100+ datasets found
  1. Top 2500 Kaggle Datasets

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Feb 16, 2024
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    Saket Kumar (2024). Top 2500 Kaggle Datasets [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.34740/kaggle/dsv/7637365
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    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Feb 16, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
    Authors
    Saket Kumar
    License

    http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/

    Description

    This dataset compiles the top 2500 datasets from Kaggle, encompassing a diverse range of topics and contributors. It provides insights into dataset creation, usability, popularity, and more, offering valuable information for researchers, analysts, and data enthusiasts.

    Research Analysis: Researchers can utilize this dataset to analyze trends in dataset creation, popularity, and usability scores across various categories.

    Contributor Insights: Kaggle contributors can explore the dataset to gain insights into factors influencing the success and engagement of their datasets, aiding in optimizing future submissions.

    Machine Learning Training: Data scientists and machine learning enthusiasts can use this dataset to train models for predicting dataset popularity or usability based on features such as creator, category, and file types.

    Market Analysis: Analysts can leverage the dataset to conduct market analysis, identifying emerging trends and popular topics within the data science community on Kaggle.

    Educational Purposes: Educators and students can use this dataset to teach and learn about data analysis, visualization, and interpretation within the context of real-world datasets and community-driven platforms like Kaggle.

    Column Definitions:

    Dataset Name: Name of the dataset. Created By: Creator(s) of the dataset. Last Updated in number of days: Time elapsed since last update. Usability Score: Score indicating the ease of use. Number of File: Quantity of files included. Type of file: Format of files (e.g., CSV, JSON). Size: Size of the dataset. Total Votes: Number of votes received. Category: Categorization of the dataset's subject matter.

  2. Global Country Information Dataset 2023

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jul 8, 2023
    + more versions
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    Nidula Elgiriyewithana ⚡ (2023). Global Country Information Dataset 2023 [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/nelgiriyewithana/countries-of-the-world-2023
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    zip(24063 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 8, 2023
    Authors
    Nidula Elgiriyewithana ⚡
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Description

    This comprehensive dataset provides a wealth of information about all countries worldwide, covering a wide range of indicators and attributes. It encompasses demographic statistics, economic indicators, environmental factors, healthcare metrics, education statistics, and much more. With every country represented, this dataset offers a complete global perspective on various aspects of nations, enabling in-depth analyses and cross-country comparisons.

    DOI

    Key Features

    • Country: Name of the country.
    • Density (P/Km2): Population density measured in persons per square kilometer.
    • Abbreviation: Abbreviation or code representing the country.
    • Agricultural Land (%): Percentage of land area used for agricultural purposes.
    • Land Area (Km2): Total land area of the country in square kilometers.
    • Armed Forces Size: Size of the armed forces in the country.
    • Birth Rate: Number of births per 1,000 population per year.
    • Calling Code: International calling code for the country.
    • Capital/Major City: Name of the capital or major city.
    • CO2 Emissions: Carbon dioxide emissions in tons.
    • CPI: Consumer Price Index, a measure of inflation and purchasing power.
    • CPI Change (%): Percentage change in the Consumer Price Index compared to the previous year.
    • Currency_Code: Currency code used in the country.
    • Fertility Rate: Average number of children born to a woman during her lifetime.
    • Forested Area (%): Percentage of land area covered by forests.
    • Gasoline_Price: Price of gasoline per liter in local currency.
    • GDP: Gross Domestic Product, the total value of goods and services produced in the country.
    • Gross Primary Education Enrollment (%): Gross enrollment ratio for primary education.
    • Gross Tertiary Education Enrollment (%): Gross enrollment ratio for tertiary education.
    • Infant Mortality: Number of deaths per 1,000 live births before reaching one year of age.
    • Largest City: Name of the country's largest city.
    • Life Expectancy: Average number of years a newborn is expected to live.
    • Maternal Mortality Ratio: Number of maternal deaths per 100,000 live births.
    • Minimum Wage: Minimum wage level in local currency.
    • Official Language: Official language(s) spoken in the country.
    • Out of Pocket Health Expenditure (%): Percentage of total health expenditure paid out-of-pocket by individuals.
    • Physicians per Thousand: Number of physicians per thousand people.
    • Population: Total population of the country.
    • Population: Labor Force Participation (%): Percentage of the population that is part of the labor force.
    • Tax Revenue (%): Tax revenue as a percentage of GDP.
    • Total Tax Rate: Overall tax burden as a percentage of commercial profits.
    • Unemployment Rate: Percentage of the labor force that is unemployed.
    • Urban Population: Percentage of the population living in urban areas.
    • Latitude: Latitude coordinate of the country's location.
    • Longitude: Longitude coordinate of the country's location.

    Potential Use Cases

    • Analyze population density and land area to study spatial distribution patterns.
    • Investigate the relationship between agricultural land and food security.
    • Examine carbon dioxide emissions and their impact on climate change.
    • Explore correlations between economic indicators such as GDP and various socio-economic factors.
    • Investigate educational enrollment rates and their implications for human capital development.
    • Analyze healthcare metrics such as infant mortality and life expectancy to assess overall well-being.
    • Study labor market dynamics through indicators such as labor force participation and unemployment rates.
    • Investigate the role of taxation and its impact on economic development.
    • Explore urbanization trends and their social and environmental consequences.

    Data Source: This dataset was compiled from multiple data sources

    If this was helpful, a vote is appreciated ❤️ Thank you 🙂

  3. d

    (HS 1) Creating and Sharing Interoperable and Reusable Large Spatial Sample...

