Data Stations

305,881
datasets

Social Sciences and Humanities

Archaeology

Life Sciences

Physical and Technical Sciences

Dutch national centre of expertise and repository for research data

Welcome to DANS, the Dutch national centre of expertise and repository for research data. We help researchers make their data available for reuse.
This allows researchers to use the data for new research and makes published research verifiable and reproducible.
DANS is one of the leading repositories in Europe.

Community experiences

"It is essential for scientists to share their data, because only then progress can be made and time can be saved. That is why it is good that DANS exists."

Prof.dr. Nicoline van der Sijs, Dutch Language Institute

"As a machine learning researcher, I understand all too well that there are no good models without good data. DANS plays a major role in this by not only making it very easy to share data, but also by incentivizing and giving proper credit to people sharing them."

Dr. Joaquin Vanschoren, Assistent Professor Machine Learning, Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e)

"From my PhD advisor, I learned that information is the only resource that grows in use. That is why I greatly applaud sharing data via DANS."

Dr. Maarten Marx, Professor, University of Amsterdam

"Choosing a repository that can be trusted becomes an important issue to make our data widely spread, easily accessible, and available in the long term. DANS is a good repository that fulfills all of those criteria."

Diah H. Apriyanti, University of Twente The Netherlands & National Research and Innovation Agency Republic of Indonesia

"We often ask a lot of participants, both literally and figuratively. By sharing research data with each other, we can ensure that participants are less burdened."

Dr. Thabo van Woudenberg, Erasmus University Rotterdam

"Sharing data has proven to be a key success factor of our project. The very fact that we started publishing and sharing data online early in the project resulted in further participation of (unknown) private searchers and accelerated adoption by professional researchers."

Dr. Stijn Heeren, Project leader Portable Antiquities of the Netherlands (PAN)

"There is an abundance of places to put data — sharing with DANS gives me confidence that the data is archived properly and with integrity.”

Dr. Chris Hartgerink, Director Liberate Science GmbH

"The sustainable and centralised access to unique research data is invaluable to inform decision-making on preserving our cultural heritage. It is indispensable for individual researchers with a small but not insignificant research agenda."

Dr. Sanneke Stigter, Assistant Professor Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage, University of Amsterdam

“Since 2012, our map of past and present Rhine-Meuse delta river branches are available via DANS, findable for archaeologists, hydrologists and others. We enjoy using the platform as an archiving and downloading place for our mapping data."

Dr. Kim M. Cohen, Faculty Geosciences, Utrecht University

"Our linguistic database of the Hebrew Bible is the product of more than four decades of hard work. DANS has helped us to reliably store this wealth of data and enable easy access."

Willem van Peursen, Professor of Old Testament, Faculty of Religion and Theology, VU & director of the ETCBC

News

A screenshot of the ODISSEI Portal

We are happy to present a new updated version of the ODISSEI Portal. In this new version of the Portal we implemented a first prototype of the so-called Data Access Broker (DAB). In addition, more information is available, for instance through ELSST, to improve the search results. The ODISSEI team also worked on a Dutch translation of the user interface. With this new version we introduce an even more user-friendly Portal for the social sciences community. We are happy to explore the different new features and what they mean to you as a user.

Skyline of Lisbon with the text "DARIAH Annual Event 2024 | June 18-21, Lisbon, Portugal"

The DARIAH Annual Event this year will take place in Lisbon (June 18-21) and is on the theme “Workflows: Digital Methods for Reproducible Research Practices in the Arts and Humanities”. Registration is now open until June 4th for what promises to be an exciting event in the digital humanities domain.

On the 13th of April last, the NRC published a background article on ‘what goes wrong in data research’. For this, Ingrid Dillo, Senior Advisor at DANS, was interviewed by Laura Wismans. In this article, Ingrid Dillo explains that available data are not always of good quality and that there is still much work to be done in the area of sharing and reusing data.

DANS has made the article available below and freely translated into English. No changes have been made to the original content.