Are you a librarian wondering what Dryad can do for you, and you can do for Dryad? Please see our guest post on “Dryad for the Science Librarian” over at the New England eScience Portal.

Seven factors that set Dryad apart
Data availability is an important aspect of communicating scholarly research. Not only has public data been shown to increase understanding, support reproducibility, increase attention, and facilitate reuse — it’s increasingly required by funders and publishers. There are plenty of ways … Continue reading
Wondering how to comply with the 2023 NIH data sharing policy? Learn more about including Dryad in your data management and sharing plan. Continue reading
In our latest post, our Executive Director Melissanne Scheld sits down with Dryad’s Board of Directors Chair, Professor Charles Fox, to discuss challenges researchers face today, how Dryad is helping alleviate some of those pain points, why Dryad has had … Continue reading
As a non-profit repository dependent on support from members and users, Dryad is greatly concerned with the economics and sustainability of data services. Our business model is built around Data Publishing Charges (DPCs), designed to recover the basic costs of curating and preserving … Continue reading
Are you a librarian wondering what Dryad can do for you, and you can do for Dryad? Please see our guest post on “Dryad for the Science Librarian” over at the New England eScience Portal.

We encourage individuals and project teams seeking to comply with data management planning mandates to consider Dryad as the destination repository for published data from their research. Dryad is not only a widely applicable, best-practice solution for research data management, it is … Continue reading
The US National Science Foundation (NSF) has released its revised policy on Dissemination and Sharing of Research Results. Starting January 18, 2011, NSF grant proposals must include a data management plan to describe “how the proposal will conform to NSF … Continue reading