Datainbrief Template
Datainbrief Template
Version 3.0
Data in Brief is an open access journal which publishes data articles. Please note:
A data article is different to a regular research article, so it is important to use the template
below to write your article for Data in Brief.
A data article simply describes data without providing conclusions or interpretive insights.
When writing your data article avoid using words such as ‘study’, ‘results’, and ‘conclusions’.
Data in Brief requires raw data related to any charts, graphs, tables or figures that are
submitted. These can be uploaded alongside your Data in Brief manuscript or deposited in a
data repository.
Have any questions? See a list of frequently asked questions here, or email our Managing Editors:
[email protected]
(1) If you are submitting your data article directly to Data in Brief you can
now skip the next section and complete the Data Article template.
(2) If you are submitting your data article to Data in Brief via another Elsevier
journal as a co-submission, please read the Co-submission Instructions on
the next page before completing the Data Article template.
Co-submission Instructions
A co-submission to Data in Brief is done at the same time you submit the revised version of a research
article to another Elsevier journal. The revision letter/email you receive from the other journal will contain
an offer to submit a data article to Data in Brief if a co-submission is permitted for that journal.
To complete a co-submission you will need to zip your Data in Brief manuscript file and all other files
relevant to the Data in Brief submission (including supplementary data files) into a single .zip file, and
upload this as a “Data in Brief”-labelled item in the other journal’s submission system when you submit
your revised manuscript to that journal. The .zip file will then be automatically transferred to Data in
Brief when your research article is accepted for publication in the other journal.
Please note, authors should not republish the same data presented in their original research article in a
Data in Brief co-submission as this could constitute duplicate publication. However, Data in Brief
welcomes for publication any data article which fulfils one or more of the following criteria:
- A description of the full dataset or additional information that will aid reuse
- A detailed description of the raw data relating to the charts, graphs or figures in your companion
research article, if making these data available will substantially enhance reproducibility and/or
reanalysis
- A description of the supplementary data which would previously have been hosted as
supplementary electronic files alongside your original research article*
- Any negative datasets or data from intermediate experiments related to your research
Data in Brief requires that all raw data be made available. Where it is possible to do so, data should be
deposited in a recognized data repository, or submitted directly to Data in Brief and hosted alongside the
published data article. Data in Brief’s preference is for data to be deposited in a repository and we
recommend Mendeley Data if you do not have a trusted repository.
*When describing supplementary data which authors previously planned to publish as supplementary
electronic files hosted alongside their original research article, it is requested that authors either deposit
these in a repository (preferred) or submit these to Data in Brief alongside their data article. They should
not be published with your research article in the other journal.
Data Article template
Please fill in the template below. All the Sections are mandatory. Please read all instructions in [square
brackets] carefully and ensure that you delete all instruction text from the template before submitting
your article. This includes all text in the sections above.
Reminder: a data article simply describes data and should not provide conclusions or interpretive insights.
Please delete this line and everything above before submitting your article.
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Article Title
[The article title must include the word ‘data’ or ‘dataset’. Avoid the use of acronyms and abbreviations
where possible. For co-submission authors, the title should be unique i.e. not the same as your research
paper. Max 250 characters]
Authors
Affiliations
[1. institution
2. institution]
Corresponding author(s)
Abstract
[The Abstract should describe the data collection process, the analysis performed, the data, and their
reuse potential. It should not provide conclusions or interpretive insights. If your article is being submitted
via another Elsevier journal, please cite this research article in the abstract. Max 1500 characters]
Keywords
[Include 4-8 keywords (or phrases) to facilitate others finding your article online. Tip: Try Google Scholar
to see what terms are most common in your field. In biomedical fields, MeSH terms are a good ‘common
vocabulary’ to draw from]
Specifications Table [Every section of this table is mandatory. Please enter information in the right-
hand column]
Subject [Please select one CATEGORY for your manuscript from the list available
at: DIB categories.]
