How do I find data?

The Browser is public facing data browser that allows researchers to discover and request access to datasets.

Features:

  • Search for datasets.

  • Filter search results (by Publisher, Data Use Limitation, Data Use Requirements, Keywords, Physical Sample Availability, Geographic Coverage).

  • Browse dataset metadata.

  • Request access to datasets.

Use Cases:

Tutorial:

View an interactive version of this tutorial here.

 

  1. To begin, open the Browser.

 

2. Filter by Publisher to examine the data held by selected organisations.

 

3. Filter by Data Use Limitation to only view datasets with permissions that fit your use case.

 

4. Filter by additional Data Use Requirements to ensure you are viewing data that fits your use cases.

 

5. Filter by Keywords to only view datasets that relate to a certain topic(s).

 

6. Filter by Physical Sample Availability to select datasets with specific physical samples associated with them (e.g. WHOLE BLOOD, URINE).

 

7. Filter by Geographic Coverage to view datasets that cover specific regions or countries.

8. You can also search the datasets using keywords. Click on the search bar.

9. Click on a dataset to learn more about it.

10. Summary: the first section includes a short abstract and contact details for the publisher.

11. You can also view media attached to the dataset. Click on the Media Icon.

12. Documentation includes a rich text description of the dataset or links to media such as documents, images, presentations, videos or links to data dictionaries, profiles or dashboards.

13. Coverage includes attributes for geographical and cohort details etc. to enable you to make decisions about the relevance of the underlying data.

14. Provenance information allows you to understand data within the context of its origins and can be an indicator of quality, authenticity and timeliness. 

15. Accessibility information allows you to understand access, usage, limitations, formats, standards and linkage or interoperability with toolsets. 

16. Enrichment and Linkage includes information about related datasets that may have previously been linked, as well as indicating if there is the opportunity to link to other datasets in the future.

17. Observations: this section holds a series of observations about a dataset, such as number of persons, events or findings. 

18. Structural Metadata: this describes the variables within a dataset.

20. You can request access to the dataset using the contact details in the Summary section.

 

Next Steps:

How do I request access to data?

What is Structural Metadata?