datacite-mapping 0.1.15 → 0.1.16

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Files changed (144) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +4 -4
  2. data/CHANGES.md +5 -0
  3. data/README.md +21 -0
  4. data/datacite-mapping.gemspec +1 -1
  5. data/lib/datacite/mapping/date.rb +2 -2
  6. data/lib/datacite/mapping/identifier.rb +19 -3
  7. data/lib/datacite/mapping/module_info.rb +1 -1
  8. data/lib/datacite/mapping/nonvalidating/identifier.rb +40 -0
  9. data/lib/datacite/mapping/nonvalidating/subject.rb +43 -0
  10. data/lib/datacite/mapping/nonvalidating.rb +10 -0
  11. data/lib/datacite/mapping/resource.rb +19 -14
  12. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3059p-mrt-datacite.xml +42 -0
  13. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r31017-mrt-datacite.xml +37 -0
  14. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3201j-mrt-datacite.xml +50 -0
  15. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r33w26-mrt-datacite.xml +45 -0
  16. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r34s3v-mrt-datacite.xml +35 -0
  17. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r36p4t-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  18. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r39g6f-mrt-datacite.xml +68 -0
  19. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3cc7d-mrt-datacite.xml +42 -0
  20. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3d59d-mrt-datacite.xml +45 -0
  21. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3f59q-mrt-datacite.xml +68 -0
  22. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3g591-mrt-datacite.xml +35 -0
  23. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3k016-mrt-datacite.xml +68 -0
  24. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3kw2j-mrt-datacite.xml +58 -0
  25. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3mw2v-mrt-datacite.xml +33 -0
  26. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3np4v-mrt-datacite.xml +40 -0
  27. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3pp45-mrt-datacite.xml +47 -0
  28. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3rp4s-mrt-datacite.xml +34 -0
  29. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/dataone-ark+=c5146=r3tg63-mrt-datacite.xml +36 -0
  30. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1159q-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  31. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d17g6j-mrt-datacite.xml +50 -0
  32. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1c88g-mrt-datacite.xml +47 -0
  33. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1cc74-mrt-datacite.xml +71 -0
  34. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1h019-mrt-datacite.xml +38 -0
  35. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1ms3x-mrt-datacite.xml +42 -0
  36. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1mw2k-mrt-datacite.xml +39 -0
  37. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1rg66-mrt-datacite.xml +39 -0
  38. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1rp4h-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  39. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucb-ark+=b6078=d1wc7s-mrt-datacite.xml +49 -0
  40. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1001p-mrt-datacite.xml +51 -0
  41. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1059f-mrt-datacite.xml +65 -0
  42. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d11010-mrt-datacite.xml +49 -0
  43. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1159r-mrt-datacite.xml +79 -0
  44. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d12019-mrt-datacite.xml +60 -0
  45. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d12s30-mrt-datacite.xml +51 -0
  46. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1301m-mrt-datacite.xml +66 -0
  47. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d13s39-mrt-datacite.xml +49 -0
  48. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d13w2z-mrt-datacite.xml +60 -0
  49. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d14s3m-mrt-datacite.xml +64 -0
  50. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d15k5m-mrt-datacite.xml +66 -0
  51. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d15p48-mrt-datacite.xml +60 -0
  52. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d16k5x-mrt-datacite.xml +49 -0
  53. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d16p4k-mrt-datacite.xml +62 -0
  54. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d17g6k-mrt-datacite.xml +50 -0
  55. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d17p4w-mrt-datacite.xml +69 -0
  56. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d18g6w-mrt-datacite.xml +69 -0
  57. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1988w-mrt-datacite.xml +66 -0
  58. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d19g66-mrt-datacite.xml +74 -0
  59. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1b886-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  60. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1bc7v-mrt-datacite.xml +67 -0
  61. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1c88h-mrt-datacite.xml +59 -0
  62. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1cc75-mrt-datacite.xml +62 -0
  63. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1d595-mrt-datacite.xml +50 -0
  64. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1f30c-mrt-datacite.xml +115 -0
  65. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1f59g-mrt-datacite.xml +71 -0
  66. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1g011-mrt-datacite.xml +52 -0
  67. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1g59s-mrt-datacite.xml +81 -0
  68. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1h01b-mrt-datacite.xml +66 -0
  69. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1h593-mrt-datacite.xml +62 -0
  70. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1j01n-mrt-datacite.xml +60 -0
  71. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1js3b-mrt-datacite.xml +55 -0
  72. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1k01z-mrt-datacite.xml +67 -0
  73. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1ks3n-mrt-datacite.xml +50 -0
  74. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1kw29-mrt-datacite.xml +82 -0