    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Dec 5, 2021
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    Young-Don Choi; Jonathan Goodall; Lawrence Band; Iman Maghami; Laurence Lin; Linnea Saby; Zhiyu/Drew Li; Shaowen Wang; Chris Calloway; Martin Seul; Dan Ames; David Tarboton (2021). (HS 1) Creating and Sharing Interoperable and Reusable Large Spatial Sample Datasets Online for Open and Reproducible Seamless Hydrological Modeling: RHESSys Use Case [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256%3Ab7cb60df9a6507b7b52553a571cf34163b04738ff488cb35bd61902d42b38e49
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 5, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    Hydroshare
    Authors
    Young-Don Choi; Jonathan Goodall; Lawrence Band; Iman Maghami; Laurence Lin; Linnea Saby; Zhiyu/Drew Li; Shaowen Wang; Chris Calloway; Martin Seul; Dan Ames; David Tarboton
    Area covered
    Description

    Reproducibility is a fundamental requirement to advance science, and data management is the basic element for reproducibility. In hydrological modeling, there have been many efforts to improve the use of spatial data as model input; however, data sharing is file-level, the use of APIs are difficult, and data distribution service is fragile from fast-evolving technologies. Currently large datasets, GeoServer, and OPeNDAP are only used separately, limiting their benefits. The objective of this study is to create and share interoperable and reusable state scale large spatial datasets on GeoServer and OPeNDAP in HydroShare for open and reproducible seamless environmental modelling. We, first, present the procedures for creating and sharing large datasets. Then, we present application workflows with an example of the Regional Hydro-Ecologic Simulation System and evaluate the data consistency of large datasets. We apply three different scales of watershed in three different states to evaluate data consistency in modeling workflows.

  4. u

    Behance Community Art Data

    • cseweb.ucsd.edu
    json
    + more versions
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    UCSD CSE Research Project, Behance Community Art Data [Dataset]. https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~jmcauley/datasets.html
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    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset authored and provided by
    UCSD CSE Research Project
    Description

    Likes and image data from the community art website Behance. This is a small, anonymized, version of a larger proprietary dataset.

    Metadata includes

    • appreciates (likes)

    • timestamps

    • extracted image features

    Basic Statistics:

    • Users: 63,497

    • Items: 178,788

    • Appreciates (likes): 1,000,000

  5. m

    Dataset of development of business during the COVID-19 crisis

    • data.mendeley.com
    • narcis.nl
    Updated Nov 9, 2020
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    Tatiana N. Litvinova (2020). Dataset of development of business during the COVID-19 crisis [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/9vvrd34f8t.1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 9, 2020
    Authors
    Tatiana N. Litvinova
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    To create the dataset, the top 10 countries leading in the incidence of COVID-19 in the world were selected as of October 22, 2020 (on the eve of the second full of pandemics), which are presented in the Global 500 ranking for 2020: USA, India, Brazil, Russia, Spain, France and Mexico. For each of these countries, no more than 10 of the largest transnational corporations included in the Global 500 rating for 2020 and 2019 were selected separately. The arithmetic averages were calculated and the change (increase) in indicators such as profitability and profitability of enterprises, their ranking position (competitiveness), asset value and number of employees. The arithmetic mean values of these indicators for all countries of the sample were found, characterizing the situation in international entrepreneurship as a whole in the context of the COVID-19 crisis in 2020 on the eve of the second wave of the pandemic. The data is collected in a general Microsoft Excel table. Dataset is a unique database that combines COVID-19 statistics and entrepreneurship statistics. The dataset is flexible data that can be supplemented with data from other countries and newer statistics on the COVID-19 pandemic. Due to the fact that the data in the dataset are not ready-made numbers, but formulas, when adding and / or changing the values in the original table at the beginning of the dataset, most of the subsequent tables will be automatically recalculated and the graphs will be updated. This allows the dataset to be used not just as an array of data, but as an analytical tool for automating scientific research on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and crisis on international entrepreneurship. The dataset includes not only tabular data, but also charts that provide data visualization. The dataset contains not only actual, but also forecast data on morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 for the period of the second wave of the pandemic in 2020. The forecasts are presented in the form of a normal distribution of predicted values and the probability of their occurrence in practice. This allows for a broad scenario analysis of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and crisis on international entrepreneurship, substituting various predicted morbidity and mortality rates in risk assessment tables and obtaining automatically calculated consequences (changes) on the characteristics of international entrepreneurship. It is also possible to substitute the actual values identified in the process and following the results of the second wave of the pandemic to check the reliability of pre-made forecasts and conduct a plan-fact analysis. The dataset contains not only the numerical values of the initial and predicted values of the set of studied indicators, but also their qualitative interpretation, reflecting the presence and level of risks of a pandemic and COVID-19 crisis for international entrepreneurship.

