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 +1,50 @@
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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>The Nature Conservancy San Diego Field Office</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ </creators>
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+ <titles>
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+ <title>Bird Surveys</title>
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+ </titles>
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+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
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+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
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+ <subjects>
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+ <subject>bird monitoring</subject>
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+ <subject>TNC</subject>
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+ <subject>The Nature Conservancy</subject>
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+ <subject>Irvine Ranch Conservancy</subject>
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+ </subjects>
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+ <contributors>
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+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
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+ <contributorName>McKinley;McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
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+ </contributor>
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+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
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+ <contributorName>The Nature Conservancy</contributorName>
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+ </contributor>
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+ </contributors>
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+ <relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://www.nature.org/ourinitiatives/regions/northamerica/unitedstates/california/contact/index.htm</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>526</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">For more detailed metadata, including data access and usage instructions, please download and consult README.txt file.</description>
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+ <description descriptionType="Methods">Characterize bird species richness and biodiversity; define habitat associations; document special status species</description>
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+ <description descriptionType="Other"/>
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+ </descriptions>
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+ <geoLocations>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationBox>33.745432 -117.763653 33.784819 -117.665462</geoLocationBox>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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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>Baldassare, Mark</creatorName>
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+ </creator>
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+ </creators>
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+ <titles>
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+ <title>Annual Survey of Orange County 1989</title>
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+ </titles>
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+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
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+ <publicationYear>2014</publicationYear>
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+ <subjects>
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+ <subject>Consumer Confidence</subject>
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+ <subject>Housing</subject>
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+ <subject>Quality of Life</subject>
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+ <subject>Social Issues</subject>
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+ <subject>Transportation</subject>
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+ <subject>Crime</subject>
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+ <subject>Pollution</subject>
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+ <subject>Volunteering</subject>
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+ <subject>Charitable Giving</subject>
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+ <subject>Traffic</subject>
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+ <subject>Taxes</subject>
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+ <subject>Politics</subject>
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+ </subjects>
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+ <contributors>
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+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
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+ <contributorName>McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
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+ </contributor>
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+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
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+ <contributorName>University of California, Irvine</contributorName>
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+ </contributor>
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+ </contributors>
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+ <relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://data.lib.uci.edu/ocs/</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>3767332</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">The theme of this year's survey is &quot;Orange County: Approaching the 1990s. The survey is designed to provide an extensive analysis of issues affecting the next decade. The sample size is 1,085 Orange County adult residents.
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+
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+ Online data analysis &amp; additional documentation in Link below.</description>
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+ <description descriptionType="Methods">The Orange County Annual survey was directed by Mark Baldassare, a professor of social ecology at UC Irvine. For the survey, 1,085 adult orange County residents were interviewed by telephone Sept. 6 to 23. In Orange County, where more than 97 percent of households have telephones, this method of interview gives highly representative data.
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+
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+ Interviewing was conducted on weekend days and weekday nights, using a random sample of 4,500 listed and unlisted telephone numbers. These were generated by computer from a list of working blocks of telephone exchanges. The telephone sample was generated by Pijacki and Associates of Shoreham, N.Y. The field work was conducted at the Center for Survey Research by UCI's Public Policy Research Organization.
52
+
53
+ Of the telephone numbers called, 23 percent resulted in completed interviews and 15 percent were refusals. The completion rate for the survey (completions divided bycompletions plus refusals) was 61 percent.
54
+
55
+ Other telephone outcomes included the following: 21 percent disconnected numbers; 3 percent computer or fax lines; 15 percent businesses and other non-Orange County households; 20 percent persistent no answers and l percent persistently unavailable respondents. Two percent were not completed because of language problems, including non-English speaking households, and hearing impairment.
56
+
57
+ Within a-household, respondents were chosen for interview using the Troldahl-Carter method. This method randomly selects a household member from a grid that includes information on the number of adult household members and the number of adult men in the household. Up to six callbacks were attempted per telephone number.
58
+
59
+ Each interview included 90 questions and took an average of 20 minutes to complete. Most interviews ranged in length from 15 to 25 minutes.