  75. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1ms3z-mrt-datacite.xml +48 -0
  76. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1mw2m-mrt-datacite.xml +67 -0
  77. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1np4m-mrt-datacite.xml +51 -0
  78. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1pk58-mrt-datacite.xml +47 -0
  79. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1pp4x-mrt-datacite.xml +67 -0
  80. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1qg6x-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  81. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1qp47-mrt-datacite.xml +68 -0
  82. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1rg67-mrt-datacite.xml +48 -0
  83. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1rp4j-mrt-datacite.xml +70 -0
  84. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1sg6j-mrt-datacite.xml +85 -0
  85. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1t88j-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  86. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1tg6v-mrt-datacite.xml +66 -0
  87. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1v88v-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  88. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1vc7h-mrt-datacite.xml +64 -0
  89. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1w885-mrt-datacite.xml +50 -0
  90. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1wc7t-mrt-datacite.xml +71 -0
  91. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1x59t-mrt-datacite.xml +47 -0
  92. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/uci-ark+=b7280=d1z594-mrt-datacite.xml +62 -0
  93. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucla-ark+=b5060=d2qr4v2t-mrt-datacite.xml +57 -0
  94. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucla-ark+=b5068=d1cc7x-mrt-datacite.xml +41 -0
  95. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucla-ark+=b5068=d1h59v-mrt-datacite.xml +33 -0
  96. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucla-ark+=b5068=d1rp49-mrt-datacite.xml +36 -0
  97. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucla-ark+=b5068=d1wc7k-mrt-datacite.xml +46 -0
  98. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucm-ark+=13030=m51g217t-mrt-datacite.xml +28 -0
  99. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucm-ark+=b6071=z7wc73-mrt-datacite.xml +83 -0
  100. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d8301x-mrt-datacite.xml +39 -0
  101. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d86p4w-mrt-datacite.xml +38 -0
  102. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d8bc75-mrt-datacite.xml +40 -0
  103. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d8g593-mrt-datacite.xml +39 -0
  104. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d8h59d-mrt-datacite.xml +53 -0
  105. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d8kw2m-mrt-datacite.xml +39 -0
  106. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d8rp4v-mrt-datacite.xml +52 -0
  107. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucop-ark+=b5060=d8z59f-mrt-datacite.xml +42 -0
  108. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsc-ark+=b7291=d11592-mrt-datacite.xml +38 -0
  109. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsc-ark+=b7291=d17p46-mrt-datacite.xml +43 -0
  110. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsc-ark+=b7291=d1h59d-mrt-datacite.xml +43 -0
  111. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsc-ark+=b7291=d1mw2x-mrt-datacite.xml +54 -0
  112. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsc-ark+=b7291=d1wc74-mrt-datacite.xml +55 -0
  113. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6057cv6-mrt-datacite.xml +96 -0
  114. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6154f00-mrt-datacite.xml +73 -0
  115. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q61z429d-mrt-datacite.xml +29 -0
  116. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q62z13fs-mrt-datacite.xml +43 -0
  117. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q65q4t1r-mrt-datacite.xml +25 -0
  118. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q66q1v54-mrt-datacite.xml +42 -0
  119. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q67p8w9z-mrt-datacite.xml +63 -0
  120. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q68g8hmp-mrt-datacite.xml +24 -0
  121. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6bg2kwf-mrt-datacite.xml +63 -0
  122. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6c8276k-mrt-datacite.xml +43 -0
  123. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6cc0xmh-mrt-datacite.xml +63 -0
  124. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6d798bd-mrt-datacite.xml +26 -0
  125. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6h12zxh-mrt-datacite.xml +46 -0
  126. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6h41pb7-mrt-datacite.xml +60 -0
  127. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6kw5cxv-mrt-datacite.xml +43 -0
  128. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6ms3qnx-mrt-datacite.xml +42 -0
  129. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6mw2f2n-mrt-datacite.xml +61 -0
  130. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6pn93h6-mrt-datacite.xml +52 -0
  131. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6qn64nk-mrt-datacite.xml +46 -0
  132. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6rf5rzx-mrt-datacite.xml +60 -0
  133. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6rn35sz-mrt-datacite.xml +63 -0
  134. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6sf2t3q-mrt-datacite.xml +21 -0
  135. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6td9v7j-mrt-datacite.xml +29 -0
  136. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6w66hpn-mrt-datacite.xml +23 -0
  137. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6x63jt1-mrt-datacite.xml +27 -0
  138. data/spec/data/dash1-datacite-xml/ucsf-ark+=b7272=q6z60kzd-mrt-datacite.xml +45 -0
  139. data/spec/data/metadata.xsd +380 -0
  140. data/spec/data/mrt-datacite.xml +61 -0
  141. data/spec/unit/datacite/mapping/date_spec.rb +23 -15
  142. data/spec/unit/datacite/mapping/nonvalidating/identifier_spec.rb +38 -0
  143. data/spec/unit/datacite/mapping/resource_spec.rb +69 -12