  6. m

    Raw data outputs 1-18

    • bridges.monash.edu
    • researchdata.edu.au
    xlsx
    Updated May 30, 2023
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    Abbas Salavaty Hosein Abadi; Sara Alaei; Mirana Ramialison; Peter Currie (2023). Raw data outputs 1-18 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.26180/21259491.v1
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    xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 30, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Monash University
    Authors
    Abbas Salavaty Hosein Abadi; Sara Alaei; Mirana Ramialison; Peter Currie
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Raw data outputs 1-18 Raw data output 1. Differentially expressed genes in AML CSCs compared with GTCs as well as in TCGA AML cancer samples compared with normal ones. This data was generated based on the results of AML microarray and TCGA data analysis. Raw data output 2. Commonly and uniquely differentially expressed genes in AML CSC/GTC microarray and TCGA bulk RNA-seq datasets. This data was generated based on the results of AML microarray and TCGA data analysis. Raw data output 3. Common differentially expressed genes between training and test set samples the microarray dataset. This data was generated based on the results of AML microarray data analysis. Raw data output 4. Detailed information on the samples of the breast cancer microarray dataset (GSE52327) used in this study. Raw data output 5. Differentially expressed genes in breast CSCs compared with GTCs as well as in TCGA BRCA cancer samples compared with normal ones. Raw data output 6. Commonly and uniquely differentially expressed genes in breast cancer CSC/GTC microarray and TCGA BRCA bulk RNA-seq datasets. This data was generated based on the results of breast cancer microarray and TCGA BRCA data analysis. CSC, and GTC are abbreviations of cancer stem cell, and general tumor cell, respectively. Raw data output 7. Differential and common co-expression and protein-protein interaction of genes between CSC and GTC samples. This data was generated based on the results of AML microarray and STRING database-based protein-protein interaction data analysis. CSC, and GTC are abbreviations of cancer stem cell, and general tumor cell, respectively. Raw data output 8. Differentially expressed genes between AML dormant and active CSCs. This data was generated based on the results of AML scRNA-seq data analysis. Raw data output 9. Uniquely expressed genes in dormant or active AML CSCs. This data was generated based on the results of AML scRNA-seq data analysis. Raw data output 10. Intersections between the targeting transcription factors of AML key CSC genes and differentially expressed genes between AML CSCs vs GTCs and between dormant and active AML CSCs or the uniquely expressed genes in either class of CSCs. Raw data output 11. Targeting desirableness score of AML key CSC genes and their targeting transcription factors. These scores were generated based on an in-house scoring function described in the Methods section. Raw data output 12. CSC-specific targeting desirableness score of AML key CSC genes and their targeting transcription factors. These scores were generated based on an in-house scoring function described in the Methods section. Raw data output 13. The protein-protein interactions between AML key CSC genes with themselves and their targeting transcription factors. This data was generated based on the results of AML microarray and STRING database-based protein-protein interaction data analysis. Raw data output 14. The previously confirmed associations of genes having the highest targeting desirableness and CSC-specific targeting desirableness scores with AML or other cancers’ (stem) cells as well as hematopoietic stem cells. These data were generated based on a PubMed database-based literature mining. Raw data output 15. Drug score of available drugs and bioactive small molecules targeting AML key CSC genes and/or their targeting transcription factors. These scores were generated based on an in-house scoring function described in the Methods section. Raw data output 16. CSC-specific drug score of available drugs and bioactive small molecules targeting AML key CSC genes and/or their targeting transcription factors. These scores were generated based on an in-house scoring function described in the Methods section. Raw data output 17. Candidate drugs for experimental validation. These drugs were selected based on their respective (CSC-specific) drug scores. CSC is the abbreviation of cancer stem cell. Raw data output 18. Detailed information on the samples of the AML microarray dataset GSE30375 used in this study.

  7. u

    Steam Video Game and Bundle Data

    • cseweb.ucsd.edu
    json
    + more versions
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    UCSD CSE Research Project, Steam Video Game and Bundle Data [Dataset]. https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~jmcauley/datasets.html
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    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset authored and provided by
    UCSD CSE Research Project
    Description

    These datasets contain reviews from the Steam video game platform, and information about which games were bundled together.

    Metadata includes

    • reviews

    • purchases, plays, recommends (likes)

    • product bundles

    • pricing information

    Basic Statistics:

    • Reviews: 7,793,069

    • Users: 2,567,538

    • Items: 15,474

    • Bundles: 615

  8. N

    Excel, AL Age Group Population Dataset: A Complete Breakdown of Excel Age...

    • neilsberg.com
    csv, json
    Updated Jul 24, 2024
    + more versions
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    Neilsberg Research (2024). Excel, AL Age Group Population Dataset: A Complete Breakdown of Excel Age Demographics from 0 to 85 Years and Over, Distributed Across 18 Age Groups // 2024 Edition [Dataset]. https://www.neilsberg.com/research/datasets/aa8c95e0-4983-11ef-ae5d-3860777c1fe6/
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    csv, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 24, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Neilsberg Research
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Alabama, Excel
    Variables measured
    Population Under 5 Years, Population over 85 years, Population Between 5 and 9 years, Population Between 10 and 14 years, Population Between 15 and 19 years, Population Between 20 and 24 years, Population Between 25 and 29 years, Population Between 30 and 34 years, Population Between 35 and 39 years, Population Between 40 and 44 years, and 9 more
    Measurement technique
    The data presented in this dataset is derived from the latest U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 2018-2022 5-Year Estimates. To measure the two variables, namely (a) population and (b) population as a percentage of the total population, we initially analyzed and categorized the data for each of the age groups. For age groups we divided it into roughly a 5 year bucket for ages between 0 and 85. For over 85, we aggregated data into a single group for all ages. For further information regarding these estimates, please feel free to reach out to us via email at research@neilsberg.com.
    Dataset funded by
    Neilsberg Research
    Description
    About this dataset

    Context

    The dataset tabulates the Excel population distribution across 18 age groups. It lists the population in each age group along with the percentage population relative of the total population for Excel. The dataset can be utilized to understand the population distribution of Excel by age. For example, using this dataset, we can identify the largest age group in Excel.