60
+
61
+ The surveys were designed in three stages over several months. In the first stage, UCI undergraduate students conducted face-to-face, interviews on Orange County topics with randomly selected adult residents. The second stage involved feedback on questions and topics from the annual survey's Steering
62
+ Committee, Advisory Committee and colleagues. The final stage included pre-tests by students, followed by final revisions of the questions.
63
+
64
+ The interview began with questions about housing, moving preferences, consumer confidence and perceptions of life in Orange County. These were followed by questions on growth, transportation and crime issues. A major section of the interview was then devoted to questions about air pollution and the Air Quality Management Plan. Later in the interview, we turned to the topics of charities. The conclusion of the survey was devoted to questions about work and commuting patterns, personal characteristics, household status and political attitudes.
65
+
66
+ The survey's validity was checked by comparing the sample's characteristics to available information on Orange County's population. We compared the 1989 survey results to the 1980 U.S. Census, previous annual surveys and other recent survey data. Age, income and other demographic features of our sample were comparable with those noted in other studies.
67
+
68
+ For data analyses, we statistically weighted the sample to represent the actual regional distribution of Orange County residents. The 1989 population estimates for north, west, central and south county regions were issued by the Demographic Research Unit, County of Orange.
69
+
70
+ Other efforts were made to correct for possible errors in the course of interviewing and data processing. Approximately 10 percent of the completed interviews were verified through callbacks. All questionnaires were checked by the interviewer supervisor immediately after completion. Finally, keypunched data were double-checked for all cases in the survey sample.
71
+
72
+ The sampling error for this survey is +/- 3 percent at the 95 percent confidence level. This means that 95 times out of 100, the results will-be within 3 percentage pointsof what they would be if all adults in Orange County were interviewed. The sampling error for any subgroup would be larger.
73
+
74
+ Sampling error is just one type of error to which surveys are subject. Results may also influenced by factors such as question wording, survey timing and other aspects of survey design.
75
+ </description>
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+ </descriptions>
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+ <geoLocations>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>
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+ <identifier identifierType="DOI"/>
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+ <creators>
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+ <creator>
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+ <creatorName>Pataki, Diane</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
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+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Physiology of Urban Trees, 7 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>London planetree</subject>
19
+ <subject>California sycamore</subject>
20
+ </subjects>
21
+ <contributors>
22
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
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+ <contributorName>McKinley;McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
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+ </contributor>
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+ </contributors>
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+ <relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://bioweb.biology.utah.edu/pataki/</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>544</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">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>
38
+ <description descriptionType="Other"/>
39
+ </descriptions>
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+ <geoLocations>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationPoint>34.07 -118.34</geoLocationPoint>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
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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"/>
3
+ <creators>
4
+ <creator>
5
+ <creatorName>Baldassare, Mark</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Special Survey of Orange County 2004</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>Jobs</subject>
18
+ <subject>Economy</subject>
19
+ <subject>Government</subject>
20
+ <subject>Housing</subject>
21
+ <subject>Transportation</subject>
22
+ <subject>Arnold Schwarzenegger</subject>
23
+ <subject>George W. Bush</subject>
24
+ <subject>Ethnic Relations</subject>
25
+ <subject>County Bankruptcy</subject>
26
+ </subjects>
27
+ <contributors>
28
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
29
+ <contributorName>McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
30
+ </contributor>
31
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
32
+ <contributorName>University of California, Irvine</contributorName>
33
+ </contributor>
34
+ </contributors>
35
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
36
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://data.lib.uci.edu/ocs/</relatedIdentifier>
37
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
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+ <sizes>
40
+ <size>658073</size>
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+ </sizes>
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+ <rightsList>
43
+ <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">This survey of 1,008 adult residents includes questions from earlier Orange County Annual Surveys. It also includes key indicators from the PPIC Statewide Survey for comparisons with the state and regions of California. It also considers racial/ethnic, income, and political differences. The following issues are explored in this Orange County Survey: Orange County Issues, Housing Issues, and State and National Issues. Orange County Issues include such questions as: What are the trends over time in consumer confidence and the public's ratings of the quality of life and the economy in Orange County? Do residents recall the Orange County government bankruptcy in 1994, how do they perceive its impacts today, and have attitudes toward the county government recovered in the past 10 years? How satisfied are residents with their local public services and city governments? What are the most important issues facing the county and how do residents rate the problems in their regions? What are their perceptions of commuting and transportation plans and preferences for local transportation taxes? Housing Issues include such questions as: How satisfied are residents with their homes and neighborhoods and how do they perceive their opportunities for buying a home in Orange County? How many residents feel the financial strain of housing costs, perceive the benefits of rising home values, or are seriously considering moving? What housing and neighborhood options are they willing to consider?