  144. metadata +267 -4
@@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
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+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-3/metadata.xsd">
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+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
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+ <creators>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Gun, Defne</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Perez, Hector</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Moura, Scott</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ </creators>
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+ <titles>
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+ <title>Fast Charging Tests</title>
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+ </titles>
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+ <publisher>UC Berkeley</publisher>
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+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
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+ <subjects>
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+ <subject>Fast Charging</subject>
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+ </subjects>
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+ <contributors>
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+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
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+ <contributorName>National Science Foundation</contributorName>
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+ </contributor>
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+ </contributors>
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+ <relatedIdentifiers/>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
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+ <sizes>
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+ <size>293617695</size>
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+ </sizes>
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+ <rightsList>
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+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
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+ </rightsList>
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+ <descriptions>
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+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">A series of tests were carried out in order to explore alternate charging protocols to the standard CCCV. Using such alternative protocols, it was possible to apply higher currents to achieve faster charging without cell degradation. In addition, baseline tests were carried out in order to study capacity fade.
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+ </description>
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+ <description descriptionType="Methods">First, several CCCV cycles were run at gradually increasing C-rates to examine behavior (particularly temperature increases) at higher C-rates. Then, MCC, CP-CV, and Boostcharge cycles were run at various C-rates. Additional 1C CCCV baseline capacity tests were run in order to examine capacity fade.
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+ </description>
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+ <description descriptionType="Other">1408107</description>
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+ </descriptions>
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+ </resource>
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+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-3/metadata.xsd">
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+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
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+ <creators>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>MacNell, Lillian</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Driscoll, Adam</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Hunt, Andrea</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ </creators>
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+ <titles>
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+ <title> Student Ratings of Teaching by Instructor Gender and Perceived Gender</title>
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+ </titles>
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+ <publisher>UC Berkeley</publisher>
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+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
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+ <subjects>
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+ <subject>Student ratings of teaching</subject>
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+ <subject>gender inequality</subject>
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+ <subject>gender bias</subject>
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+ <subject>student evaluations</subject>
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+ </subjects>
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+ <relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="DOI" relationType="IsSupplementTo">10.1007/s10755-017-9313-4</relatedIdentifier>
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+ </relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Collection">Collection</resourceType>
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+ <sizes>
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+ <size>40210</size>
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+ </sizes>
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+ <rightsList>
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+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
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+ </rightsList>
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+ <descriptions>