    Key observations

    The largest age group in Excel, AL was for the group of age 45 to 49 years years with a population of 74 (15.64%), according to the ACS 2018-2022 5-Year Estimates. At the same time, the smallest age group in Excel, AL was the 85 years and over years with a population of 2 (0.42%). Source: U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 2018-2022 5-Year Estimates

    Content

    When available, the data consists of estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 2018-2022 5-Year Estimates

    Age groups:

    • Under 5 years
    • 5 to 9 years
    • 10 to 14 years
    • 15 to 19 years
    • 20 to 24 years
    • 25 to 29 years
    • 30 to 34 years
    • 35 to 39 years
    • 40 to 44 years
    • 45 to 49 years
    • 50 to 54 years
    • 55 to 59 years
    • 60 to 64 years
    • 65 to 69 years
    • 70 to 74 years
    • 75 to 79 years
    • 80 to 84 years
    • 85 years and over

    Variables / Data Columns

    • Age Group: This column displays the age group in consideration
    • Population: The population for the specific age group in the Excel is shown in this column.
    • % of Total Population: This column displays the population of each age group as a proportion of Excel total population. Please note that the sum of all percentages may not equal one due to rounding of values.

    Good to know

    Margin of Error

    Data in the dataset are based on the estimates and are subject to sampling variability and thus a margin of error. Neilsberg Research recommends using caution when presening these estimates in your research.

    Custom data

    If you do need custom data for any of your research project, report or presentation, you can contact our research staff at research@neilsberg.com for a feasibility of a custom tabulation on a fee-for-service basis.

    Inspiration

    Neilsberg Research Team curates, analyze and publishes demographics and economic data from a variety of public and proprietary sources, each of which often includes multiple surveys and programs. The large majority of Neilsberg Research aggregated datasets and insights is made available for free download at https://www.neilsberg.com/research/.

    Recommended for further research

    This dataset is a part of the main dataset for Excel Population by Age. You can refer the same here

  9. u

    PDMX

    • cseweb.ucsd.edu
    json
    + more versions
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    UCSD CSE Research Project, PDMX [Dataset]. https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~jmcauley/datasets.html
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    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset authored and provided by
    UCSD CSE Research Project
    Description

    We introduce PDMX: a Public Domain MusicXML dataset for symbolic music processing, including over 250k musical scores in MusicXML format. PDMX is the largest publicly available, copyright-free MusicXML dataset in existence. PDMX includes genre, tag, description, and popularity metadata for every file.

  10. u

    Amazon Question and Answer Data

    • cseweb.ucsd.edu
    json
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    UCSD CSE Research Project, Amazon Question and Answer Data [Dataset]. https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~jmcauley/datasets.html
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    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset authored and provided by
    UCSD CSE Research Project
    Description

    These datasets contain 1.48 million question and answer pairs about products from Amazon.

    Metadata includes

    • question and answer text

    • is the question binary (yes/no), and if so does it have a yes/no answer?

    • timestamps

    • product ID (to reference the review dataset)

    Basic Statistics:

    • Questions: 1.48 million

    • Answers: 4,019,744

    • Labeled yes/no questions: 309,419

    • Number of unique products with questions: 191,185

  11. Data from: Code4ML: a Large-scale Dataset of annotated Machine Learning Code...

    • zenodo.org
    csv
    Updated Sep 15, 2023
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    Anonymous authors; Anonymous authors (2023). Code4ML: a Large-scale Dataset of annotated Machine Learning Code [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6607065
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    csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 15, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Anonymous authors; Anonymous authors
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    We present Code4ML: a Large-scale Dataset of annotated Machine Learning Code, a corpus of Python code snippets, competition summaries, and data descriptions from Kaggle.

    The data is organized in a table structure. Code4ML includes several main objects: competitions information, raw code blocks collected form Kaggle and manually marked up snippets. Each table has a .csv format.

    Each competition has the text description and metadata, reflecting competition and used dataset characteristics as well as evaluation metrics (competitions.csv). The corresponding datasets can be loaded using Kaggle API and data sources.

    The code blocks themselves and their metadata are collected to the data frames concerning the publishing year of the initial kernels. The current version of the corpus includes two code blocks files: snippets from kernels up to the 2020 year (сode_blocks_upto_20.csv) and those from the 2021 year (сode_blocks_21.csv) with corresponding metadata. The corpus consists of 2 743 615 ML code blocks collected from 107 524 Jupyter notebooks.

    Marked up code blocks have the following metadata: anonymized id, the format of the used data (for example, table or audio), the id of the semantic type, a flag for the code errors, the estimated relevance to the semantic class (from 1 to 5), the id of the parent notebook, and the name of the competition. The current version of the corpus has ~12 000 labeled snippets (markup_data_20220415.csv).

    As marked up code blocks data contains the numeric id of the code block semantic type, we also provide a mapping from this number to semantic type and subclass (actual_graph_2022-06-01.csv).

    The dataset can help solve various problems, including code synthesis from a prompt in natural language, code autocompletion, and semantic code classification.

  12. w

    Data Use in Academia Dataset

    • datacatalog.worldbank.org
    csv, utf-8
    Updated Nov 27, 2023
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    Semantic Scholar Open Research Corpus (S2ORC) (2023). Data Use in Academia Dataset [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/search/dataset/0065200/data_use_in_academia_dataset
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    utf-8, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 27, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Semantic Scholar Open Research Corpus (S2ORC)
    Brian William Stacy
    License

    https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/public-licenses?fragment=cchttps://datacatalog.worldbank.org/public-licenses?fragment=cc

    Description

    This dataset contains metadata (title, abstract, date of publication, field, etc) for around 1 million academic articles. Each record contains additional information on the country of study and whether the article makes use of data. Machine learning tools were used to classify the country of study and data use.