47
+
48
+ Online data analysis &amp; additional documentation in Link below.</description>
49
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">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 fourth in an annual series of PPIC surveys of Orange County. Mark Baldassare, director of the PPIC Statewide Survey, is the founder and director of the Orange County Annual Survey at UCI and a former UCI professor. The UCI survey was conducted 19 times from 1982 to 2000; thus, the Orange County Survey collaboration between PPIC and UCI that began in 2001 is an extension of earlier survey efforts. The special survey of Orange County is co-sponsored by UCI with local support received for this four-year series from Deloitte and Touche, Pacific Life Foundation, Disneyland, Los Angeles Times, Orange County Business Council, Orange County Division of League of California Cities, Orange County Register, The Irvine Company, and United Way of Orange County.
50
+
51
+ Orange County is the second most populous county in the state and one of California's fastest growing and changing regions. The county is home to three million residents today, having gained approximately one million residents since 1980. Three in four residents were white and non-Hispanic in 1980; today, nearly half are Latinos and Asians, and more population growth and racial/ethnic change are projected for the next several decades.
52
+ The county's dynamic economy has become one of the leaders in the high-technology industry. The county is a bellwether county in state and national politics and the site of many important local governance issues, including a county government bankruptcy that occurred 10 years ago in December 1994. There are also housing, transportation, land use, and environmental concerns related to development. Public opinion findings are critical to informing discussions and resolving public debates on key issues. The purpose of this study is to inform policymakers, the media, and the general public by providing timely, accurate, and objective information about policy preferences and economic, social, and political trends.
53
+
54
+ To measure changes over time, this survey of 1,008 adult residents includes questions from earlier Orange County Annual Surveys. It also includes key indicators from the PPIC Statewide Survey for comparisons with the state and regions of California. We also consider racial/ethnic, income, and political differences. The following issues are explored in this Orange County Survey:
55
+
56
+ Orange County Issues - What are the trends over time in consumer confidence and the public's ratings of the quality of life and the economy in Orange County? Do residents recall the Orange County government bankruptcy in 1994, how do they perceive its impacts today, and have attitudes toward the county government recovered in the past 10 years? How satisfied are residents with their local public services and city governments? What are the most important issues facing the county and how do residents rate the problems in their regions? What are their perceptions of commuting and transportation plans and preferences for local transportation taxes?
57
+
58
+ Housing Issues - How satisfied are residents with their homes and neighborhoods and how do they perceive their opportunities for buying a home in Orange County? How many residents feel the financial strain of housing costs, perceive the benefits of rising home values, or are seriously considering moving? What housing and neighborhood options are they willing to consider?