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+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">Student ratings of teaching play an important role in decisions about hiring, tenure, and compensation for instructors in higher education. In face-to-face classrooms, researchers are limited in their ability to test for the existence of bias in such ratings, as it is difficult to mask or misrepresent the gender of an instructor in the classroom. However, in the online environment is it possible to disguise an instructor’s gender identity, and therefore isolate the effects of gender bias independent of instructor performance. These data were collected during a controlled pseudo-experiment in which a male and female assistant instructor helped teach an online class, each under both male and female identities. Students were asked to rate their instructors on 12 measures, and overall. Data include the group to which students were assigned, their responses to the evaluation, and demographic information including their gender and birth year. The data also include course grades for each group. </description>
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+ <description descriptionType="Methods">Students in the class were randomly assigned to one of four work groups, which were divided between two instructors, one male and one female. Unbeknownst to the students, each instructor interacted with one group under their own identity and a second under their fellow instructor’s identity. We created a survey asking students to rate their instructors on 12 measures, and overall. Six questions asked about “effectiveness” traits, e.g. professionalism and promptness. Six questions asked about “interpersonal” traits, e.g. enthusiasm and giving praise. </description>
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+ </descriptions>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,39 @@
1
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+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
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+ <creators>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Brenner, Steven</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Giacomini, Kathleen</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
10
+ <creator>
11
+ <creatorName>Scherer, Steven</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
13
+ </creators>
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+ <titles>
15
+ <title>Pharmacogenomics Research Network: Transcriptomic variation of pharmacogenes in multiple human tissues and lymphoblastoid cell lines</title>
16
+ </titles>
17
+ <publisher>UC Berkeley</publisher>
18
+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
19
+ <subjects>
20
+ <subject>RNA-seq</subject>
21
+ <subject>pharmacogenetic</subject>
22
+ <subject>splicing</subject>
23
+ <subject>biomarkers</subject>
24
+ <subject>transporter</subject>
25
+ <subject>gene expression</subject>
26
+ <subject>enzyme</subject>
27
+ <subject>drug target</subject>
28
+ <subject>transcriptome</subject>
29
+ </subjects>
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+ <relatedIdentifiers/>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
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+ <sizes>
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+ <size>3397657</size>
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+ </sizes>
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+ <rightsList>
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+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
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+ </rightsList>
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+ <descriptions/>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
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+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-3/metadata.xsd">
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+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
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+ <creators>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName> Kurtovich, Elaine</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ <creator>
8
+ <creatorName>Guendelman, Sylvia</creatorName>
9
+ </creator>
10
+ <creator>
11
+ <creatorName>Neuhauser, Linda</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Edelman, Dana</creatorName>
15
+ </creator>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName> Georges, Maura </creatorName>
18
+ </creator>
19
+ <creator>
20
+ <creatorName>Mason-Marti, Peyton </creatorName>
21
+ </creator>
22
+ </creators>
23
+ <titles>
24
+ <title>Maternity Leave Educational Tool Evaluation</title>
25
+ </titles>
26
+ <publisher>UC Berkeley</publisher>
27
+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
28
+ <subjects>
29
+ <subject>maternity leave</subject>
30
+ <subject>pregnancy</subject>
31
+ <subject>health education</subject>
32
+ </subjects>
33
+ <contributors>
34
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
35
+ <contributorName>March of Dimes, California Chapter</contributorName>
36
+ </contributor>
37
+ </contributors>
38
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
39
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementTo">marchofdimes.com/ca/maternityleave</relatedIdentifier>
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+ </relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
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+ <sizes>
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+ <size>338409</size>
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+ </sizes>
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+ <rightsList>
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+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
47
+ </rightsList>
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+ <descriptions>
49
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">We developed an evidence-based maternity leave educational tool for working women in California using participatory design. We tested its short-term efficacy with a randomized controlled trial of pregnant English-speakers (n=155). </description>
50
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">Participants in the intervention group received the educational tool, while control participants did not. This dataset contains data from a postpartum online survey of these participants, including data on prenatal and postpartum leave and reasons for taking/not taking leave. Intervention participants were asked if they read the tool, how they used the tool, and how helpful it was in planning their leave.