    Our data source of academic articles is the Semantic Scholar Open Research Corpus (S2ORC) (Lo et al. 2020). The corpus contains more than 130 million English language academic papers across multiple disciplines. The papers included in the Semantic Scholar corpus are gathered directly from publishers, from open archives such as arXiv or PubMed, and crawled from the internet.


    We placed some restrictions on the articles to make them usable and relevant for our purposes. First, only articles with an abstract and parsed PDF or latex file are included in the analysis. The full text of the abstract is necessary to classify the country of study and whether the article uses data. The parsed PDF and latex file are important for extracting important information like the date of publication and field of study. This restriction eliminated a large number of articles in the original corpus. Around 30 million articles remain after keeping only articles with a parsable (i.e., suitable for digital processing) PDF, and around 26% of those 30 million are eliminated when removing articles without an abstract. Second, only articles from the year 2000 to 2020 were considered. This restriction eliminated an additional 9% of the remaining articles. Finally, articles from the following fields of study were excluded, as we aim to focus on fields that are likely to use data produced by countries’ national statistical system: Biology, Chemistry, Engineering, Physics, Materials Science, Environmental Science, Geology, History, Philosophy, Math, Computer Science, and Art. Fields that are included are: Economics, Political Science, Business, Sociology, Medicine, and Psychology. This third restriction eliminated around 34% of the remaining articles. From an initial corpus of 136 million articles, this resulted in a final corpus of around 10 million articles.


    Due to the intensive computer resources required, a set of 1,037,748 articles were randomly selected from the 10 million articles in our restricted corpus as a convenience sample.


    The empirical approach employed in this project utilizes text mining with Natural Language Processing (NLP). The goal of NLP is to extract structured information from raw, unstructured text. In this project, NLP is used to extract the country of study and whether the paper makes use of data. We will discuss each of these in turn.


    To determine the country or countries of study in each academic article, two approaches are employed based on information found in the title, abstract, or topic fields. The first approach uses regular expression searches based on the presence of ISO3166 country names. A defined set of country names is compiled, and the presence of these names is checked in the relevant fields. This approach is transparent, widely used in social science research, and easily extended to other languages. However, there is a potential for exclusion errors if a country’s name is spelled non-standardly.


    The second approach is based on Named Entity Recognition (NER), which uses machine learning to identify objects from text, utilizing the spaCy Python library. The Named Entity Recognition algorithm splits text into named entities, and NER is used in this project to identify countries of study in the academic articles. SpaCy supports multiple languages and has been trained on multiple spellings of countries, overcoming some of the limitations of the regular expression approach. If a country is identified by either the regular expression search or NER, it is linked to the article. Note that one article can be linked to more than one country.


    The second task is to classify whether the paper uses data. A supervised machine learning approach is employed, where 3500 publications were first randomly selected and manually labeled by human raters using the Mechanical Turk service (Paszke et al. 2019).[1] To make sure the human raters had a similar and appropriate definition of data in mind, they were given the following instructions before seeing their first paper:


    Each of these documents is an academic article. The goal of this study is to measure whether a specific academic article is using data and from which country the data came.

    There are two classification tasks in this exercise:

    1. identifying whether an academic article is using data from any country

    2. Identifying from which country that data came.

    For task 1, we are looking specifically at the use of data. Data is any information that has been collected, observed, generated or created to produce research findings. As an example, a study that reports findings or analysis using a survey data, uses data. Some clues to indicate that a study does use data includes whether a survey or census is described, a statistical model estimated, or a table or means or summary statistics is reported.

    After an article is classified as using data, please note the type of data used. The options are population or business census, survey data, administrative data, geospatial data, private sector data, and other data. If no data is used, then mark "Not applicable". In cases where multiple data types are used, please click multiple options.[2]

    For task 2, we are looking at the country or countries that are studied in the article. In some cases, no country may be applicable. For instance, if the research is theoretical and has no specific country application. In some cases, the research article may involve multiple countries. In these cases, select all countries that are discussed in the paper.

    We expect between 10 and 35 percent of all articles to use data.


    The median amount of time that a worker spent on an article, measured as the time between when the article was accepted to be classified by the worker and when the classification was submitted was 25.4 minutes. If human raters were exclusively used rather than machine learning tools, then the corpus of 1,037,748 articles examined in this study would take around 50 years of human work time to review at a cost of $3,113,244, which assumes a cost of $3 per article as was paid to MTurk workers.


    A model is next trained on the 3,500 labelled articles. We use a distilled version of the BERT (bidirectional Encoder Representations for transformers) model to encode raw text into a numeric format suitable for predictions (Devlin et al. (2018)). BERT is pre-trained on a large corpus comprising the Toronto Book Corpus and Wikipedia. The distilled version (DistilBERT) is a compressed model that is 60% the size of BERT and retains 97% of the language understanding capabilities and is 60% faster (Sanh, Debut, Chaumond, Wolf 2019). We use PyTorch to produce a model to classify articles based on the labeled data. Of the 3,500 articles that were hand coded by the MTurk workers, 900 are fed to the machine learning model. 900 articles were selected because of computational limitations in training the NLP model. A classification of “uses data” was assigned if the model predicted an article used data with at least 90% confidence.


