Sharing Research Online

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Research takes a lot of your time and effort thus,share it once you have finished it or if you have already done it!
Elsevier has a
resource for determining which journal would be a good fit for a particular article.
Here are also has some tips on sharing your research for reaching a broader audience:


Post your work to field and topic-related forums. This includes sharing with research networks, but it is not necessarily sharing with research networks. If you are analyzing a novel or series that has an active fandom, you can share it to fandom spaces. If you are working in a field that has aspects of both research and practice, you can join practice-oriented forums, participate, and share your work once you have it.


Remind people it is OK to ask authors for copies of their papers. Most journals allow authorsto send copiesof their papers to peoplewho contact them to ask. Not everyone knows this, and people who do know can be reluctant to ask, for a variety of reasons. Attaching this reminder to share your work may also encourage people who would otherwise see the journal paywall and give up asking you for a copy instead!


Keep track of requests for your papers. This is not just about tracking impact, though committees might be interested in how many people have asked for copies of your work. This is a list of people who were interested enough in your work to ask you for a copy.
Sharing information stimulates science. When researchers choose to make their data publicly available, they are allowing their work to contribute far beyond their original findings.
The benefits of data sharing are immense. When researchers make their data public, they increase transparency and trust in their work,they enable others to reproduce and validate their findings, and ultimately, contribute to the pace of scientific discovery by allowing others to reuse and build on top of their data.

Below find some useful repository links to share your researchdata:


1. Figshare - Figshare is a free access data repository where researchers may save and make their research findings, including datasets, pictures, and videos readily accessible. Researchers can upload any file format to Figshare,which also provides a digital object identification (DOI) for citations.

2. 
Mendeley Data - Researchers can save and share their data on Mendeley Data, an open repository for research data. Options for sharing datasets are available both publicly and privately for any user. The datasets posted to Mendeley Data are checked during moderation. By doing this, you may be sure that the information is original, scientific, and free of plagiarized research articles. On Mendeley Data, researchers can post and store their work without paying a fee.

3.
Dryad Digital Repository - A curated general-purpose repository called Dryad makes data citable,freely reusable, and discoverable. Most file types, including compressed archives containing several files (such as text, spreadsheets, video, photos, and software code), can be submitted. There are no admission fees for individual users or institutions because a core value of Dryad is to make its contents openly accessible for research and educational purposes. The $120 US fee that Dryad charges for each data publication serves to fund the company's operations.

4.
Harvard Dataverse - On the online data archive known as Harvard Dataverse, researchers can save, share, cite, and explore their data. The Harvard Institute of Quantitative Social Science developed the open-source online application Dataverse, which powers the Harvard Dataverse repository. Researchers, journals, and organizations can use Harvard's version of the Dataverse online application or install it on their own server. The Harvard Dataverse accepts all types of scientific data from all fields. Harvard Dataverse is free and has a limit of 2.5 GB per file and 10 GB per dataset.

5.
Open ScienceFramework - OSF is a free, open-source research management and collaboration tool designed to help researchers document their project's lifecycle and archive materials. It is built and maintained by the nonprofit Center for Open Science. Each user, project, component, and file is given a unique, persistent uniform resourcelocator (URL) to enable sharingand promote attribution. Projects can also be assigned digital object identifiers (DOIs) if they are made publicly available. OSF is a free service.

6.
Zenodo - Zenodo encourages users to early on in their research lifecycle to upload their research outputs by allowing them to be private. Once an associated paper is published, datasets are automatically made open. Zenodo has no restriction on the file type that researchers may upload and accepts dataset of up to 50 GB.


https://www.teamscopeapp.com/blog/6-repositories-to-share-your-research-data
Below you may find another useful link:
https://www.elsevier.com/authors/submit-your-paper/sharing-and-promoting-your-article