Specific subject area [Briefly describe the narrower subject area. Max 150 characters]
Type of data [List the type(s) of data this article describes. Simply delete from this list
as appropriate:]
Table
Image
Chart
Graph
Figure
[Any other type not listed- please specify]
How data were acquired [State how the data were acquired: E.g. Microscope, survey, SEM, NMR,
mass spectrometry, etc.
Instruments: E.g. hardware, software, program
Model and make of the instruments used:]
Data format [List your data format(s). Note, all raw data must be provided (or linked
to in a repository). Simply delete from this list as appropriate:]
Raw
Analyzed
Filtered
[Any other format not listed- please specify]
Parameters for data [Provide a brief description of which conditions were considered for data
collection collection. Max 400 characters]
Description of data [Provide a brief description of how the data were collected. Max 600
collection characters]
Data source location [Fill the available information in, and delete from this list as appropriate:
Institution:
City/Town/Region:
Country:
Latitude and longitude (and GPS coordinates) for collected
samples/data:]
Data accessibility [State here if the data are either hosted ‘With the article’ or on a public
repository. The journal does not have a strict policy but in the interest of
openly sharing data we recommend hosting your data in a trusted
repository. Please delete or complete as appropriate, either:]
Related research article [If your data article is related to a research article, please cite your
associated research article here.
Author’s name
Title
Journal
DOI
If your data article is not related to a research article, please delete this
last row of the table]
[Provide 3-6 bullet points explaining why this data are of value to the scientific community. Bullet points
1-3 must specifically answer the question next to the bullet point. You may provide up to 3 additional
bullet points to outline the value of the data. Please keep points brief.
How can these data be used for further insights and development of experiments?
What is the additional value of these data?
…
…]
Data
[Describe the actual data files (i.e. figures, tables, dataset, etc.) that are included in this article. Make
sure you refer to each one specifically. No insight, interpretation, background or conclusions should be
included in this section.]
[Offer a complete description of the experimental design and methods used to acquire the data. Please
provide any programs or code files used for filtering and analyzing the data. It is very important that this
section is as comprehensive as possible and if you are submitting via another Elsevier journal you are
encouraged to provide more detail than in your accompanying research article. There is no character
limit for this section, however, no insight, interpretation, or background should be included in this
section.]
Acknowledgments
References
[References are limited (approx. 15) and excessive self-citation is not allowed. If your data article is co-
submitted via another Elsevier journal, please cite your associated research article here.
Reference style:
Text: Indicate references by number(s) in square brackets in line with the text. The actual authors can be
referred to, but the reference number(s) must always be given.
Example: '..... as demonstrated [3,6]. Barnaby and Jones [8] obtained a different result ....'
List: Number the references (numbers in square brackets) in the list in the order in which they appear in
the text.
Examples:
Reference to a journal publication:
[1] J. van der Geer, J.A.J. Hanraads, R.A. Lupton, The art of writing a scientific article, J. Sci. Commun. 163
(2010) 51–59. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.Sc.2010.00372.
Reference to a journal publication with an article number:
[2] Van der Geer, J., Hanraads, J.A.J., Lupton, R.A., 2018. The art of writing a scientific article. Heliyon.
19, e00205. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00205.
Reference to a book:
[3] W. Strunk Jr., E.B. White, The Elements of Style, fourth ed., Longman, New York, 2000.
Reference to a chapter in an edited book:
[4] G.R. Mettam, L.B. Adams, How to prepare an electronic version of your article, in: B.S. Jones, R.Z.
Smith (Eds.), Introduction to the Electronic Age, E-Publishing Inc., New York, 2009, pp. 281–304.
Reference to a website:
[5] Cancer Research UK, Cancer statistics reports for the UK.
http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/aboutcancer/statistics/cancerstatsreport/, 2003 (accessed 13 March
2003).
Reference to a dataset:
[6] [dataset] M. Oguro, S. Imahiro, S. Saito, T. Nakashizuka, Mortality data for Japanese oak wilt disease
and surrounding forest compositions, Mendeley Data, v1, 2015.
https://doi.org/10.17632/xwj98nb39r.1.]