    The performance of the models classifying articles to countries and as using data or not can be compared to the classification by the human raters. We consider the human raters as giving us the ground truth. This may underestimate the model performance if the workers at times got the allocation wrong in a way that would not apply to the model. For instance, a human rater could mistake the Republic of Korea for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. If both humans and the model perform the same kind of errors, then the performance reported here will be overestimated.


    The model was able to predict whether an article made use of data with 87% accuracy evaluated on the set of articles held out of the model training. The correlation between the number of articles written about each country using data estimated under the two approaches is given in the figure below. The number of articles represents an aggregate total of

  13. json_large_sample

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Dec 1, 2023
    + more versions
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    Noura Aly (2023). json_large_sample [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/nouraaly/json-large-sample
    Explore at:
    zip(55508 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 1, 2023
    Authors
    Noura Aly
    License

    Apache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Dataset

    This dataset was created by Noura Aly

    Released under Apache 2.0

    Contents

  14. d

    Current Population Survey (CPS)

    • search.dataone.org
    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    Updated Nov 21, 2023
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    Damico, Anthony (2023). Current Population Survey (CPS) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/AK4FDD
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 21, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Damico, Anthony
    Description

    analyze the current population survey (cps) annual social and economic supplement (asec) with r the annual march cps-asec has been supplying the statistics for the census bureau's report on income, poverty, and health insurance coverage since 1948. wow. the us census bureau and the bureau of labor statistics ( bls) tag-team on this one. until the american community survey (acs) hit the scene in the early aughts (2000s), the current population survey had the largest sample size of all the annual general demographic data sets outside of the decennial census - about two hundred thousand respondents. this provides enough sample to conduct state- and a few large metro area-level analyses. your sample size will vanish if you start investigating subgroups b y state - consider pooling multiple years. county-level is a no-no. despite the american community survey's larger size, the cps-asec contains many more variables related to employment, sources of income, and insurance - and can be trended back to harry truman's presidency. aside from questions specifically asked about an annual experience (like income), many of the questions in this march data set should be t reated as point-in-time statistics. cps-asec generalizes to the united states non-institutional, non-active duty military population. the national bureau of economic research (nber) provides sas, spss, and stata importation scripts to create a rectangular file (rectangular data means only person-level records; household- and family-level information gets attached to each person). to import these files into r, the parse.SAScii function uses nber's sas code to determine how to import the fixed-width file, then RSQLite to put everything into a schnazzy database. you can try reading through the nber march 2012 sas importation code yourself, but it's a bit of a proc freak show. this new github repository contains three scripts: 2005-2012 asec - download all microdata.R down load the fixed-width file containing household, family, and person records import by separating this file into three tables, then merge 'em together at the person-level download the fixed-width file containing the person-level replicate weights merge the rectangular person-level file with the replicate weights, then store it in a sql database create a new variable - one - in the data table 2012 asec - analysis examples.R connect to the sql database created by the 'download all microdata' progr am create the complex sample survey object, using the replicate weights perform a boatload of analysis examples replicate census estimates - 2011.R connect to the sql database created by the 'download all microdata' program create the complex sample survey object, using the replicate weights match the sas output shown in the png file below 2011 asec replicate weight sas output.png statistic and standard error generated from the replicate-weighted example sas script contained in this census-provided person replicate weights usage instructions document. click here to view these three scripts for more detail about the current population survey - annual social and economic supplement (cps-asec), visit: the census bureau's current population survey page the bureau of labor statistics' current population survey page the current population survey's wikipedia article notes: interviews are conducted in march about experiences during the previous year. the file labeled 2012 includes information (income, work experience, health insurance) pertaining to 2011. when you use the current populat ion survey to talk about america, subract a year from the data file name. as of the 2010 file (the interview focusing on america during 2009), the cps-asec contains exciting new medical out-of-pocket spending variables most useful for supplemental (medical spending-adjusted) poverty research. confidential to sas, spss, stata, sudaan users: why are you still rubbing two sticks together after we've invented the butane lighter? time to transition to r. :D

  15. z

    Requirements data sets (user stories)

    • zenodo.org
    • data.mendeley.com
    txt
    Updated Jan 13, 2025
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    Fabiano Dalpiaz; Fabiano Dalpiaz (2025). Requirements data sets (user stories) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/7zbk8zsd8y.1
    Explore at:
    txtAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 13, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Mendeley Data
    Authors
    Fabiano Dalpiaz; Fabiano Dalpiaz
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    A collection of 22 data set of 50+ requirements each, expressed as user stories.

    The dataset has been created by gathering data from web sources and we are not aware of license agreements or intellectual property rights on the requirements / user stories. The curator took utmost diligence in minimizing the risks of copyright infringement by using non-recent data that is less likely to be critical, by sampling a subset of the original requirements collection, and by qualitatively analyzing the requirements. In case of copyright infringement, please contact the dataset curator (Fabiano Dalpiaz, f.dalpiaz@uu.nl) to discuss the possibility of removal of that dataset [see Zenodo's policies]

    The data sets have been originally used to conduct experiments about ambiguity detection with the REVV-Light tool: https://github.com/RELabUU/revv-light

    This collection has been originally published in Mendeley data: https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/7zbk8zsd8y/1

    Overview of the datasets [data and links added in December 2024]

    The following text provides a description of the datasets, including links to the systems and websites, when available. The datasets are organized by macro-category and then by identifier.