51
+ </description>
52
+ </descriptions>
53
+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
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+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-3/metadata.xsd">
2
+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
3
+ <creators>
4
+ <creator>
5
+ <creatorName>Feinberg, Joshua</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ <creator>
8
+ <creatorName>Solheid, Peter</creatorName>
9
+ </creator>
10
+ <creator>
11
+ <creatorName>Swanson-Hysell, Nicholas</creatorName>
12
+ <nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID" schemeURI="http://www.orcid.org">0000-0003-3215-4648</nameIdentifier>
13
+ </creator>
14
+ <creator>
15
+ <creatorName>Jackson, Mike J.</creatorName>
16
+ <nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID" schemeURI="http://www.orcid.org">0000-0003-4778-7157</nameIdentifier>
17
+ </creator>
18
+ <creator>
19
+ <creatorName>Bowles, Julie</creatorName>
20
+ </creator>
21
+ </creators>
22
+ <titles>
23
+ <title>Full vector low-temperature magnetic measurements of geologic materials</title>
24
+ </titles>
25
+ <publisher>UC Berkeley</publisher>
26
+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
27
+ <subjects>
28
+ <subject>rock magnetism</subject>
29
+ <subject>low-temperature magnetometry</subject>
30
+ <subject>magnetite</subject>
31
+ <subject>Verwey transition</subject>
32
+ <subject>pyrrhotite</subject>
33
+ <subject>Besnus transition</subject>
34
+ <subject>hematite</subject>
35
+ <subject>Morin transition</subject>
36
+ </subjects>
37
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
38
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsDocumentedBy">http://escholarship.org/uc/item/7n65f6gg</relatedIdentifier>
39
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="DOI" relationType="IsDocumentedBy">10.1002/2014GC005591</relatedIdentifier>
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+ </relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Collection">Collection</resourceType>
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+ <rightsList>
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+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
44
+ </rightsList>
45
+ <descriptions>
46
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">The magnetic properties of geologic materials offer insights into an enormous range of important geophysical phenomena ranging from inner core dynamics to paleoclimate. Often it is the low-temperature behavior (&lt;300 K) of magnetic minerals that provides the most useful and highest sensitivity information for a given problem. Conventional measurements of low-temperature remanence are typically conducted on instruments that are limited to measuring one single-axis component of the magnetization vector and are optimized for measurements in strong fields. These instrumental limitations have prevented fully optimized applications and have motivated the development of a low-temperature probe that can be used for low-temperature remanence measurements between 17 and 300 K along three orthogonal axes using a standard 2G Enterprises SQuID rock magnetometer. In this contribution, we describe the design and implementation of this instrument and present data from five case studies that demonstrate the probe's considerable potential for future research: a polycrystalline hematite sample, a polycrystalline hematite and magnetite mixture, a single crystal of magnetite, a single crystal of pyrrhotite, and samples of Umkondo Large Igneous Province diabase sills.</description>
47
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">The code folder contains an IPython/Jupyter notebook file that is the main supplemental materials associated with the paper as well as non-standard function libraries necessary to run the code within the notebook. To run the code in the notebook it is necessary to both download the code from the Github repository and have an installed Python distribution that includes IPython and the other standard scientific python libraries (http://www.scipy.org/). There are good instructions for installing IPython/jupyter here: http://ipython.org/install.html. Alternatively you can view the notebook online with the jupyter nbviewer at this link: https://nbviewer.jupyter.org/github/swanson-hysell/2015_Feinberg-et-al_low-temp/blob/master/Code/LowT_Data_Analysis.ipynb. The data folder contains the data generated for the case studies presented in this work that are used in the data analysis and presented in the paper. The manuscript folder contains the paper text and figures.</description>
48
+ </descriptions>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,51 @@
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+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
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+ <creators>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>The Nature Conservancy San Diego Field Office</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Oak Woodland Monitoring for the Irvine Open Space Easements (4)</title>
10
+ </titles>
11
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
12
+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
13
+ <subjects>
14
+ <subject>TNC</subject>
15
+ <subject>The Nature Conservancy</subject>
16
+ <subject>SDSU</subject>
17
+ <subject>San Diego State University</subject>
18
+ <subject>Quercus</subject>
19
+ </subjects>
20
+ <contributors>
21
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
22
+ <contributorName>McKinley;McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
