

3

]. Based on an examination of teachings of nine major

reli-gions, covering issues such as other-person centeredness and environmental stewardship,

Posas [

4

] argued strongly that religions from Bahá

í to Buddhism and from Islam to

PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0134868 August 6, 2015

1 / 16

OPEN ACCESS

Citation:

Morrison M, Duncan R, Parton K (2015)

Religion Does Matter for Climate Change Attitudes

and Behavior. PLoS ONE 10(8): e0134868.

doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0134868

Editor:

Kristie L Ebi, University of Washington,

UNITED STATES

Received:

March 10, 2015

Accepted:

July 14, 2015

Published:

August 6, 2015

Copyright:

© 2015 Morrison et al. This is an open

access article distributed under the terms of the

Creative Commons Attribution License

, which permits

unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any

medium, provided the original author and source are

credited.

Data Availability Statement:

The data for this study

are available from Dryad with the following DOI:

10.

5061/dryad.vr315

.

Funding:

The authors have no support or funding to

report.

Competing Interests:

The authors have declared

(9)

Location of the citation:

from original article to data

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

9

(10)

Publishers can harvest DataCite MDS

(11)

3

rd

parties

can also

harvest

DataCite MDS

(12)

Publishers can instead query on-the-fly

(13)

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

13

Some 3

rd

parties

require bespoke

mechanisms

(14)

Links from reuse articles to data:

some good examples, but unreliable &

idiosyncratic

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

14

(15)

Pennell MW et al. (2015) Y Fuse? Sex Chromosome

Fusions in Fishes and Reptiles. PLoS Genet doi:

10.1371/journal.pgen.1005237

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

15

Is this a

good

example

or not??

Links from reuse articles to data:

some good examples, but unreliable &

idiosyncratic

(16)

Links from reuse articles to and

from data:

not easily discoverable

5 Jan 2016

Data-publication linking workshop

16

• 

Commercial indexers (Thomson-Reuters)

• 

Government-run digital libraries (EuropePMC)

(17)

In summary

o

Difficulty of linking from

o

data to original article:

easy

o

original article to data:

many solutions

o

reuse article to original article:

this is current practice

o

original article to reuse article:

standard citation services

o

reuse article to and from data:

hard

Should we keep trying to reform data citation practice,

or should we put our efforts into other ways to catalog

data reuse links?

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