    Public administration and transparency

    g02-federalspending.txt (2018) originates from early data in the Federal Spending Transparency project, which pertain to the website that is used to share publicly the spending data for the U.S. government. The website was created because of the Digital Accountability and Transparency Act of 2014 (DATA Act). The specific dataset pertains a system called DAIMS or Data Broker, which stands for DATA Act Information Model Schema. The sample that was gathered refers to a sub-project related to allowing the government to act as a data broker, thereby providing data to third parties. The data for the Data Broker project is currently not available online, although the backend seems to be hosted in GitHub under a CC0 1.0 Universal license. Current and recent snapshots of federal spending related websites, including many more projects than the one described in the shared collection, can be found here.

    g03-loudoun.txt (2018) is a set of extracted requirements from a document, by the Loudoun County Virginia, that describes the to-be user stories and use cases about a system for land management readiness assessment called Loudoun County LandMARC. The source document can be found here and it is part of the Electronic Land Management System and EPlan Review Project - RFP RFQ issued in March 2018. More information about the overall LandMARC system and services can be found here.

    g04-recycling.txt(2017) concerns a web application where recycling and waste disposal facilities can be searched and located. The application operates through the visualization of a map that the user can interact with. The dataset has obtained from a GitHub website and it is at the basis of a students' project on web site design; the code is available (no license).

    g05-openspending.txt (2018) is about the OpenSpending project (www), a project of the Open Knowledge foundation which aims at transparency about how local governments spend money. At the time of the collection, the data was retrieved from a Trello board that is currently unavailable. The sample focuses on publishing, importing and editing datasets, and how the data should be presented. Currently, OpenSpending is managed via a GitHub repository which contains multiple sub-projects with unknown license.

    g11-nsf.txt (2018) refers to a collection of user stories referring to the NSF Site Redesign & Content Discovery project, which originates from a publicly accessible GitHub repository (GPL 2.0 license). In particular, the user stories refer to an early version of the NSF's website. The user stories can be found as closed Issues.

    (Research) data and meta-data management

    g08-frictionless.txt (2016) regards the Frictionless Data project, which offers an open source dataset for building data infrastructures, to be used by researchers, data scientists, and data engineers. Links to the many projects within the Frictionless Data project are on GitHub (with a mix of Unlicense and MIT license) and web. The specific set of user stories has been collected in 2016 by GitHub user @danfowler and are stored in a Trello board.

    g14-datahub.txt (2013) concerns the open source project DataHub, which is currently developed via a GitHub repository (the code has Apache License 2.0). DataHub is a data discovery platform which has been developed over multiple years. The specific data set is an initial set of user stories, which we can date back to 2013 thanks to a comment therein.

    g16-mis.txt (2015) is a collection of user stories that pertains a repository for researchers and archivists. The source of the dataset is a public Trello repository. Although the user stories do not have explicit links to projects, it can be inferred that the stories originate from some project related to the library of Duke University.

    g17-cask.txt (2016) refers to the Cask Data Application Platform (CDAP). CDAP is an open source application platform (GitHub, under Apache License 2.0) that can be used to develop applications within the Apache Hadoop ecosystem, an open-source framework which can be used for distributed processing of large datasets. The user stories are extracted from a document that includes requirements regarding dataset management for Cask 4.0, which includes the scenarios, user stories and a design for the implementation of these user stories. The raw data is available in the following environment.

    g18-neurohub.txt (2012) is concerned with the NeuroHub platform, a neuroscience data management, analysis and collaboration platform for researchers in neuroscience to collect, store, and share data with colleagues or with the research community. The user stories were collected at a time NeuroHub was still a research project sponsored by the UK Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC). For information about the research project from which the requirements were collected, see the following record.

    g22-rdadmp.txt (2018) is a collection of user stories from the Research Data Alliance's working group on DMP Common Standards. Their GitHub repository contains a collection of user stories that were created by asking the community to suggest functionality that should part of a website that manages data management plans. Each user story is stored as an issue on the GitHub's page.

    g23-archivesspace.txt (2012-2013) refers to ArchivesSpace: an open source, web application for managing archives information. The application is designed to support core functions in archives administration such as accessioning; description and arrangement of processed materials including analog, hybrid, and
    born digital content; management of authorities and rights; and reference service. The application supports collection management through collection management records, tracking of events, and a growing number of administrative reports. ArchivesSpace is open source and its

  16. Z

    Data from: An Open-set Recognition and Few-Shot Learning Dataset for Audio...

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • data.europa.eu
    Updated May 21, 2024
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    Javier Naranjo-Alcazar; Sergi Perez-Castanos; Pedro Zuccarello; Maximo Cobos (2024). An Open-set Recognition and Few-Shot Learning Dataset for Audio Event Classification in Domestic Environments [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_3689287
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    May 21, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Universitat de Valencia
    Visualfy
    Authors
    Javier Naranjo-Alcazar; Sergi Perez-Castanos; Pedro Zuccarello; Maximo Cobos
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The problem of training a deep neural network with a small set of positive samples is known as few-shot learning (FSL). It is widely known that traditional deep learning (DL) algorithms usually show very good performance when trained with large datasets. However, in many applications, it is not possible to obtain such a high number of samples. In the image domain, typical FSL applications are those related to face recognition. In the audio domain, music fraud or speaker recognition can be clearly benefited from FSL methods. This paper deals with the application of FSL to the detection of specific and intentional acoustic events given by different types of sound alarms, such as door bells or fire alarms, using a limited number of samples. These sounds typically occur in domestic environments where many events corresponding to a wide variety of sound classes take place. Therefore, the detection of such alarms in a practical scenario can be considered an open-set recognition (OSR) problem. To address the lack of a dedicated public dataset for audio FSL, researchers usually make modifications on other available datasets. This paper is aimed at providing the audio recognition community with a carefully annotated dataset for FSL and OSR comprised of 1360 clips from 34 classes divided into pattern sounds and unwanted sounds. To facilitate and promote research in this area, results with two baseline systems (one trained from scratch and another based on transfer learning), are presented.

