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Help for Proposal
Writers
If you are writing a proposal that
includes the use of an existing PDS data set or the generation of a new PDS data set, please follow these
guidelines.
Use of Existing PDS Data Sets
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Check the
instructions for
the program to
which you are
proposing for
any rules about
which PDS data
sets are
acceptable. Some
programs have
specific
requirements
about the status
of PDS data sets
for use in
proposals.
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The
archive status
of each PDS
Geosciences Node
data set is
listed on the
page
All Geosciences
Node Data
Holdings.
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When mentioning
a PDS data set
in your
proposal, cite
the PDS Data Set
ID, which
uniquely
identifies the
data set in all
of PDS. Many
data sets have
similar names,
so specifying
the Data Set ID
avoids any
ambiguity.
Generation of a New PDS Data Set
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Contact
PDS.
If you
intend to
archive your
data in PDS,
discuss it
with PDS before
submitting your
proposal. We can
tell you what
would be
required to make
your data into a
PDS archive, and
make sure you
are connected
with the right
PDS node to
handle your
data. The node
can provide a
letter stating
that it is aware
of your proposed
effort and can
support the
archiving of
your data.
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Which
PDS node?
Links
to all the PDS
nodes are found
in the orange
bar near the
bottom of this
page. To
determine if a
node is the
right one to
archive your
data, look at
the node's web
site to see the
types of data
already archived
there. Contact
information for
all PDS nodes is
available on
their web sites
and on the main
PDS web site
Contact
page.
To contact the
Geosciences
Node, send email
to
geosci@wunder.wustl.edu.
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Estimation of
Effort.
If your proposal
is accepted, you
should work closely
with your PDS
node
representative
throughout the
course of your
work in
generating the
data set. Even
if you are a
seasoned PDS
veteran, it's
unlikely that
you can simply
deliver an
archive-ready
package to PDS
at the end of
your work. Your
PDS representative
can help you define
your data
structures,
design PDS
labels, design
the components
of the archive
(data,
documentation,
index tables,
supporting
materials), and
prepare for the
peer review.
Discuss the
scope of this
work with your
PDS representative in order
to accurately
estimate the
effort required
in your
proposal.
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Peer
Review.
Every data set
archived in PDS
must pass a peer
review. The
review committee
consists of a
small number of
scientists who
have relevant
expertise, along
with PDS
representatives.
The review
results in a
list of
recommendations
called liens
that must be
addressed before
the data set can
be accepted.
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More
Information.
See
Proposer's
Archiving Guide
(PAG)
for Individual
Proposers
(rev. 4/21/16) on the
main PDS web
site.
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Compressed
Data Policy.
If you are
considering
archiving data
in compressed
files, e.g. JPEG
images, you may
need to
reconsider.
Please read the
PDS Policy for
Use of
Compression in
PDS Archives.
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