23
+ </contributor>
24
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
25
+ <contributorName>The Nature Conservancy</contributorName>
26
+ </contributor>
27
+ </contributors>
28
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
29
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://www.nature.org/ourinitiatives/regions/northamerica/unitedstates/california/contact/index.htm</relatedIdentifier>
30
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
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+ <sizes>
33
+ <size>574</size>
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+ </sizes>
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+ <rightsList>
36
+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
37
+ </rightsList>
38
+ <descriptions>
39
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">For more detailed metadata, including data access and usage instructions, please download and consult README.txt file.</description>
40
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">Describe status of mature oak trees, assess recruitment, describe understory vegetation, design monitoring program</description>
41
+ <description descriptionType="Other"/>
42
+ </descriptions>
43
+ <geoLocations>
44
+ <geoLocation>
45
+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
46
+ </geoLocation>
47
+ <geoLocation>
48
+ <geoLocationBox>33.802241 -117.750349 33.811512 -117.72769</geoLocationBox>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
1
+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-3/metadata.xsd">
2
+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
3
+ <creators>
4
+ <creator>
5
+ <creatorName>Baldassare, Mark</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Annual Survey of Orange County 1986</title>
10
+ </titles>
11
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
12
+ <publicationYear>2014</publicationYear>
13
+ <subjects>
14
+ <subject>Consumer Confidence</subject>
15
+ <subject>Housing</subject>
16
+ <subject>Social Issues</subject>
17
+ <subject>Buildings</subject>
18
+ <subject>Transportation</subject>
19
+ <subject>Charitable Giving</subject>
20
+ <subject>Homosexuality</subject>
21
+ <subject>Politics</subject>
22
+ </subjects>
23
+ <contributors>
24
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
25
+ <contributorName>McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
26
+ </contributor>
27
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
28
+ <contributorName>University of California, Irvine</contributorName>
29
+ </contributor>
30
+ </contributors>
31
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
32
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://data.lib.uci.edu/ocs/</relatedIdentifier>
33
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
34
+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
35
+ <sizes>
36
+ <size>3674848</size>
37
+ </sizes>
38
+ <rightsList>
39
+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
40
+ </rightsList>
41
+ <descriptions>
42
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">This is the fifth year of the Orange County Annual Survey. The 1986 report asks questions found in national surveys and compares Orange County to the nation. It examines key trends over time with questions repeated annually in our survey. The design, analysis, and interpretation of the 1986 survey are guided by goals (1) to provide decisionmakers in the private and public sectors with valid and current information on Orange County residents; (2) to track shifts in important attitudes and population characteristics over time; (3) to study the social, economic and political issues of Orange County from a non-advocacy positions and (4) to help establish public discussion and enlightened debate in future public policy. The sample size is 1,008 Orange County adult residents.
43
+
44
+ Online data analysis &amp; additional documentation in Link below.</description>
45
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">The Orange County Annual Survey was conducted by Mark Baldassare, an associate professor of social ecology at UC Irvine. The telephone interviews with 1,008 adult residents took place between September 2 and 19. Telephone interviews provide representative data in Orange County, because more than 97 percent of the households have telephones.
46
+
47
+ The calls were made on weekend days and weekday nights using a random sample of listed and unlisted telephone numbers. Telephone numbers were randomly generated by computer from a list of working blocks of telephone exchanges. Within a household, respondents were chosen for interview using the Troldahl-Carter method, which randomly selects a househoId member from a grid. The field work was conducted by the Center for Survey Research, Public Policy Research Organization, at UC Irvine. The sample was generated by Pijacki Associates of Shoreham, New York.
48
+
49
+ Each interview contained 90 questions and took an average of 20 minutes to complete. The surveys were designed in three stages over several months. In the first stage, amail questionnaire and personal interviews with community leaders were used to define topics and questions. The second stage involved meetings with the Research Advisory Committee. In this stage, Mark Baldassare drafted questions and made revisions based upon comments from the group. The final stage involved extensive consultation between Baldassare and the Center for Survey Research staff, followed by pre-tests and final revisions of the questions.
