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Data management plans

Pre-registration

Pre-registration is the practice of publishing, in advance, how you plan to collect data and analyze it. The idea behind pre-registration is to ensure that the data generated during a research project is used to test a hypothesis rather than to generate one. This improves the quality and transparency of research and also addresses the replication crisis.

Pre-registration databases

Registration reports

Registration reports are a form of pre-registration that are peer reviewed. Researchers submit papers, for review and approval, that describe their research questions and methodology before the data is collected and the results of the study are known.

The Center for Open Science keeps a list of all journals that publish registration reports.

Develop the research idea, design the study, then the stage 1 peer review happens. Data is collected and analyzed, the report is written, then the second peer review stage happens. Finally the report is published. Image source: Center for Open Science

Help and resources

Research data management consultations are available for Concordia faculty, students, and staff. Find out more about how librarians on the Library's RDM team can provide guidance. This service is part of Concordia's Institutional Research Data Management Strategy.

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