59
+
60
+ State and National Issues - What is the overall outlook for California and U.S. conditions? How do residents rate the job performances of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and President George W. Bush? What are their perceptions of the national election and the second term of the Bush presidency? Has the partisan divide in trust in the federal government increased over time?</description>
61
+ </descriptions>
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+ <geoLocations>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,51 @@
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>Allison, Steven D.</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Can microbial functional traits predict the response and resilience of decomposition to global change?</title>
10
+ </titles>
11
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
12
+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
13
+ <subjects>
14
+ <subject>soil</subject>
15
+ <subject>microbial community</subject>
16
+ <subject>litter</subject>
17
+ <subject>global change</subject>
18
+ <subject>fungi</subject>
19
+ </subjects>
20
+ <contributors>
21
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
22
+ <contributorName>McKinley;McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
23
+ </contributor>
24
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
25
+ <contributorName>U.S. Department of Energy. Select a sub-organization</contributorName>
26
+ </contributor>
27
+ </contributors>
28
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
29
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://allison.bio.uci.edu/</relatedIdentifier>
30
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
31
+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
32
+ <sizes>
33
+ <size>581</size>
34
+ </sizes>
35
+ <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">1) Connect diverse microbial groups with the extracellular enzyme systems that catalyze the decay of organic material 2) Determine whether different groups of microbes and their enzymes respond to environmental changes 3) Determine whether microbes and their functions can recover from environmental changes 4) Develop mathematical models to predict the responses of microbial communities and their associated functions under new environmental conditions</description>
41
+ <description descriptionType="Other"/>
42
+ </descriptions>
43
+ <geoLocations>
44
+ <geoLocation>
45
+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
46
+ </geoLocation>
47
+ <geoLocation>
48
+ <geoLocationPoint>33.733548 -117.698078</geoLocationPoint>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
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>Meng, Jhao-An</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ <creator>
8
+ <creatorName>Saberi, Kourosh</creatorName>
9
+ </creator>
10
+ </creators>
11
+ <titles>
12
+ <title>DATA set for PLOS One Hsieh et al. 2016</title>
13
+ </titles>
14
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
15
+ <publicationYear>2016</publicationYear>
16
+ <subjects>
17
+ <subject>fMRI</subject>
18
+ <subject>auditory motion</subject>
19
+ <subject>sensorimotor</subject>
20
+ </subjects>
21
+ <contributors>
22
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
23
+ <contributorName>Saberi;Saberi, Kourosh</contributorName>
24
+ </contributor>
25
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
26
+ <contributorName>National Institutes of Health. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders</contributorName>
27
+ </contributor>
28
+ </contributors>
29
+ <relatedIdentifiers/>
30
+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
31
+ <sizes>
32
+ <size>150320964</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">The auditory system encounters motion cues through an acoustic object’s movement or rotation of the listener’s head in a stationary sound field, generating a wide range of naturally occurring velocities from a few to several hundred degrees per second. The angular velocity of moving acoustic objects relative to a listener is typically slow and does not exceed tens of degrees per second, whereas head rotations in a stationary acoustic field may generate fast-changing spatial cues in the order of several hundred degrees per second. We hypothesized that these two types of systems (i.e., encoding slow movements of an object or fast head rotations) may engage functionally distinct substrates in processing spatially dynamic auditory cues, with the latter potentially involved in maintaining perceptual constancy in a stationary field during head rotations and therefore possibly involving corollary-discharge mechanisms in premotor cortex. Using fMRI, we examined cortical response patterns to sound sources moving at a wide range of velocities in 3D virtual auditory space. We found a significant categorical difference between fast and slow moving sounds, with stronger activations in response to higher velocities in the posterior superior temporal regions, the planum temporale, and notably the premotor ventral-rostral (PMVr) area implicated in planning neck and head motor functions</description>
39
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">fMRI scanning of human cortex while listening to motion of an auditory source in 3D virtual space.</description>
40
+ <description descriptionType="Other">R01DC009659</description>
41
+ </descriptions>
42
+ <geoLocations>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationPlace>false</geoLocationPlace>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>
@@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
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 1996</title>
10
+ </titles>
11
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
12
+ <publicationYear>2014</publicationYear>
13
+ <subjects>
14
+ <subject>Consumer Confidence</subject>
15
+ <subject>Income</subject>
16
+ <subject>Economy</subject>
17
+ <subject>Health</subject>
18
+ <subject>Social Issues</subject>
19
+ <subject>Police</subject>
20
+ <subject>Recreation</subject>
21
+ <subject>Libraries</subject>
22
+ <subject>Public Schools</subject>
23
+ <subject>Art</subject>
24
+ <subject>Charitable Giving</subject>
25
+ <subject>Media</subject>
26
+ <subject>Measure A</subject>
27
+ <subject>Politics</subject>
28
+ <subject>Quality of Life</subject>
29
+ <subject>Housing</subject>
30
+ <subject>Transportation</subject>
31
+ </subjects>
32
+ <contributors>
33
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
34
+ <contributorName>McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
35
+ </contributor>
36
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
37
+ <contributorName>University of California, Irvine</contributorName>
38
+ </contributor>
39
+ </contributors>
40
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
41
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://data.lib.uci.edu/ocs/</relatedIdentifier>
42
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
43
+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
44
+ <sizes>
45
+ <size>468429</size>
46
+ </sizes>
47
+ <rightsList>
48
+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
49
+ </rightsList>
50
+ <descriptions>
51
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">This fifteenth Orange County Annual Survey, UCI, examines several topics of recent relevance in Orange County and analyzes social, economic and political trends over time. The survey measures the extent to which Orange County has recovered from the economic recession and the county government's bankruptcy. It does this by analyzing trends in attitudes toward the economy, quality of life, local government, consumer confidence and personal finance. A special focus this year is to better understand attitudes about charity and charitable giving. Finally, it continues to track trends over time in the county's most important problems, transportation, housing and the political climate. The sample size is 1,000 Orange County adult residents.