50
+
51
+ The interview began with questions about housing, economics, growth and general evaluations of Orange County. These were followed by questions on transportation issues. Later in the interview, we turned to the topics of media use, civic and social responsibility and civil liberties. The conclusion of the survey was devoted to questions about respondents' household, financial, personal and political characteristics.
52
+
53
+ The survey also included questions devoted to the concerns of two private sponsors. These are not part of the Orange County Annual Survey report.
54
+
55
+ The survey's validity was checked by comparing the sample's characteristics to available information on Orange County's population. We compared the 1986 survey results to the 1980 Census, previous Orange County Annual Surveys, and other recent polling data. Age, marital status, and other demographic features of our sample were close to those noted in other studies. For data analyses, we statistically weighted the sample to represent the actual regional distribution of Orange County residents.
56
+
57
+ The sampling error for this survey is +/- 3 percent. This means it is 95 percent certain that the results are within 3 percentage points of what they would be if all adults in Orange County were interviewed. The sampling error for any subgroup would be larger. Sampling error is just one type of error to which surveys are subject. Results may be influenced by many other factors, such as question wording, survey timing and interview design.
58
+ </description>
59
+ </descriptions>
60
+ <geoLocations>
61
+ <geoLocation>
62
+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
63
+ </geoLocation>
64
+ </geoLocations>
65
+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
1
+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-3/metadata.xsd">
2
+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
3
+ <creators>
4
+ <creator>
5
+ <creatorName>Pataki, Diane</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Physiology of Urban Trees, 4 of 7</title>
10
+ </titles>
11
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
12
+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
13
+ <subjects>
14
+ <subject>urban ecology</subject>
15
+ <subject>SLA</subject>
16
+ <subject>Specific leaf area</subject>
17
+ <subject>carbon isotope analysis</subject>
18
+ <subject>redwood</subject>
19
+ <subject>chinese elm</subject>
20
+ <subject>Canary Island pine</subject>
21
+ </subjects>
22
+ <contributors>
23
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
24
+ <contributorName>McKinley;McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
25
+ </contributor>
26
+ </contributors>
27
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
28
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://bioweb.biology.utah.edu/pataki/</relatedIdentifier>
29
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
30
+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
31
+ <sizes>
32
+ <size>582</size>
33
+ </sizes>
34
+ <rightsList>
35
+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
36
+ </rightsList>
37
+ <descriptions>
38
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">Measurements of water use by trees planted in urban environments. For more detailed metadata, including data access and usage instructions, please download and consult README.txt file.</description>
39
+ <description descriptionType="Other"/>
40
+ </descriptions>
41
+ <geoLocations>
42
+ <geoLocation>
43
+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
44
+ </geoLocation>
45
+ <geoLocation>
46
+ <geoLocationPoint>34.08 -118.24</geoLocationPoint>
47
+ </geoLocation>
48
+ </geoLocations>
49
+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
1
+ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-3 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-3/metadata.xsd">
2
+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
3
+ <creators>
4
+ <creator>
5
+ <creatorName>Baldassare, Mark</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Special Survey of Orange County 2001</title>
10
+ </titles>
11
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
12
+ <publicationYear>2014</publicationYear>
13
+ <subjects>
14
+ <subject>Consumer Confidence</subject>
15
+ <subject>Traffic</subject>
16
+ <subject>Growth</subject>
17
+ <subject>Government</subject>
18
+ <subject>Transportation</subject>
19
+ <subject>Economy</subject>
20
+ <subject>El Toro Airport</subject>
21
+ <subject>Great Park</subject>
22
+ <subject>Gray Davis</subject>
23
+ <subject>George W. Bush</subject>
24
+ <subject>Politics</subject>
25
+ </subjects>
26
+ <contributors>
27
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
28
+ <contributorName>McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
29
+ </contributor>
30
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
31
+ <contributorName>University of California, Irvine</contributorName>
32
+ </contributor>
33
+ </contributors>
34
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
35
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://data.lib.uci.edu/ocs/</relatedIdentifier>
36
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
37
+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
38
+ <sizes>
39
+ <size>694516</size>
40
+ </sizes>
41
+ <rightsList>
42
+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
43
+ </rightsList>
44
+ <descriptions>
45
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">The Orange County Survey - a collaborative effort of the Public Policy Institute of California and the School of Social Ecology at the University of California, Irvine - is a special edition of the PPIC Statewide Survey. This is the first of an annual series of PPIC surveys of Orange County. The purpose of this study is to inform policymakers by providing timely, accurate, and objective information about policy preferences and economic, social, and political trends. The sample size is 2,004 Orange County adult residents.