  17. Sample Sales Data (5 million transactions)

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jul 8, 2021
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    Chris Chua (2021). Sample Sales Data (5 million transactions) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/weitat/sample-sales
    Explore at:
    zip(201186399 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 8, 2021
    Authors
    Chris Chua
    Description

    Dataset

    This dataset was created by Chris Chua

    Contents

  18. MNIST dataset for Outliers Detection - [ MNIST4OD ]

    • figshare.com
    application/gzip
    Updated May 17, 2024
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    Giovanni Stilo; Bardh Prenkaj (2024). MNIST dataset for Outliers Detection - [ MNIST4OD ] [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.9954986.v2
    Explore at:
    application/gzipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 17, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Figsharehttp://figshare.com/
    figshare
    Authors
    Giovanni Stilo; Bardh Prenkaj
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Here we present a dataset, MNIST4OD, of large size (number of dimensions and number of instances) suitable for Outliers Detection task.The dataset is based on the famous MNIST dataset (http://yann.lecun.com/exdb/mnist/).We build MNIST4OD in the following way:To distinguish between outliers and inliers, we choose the images belonging to a digit as inliers (e.g. digit 1) and we sample with uniform probability on the remaining images as outliers such as their number is equal to 10% of that of inliers. We repeat this dataset generation process for all digits. For implementation simplicity we then flatten the images (28 X 28) into vectors.Each file MNIST_x.csv.gz contains the corresponding dataset where the inlier class is equal to x.The data contains one instance (vector) in each line where the last column represents the outlier label (yes/no) of the data point. The data contains also a column which indicates the original image class (0-9).See the following numbers for a complete list of the statistics of each datasets ( Name | Instances | Dimensions | Number of Outliers in % ):MNIST_0 | 7594 | 784 | 10MNIST_1 | 8665 | 784 | 10MNIST_2 | 7689 | 784 | 10MNIST_3 | 7856 | 784 | 10MNIST_4 | 7507 | 784 | 10MNIST_5 | 6945 | 784 | 10MNIST_6 | 7564 | 784 | 10MNIST_7 | 8023 | 784 | 10MNIST_8 | 7508 | 784 | 10MNIST_9 | 7654 | 784 | 10

  19. B

    Data Cleaning Sample

    • borealisdata.ca
    • dataone.org
    Updated Jul 13, 2023
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    Rong Luo (2023). Data Cleaning Sample [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/ZCN177
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jul 13, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Borealis
    Authors
    Rong Luo
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Sample data for exercises in Further Adventures in Data Cleaning.

  20. h

    Incube-large-math-dataset

    • huggingface.co
    Updated Oct 14, 2025
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    evanto (2025). Incube-large-math-dataset [Dataset]. https://huggingface.co/datasets/evanto/Incube-large-math-dataset
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 14, 2025
    Authors
    evanto
    Description

    InCube - Large Math Dataset

      Overview
    

    This dataset contains over 175 million mathematical questions and their answers, designed for training and evaluating machine learning models on mathematical reasoning tasks. It spans 17 different types of mathematical operations with varying levels of complexity.

      Dataset Details
    
    
    
    
    
      Size
    

    Total examples: ~175 million File format: JSON Examples per operation: ~10 million (with some variation due to mathematical… See the full description on the dataset page: https://huggingface.co/datasets/evanto/Incube-large-math-dataset.

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Saket Kumar (2024). Top 2500 Kaggle Datasets [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.34740/kaggle/dsv/7637365
Organization logo

Top 2500 Kaggle Datasets

Explore, Analyze, Innovate: The Best of Kaggle's Data at Your Fingertips

Explore at:
CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
Dataset updated
Feb 16, 2024
Dataset provided by
Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
Authors
Saket Kumar
License

http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/

Description

This dataset compiles the top 2500 datasets from Kaggle, encompassing a diverse range of topics and contributors. It provides insights into dataset creation, usability, popularity, and more, offering valuable information for researchers, analysts, and data enthusiasts.

Research Analysis: Researchers can utilize this dataset to analyze trends in dataset creation, popularity, and usability scores across various categories.

Contributor Insights: Kaggle contributors can explore the dataset to gain insights into factors influencing the success and engagement of their datasets, aiding in optimizing future submissions.

Machine Learning Training: Data scientists and machine learning enthusiasts can use this dataset to train models for predicting dataset popularity or usability based on features such as creator, category, and file types.

Market Analysis: Analysts can leverage the dataset to conduct market analysis, identifying emerging trends and popular topics within the data science community on Kaggle.

Educational Purposes: Educators and students can use this dataset to teach and learn about data analysis, visualization, and interpretation within the context of real-world datasets and community-driven platforms like Kaggle.

Column Definitions:

Dataset Name: Name of the dataset. Created By: Creator(s) of the dataset. Last Updated in number of days: Time elapsed since last update. Usability Score: Score indicating the ease of use. Number of File: Quantity of files included. Type of file: Format of files (e.g., CSV, JSON). Size: Size of the dataset. Total Votes: Number of votes received. Category: Categorization of the dataset's subject matter.

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