52
+
53
+ Online data analysis &amp; additional documentation in Link below.</description>
54
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">The Orange County Annual Survey, UCI, was co-directed by Mark Baldassare, professor and chair of urban and regional planning, and Cheryl Katz, research associate. The random telephone survey included interviews with 1,000 Orange County adult residents co nducted August 30 to September 8, 1996. We follow the methods used in the 14 previous surveys.
55
+
56
+ Interviewing was conducted on weekend days and weekday nights, using a computer-generated random sample of telephone numbers. Within a household, adult respondents were randomly chosen for interview. Each interview included 96 questions and took an average of 20 minutes to complete. The interviewing was conducted in English and Spanish, as needed. The completion rate for the survey was 68 percent. This rate is consistent with earlier Orange County Annual Surveys. The field work was conducted by Interviewing Services of America in Van Nuys, CA.
57
+
58
+ The survey sample was compared to the U.S. Census and state figures by city for Orange County and was found to represent the actual regional distribution of Orange County residents. The sample's demographic characteristics were also closely comparable to the Census and other survey data, including the previous Orange County Annual Surveys.
59
+
60
+ The sampling error for this survey is +/- 3 percent at the 95 percent confidence level. This means that 95 times out of 100, the results will be 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 also be affected by question wording, ordering, and survey timing.</description>
61
+ </descriptions>
62
+ <geoLocations>
63
+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
65
+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>
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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>The Nature Conservancy San Diego Field Office</creatorName>
6
+ </creator>
7
+ </creators>
8
+ <titles>
9
+ <title>Vegetation monitoring</title>
10
+ </titles>
11
+ <publisher>UC Irvine</publisher>
12
+ <publicationYear>2015</publicationYear>
13
+ <subjects>
14
+ <subject>vegetation monitoring</subject>
15
+ <subject>TNC</subject>
16
+ <subject>The Nature Conservancy</subject>
17
+ <subject>SDSU</subject>
18
+ <subject>San Diego State University</subject>
19
+ <subject>Irvine Ranch Conservancy</subject>
20
+ <subject>plants</subject>
21
+ </subjects>
22
+ <contributors>
23
+ <contributor contributorType="DataManager">
24
+ <contributorName>McKinley;McKinley, Matthew J.</contributorName>
25
+ </contributor>
26
+ <contributor contributorType="Funder">
27
+ <contributorName>The Nature Conservancy</contributorName>
28
+ </contributor>
29
+ </contributors>
30
+ <relatedIdentifiers>
31
+ <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" relationType="IsSupplementedBy">http://www.nature.org/ourinitiatives/regions/northamerica/unitedstates/california/contact/index.htm</relatedIdentifier>
32
+ </relatedIdentifiers>
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+ <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">Dataset</resourceType>
34
+ <sizes>
35
+ <size>551</size>
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+ </sizes>
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+ <rightsList>
38
+ <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)</rights>
39
+ </rightsList>
40
+ <descriptions>
41
+ <description descriptionType="Abstract">For more detailed metadata, including data access and usage instructions, please download and consult README.txt file.</description>
42
+ <description descriptionType="Methods">Describe status and trend in cover, richness and other vegetation characteristics; design long-term monitoring program</description>
43
+ <description descriptionType="Other"/>
44
+ </descriptions>
45
+ <geoLocations>
46
+ <geoLocation>
47
+ <geoLocationPlace>Orange County (Calif.)</geoLocationPlace>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocation>
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+ <geoLocationBox>33.787975 -117.722712 33.794966 -117.683229</geoLocationBox>
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+ </geoLocation>
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+ </geoLocations>
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+ </resource>