46
+
47
+ Online data analysis &amp; additional documentation in Link below.</description>
48
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">The Orange County Survey is a special edition of the PPIC Statewide
49
+ Survey, which is directed by Mark Baldassare, a senior fellow at the
50
+ Public Policy Institute of California, with research assistance from Lisa
51
+ Cole and Eric McGhee. The survey was conducted in collaboration with the
52
+ School of Social Ecology at the University of California, Irvine; however, the survey methodology and questions and the content of this report were solely determined by Mark Baldassare.
53
+
54
+ The findings of this survey are based on a telephone survey of 2,004 Orange County adult residents interviewed from August 20 to August 31, 2001. Interviewing took place on weekend days and weekday nights, using a computer-generated random sample of telephone numbers, ensuring that both listed and unlisted telephone numbers were called. All telephone exchanges in Orange County were eligible for calling. Telephone numbers in the survey sample were called up to five times to increase the likelihood of reaching eligible households. Once a household was reached, an adult respondent (18 or older) was randomly chosen for interviewing by using the &quot;last birthday method&quot; to avoid biases in age and gender.
55
+
56
+ Each interview took an average of 20 minutes to complete. Interviewing was conducted in English or Spanish.
57
+
58
+ We used recent U.S. Census and state figures to compare the demographic characteristics of the survey sample with characteristics of Orange
59
+ County's adult population. The survey sample was closely comparable to the census and state figures.
60
+
61
+ The survey data in this report were statistically weighted to account for any demographic differences.
62
+
63
+ The sampling error for the total sample of 2,004 adults is +/- 2 percent at the 95 percent confidence level. This means that 95 times out of 100, the results will be within 2 percentage points of what they would be if all Orange County adults were interviewed. The sampling error for subgroups is larger. Sampling error is just one type of error to which surveys are subject.
64
+
65
+ Results may also be affected by factors such as question wording, question order, and survey timing.
66
+
67
+ Throughout the report, we refer to two geographic regions. North County refers to cities and communities north of the 55 Freeway, including
68
+ Anaheim, Orange, Villa Park, La Habra, Brea, Buena Park, Fullerton, Placentia, Yorba Linda, La Palma, Cypress, Los Alamitos, Rossmoor, Seal Beach, Westminster, Midway City, Stanton, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Santa Ana, Garden Grove, Tustin, Tustin Foothills, and Costa Mesa. South County refers to cities and communities south of the 55 Freeway, including Newport Beach, Irvine, Lake Forest, Newport Coast, Aliso Viejo, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Woods, Mission Viejo, Portola Hills, Rancho Santa Margarita, Foothill Ranch, Coto de Caza, Trabuco, Laguna Beach, Dana Point, San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, and San Juan Capistrano. In the analysis of questions on the proposed El Toro airport, we include Newport Beach in the North County.
69
+
70
+ We also present results for non-Hispanic whites (referred to in the tables as &quot;whites&quot;), Latinos, and Asians because each group accounts for a substantial number of the county's adult population. We also contrast the opinions of Democrats and Republicans with &quot;other&quot; or &quot;independent&quot; registered voters. This third category includes those who are registered to vote as &quot;decline to state&quot; as well as a fewer number who say they are members of other political parties.
71
+
72
+ In some cases, we compare the Orange County Survey responses to responses in the 1982-2000 Orange County Annual Surveys at the University of California, Irvine, the PPIC Statewide Surveys, and national surveys by the University of Michigan and CBS/New York Times.</description>
73
+ </descriptions>
74
+ <geoLocations>
75
+ <geoLocation>
76
+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
77
+ </geoLocation>
78
+ </geoLocations>
79
+ </resource>