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License information was derived automatically
The zip-file contains the data and code accompanying the paper 'Effects of nutrient enrichment on freshwater macrophyte and invertebrate abundance: A meta-analysis'. Together, these files should allow for the replication of the results.
The 'raw_data' folder contains the 'MA_database.csv' file, which contains the extracted data from all primary studies that are used in the analysis. Furthermore, this folder contains the file 'MA_database_description.txt', which gives a description of each data column in the database.
The 'derived_data' folder contains the files that are produced by the R-scripts in this study and used for data analysis. The 'MA_database_processed.csv' and 'MA_database_processed.RData' files contain the converted raw database that is suitable for analysis. The 'DB_IA_subsets.RData' file contains the 'Individual Abundance' (IA) data subsets based on taxonomic group (invertebrates/macrophytes) and inclusion criteria. The 'DB_IA_VCV_matrices.RData' contains for all IA data subsets the variance-covariance (VCV) matrices. The 'DB_AM_subsets.RData' file contains the 'Total Abundance' (TA) and 'Mean Abundance' (MA) data subsets based on taxonomic group (invertebrates/macrophytes) and inclusion criteria.
The 'output_data' folder contains maps with the output data for each data subset (i.e. for each metric, taxonomic group and set of inclusion criteria). For each data subset, the map contains random effects selection results ('Results1_REsel_
The 'scripts' folder contains all R-scripts that we used for this study. The 'PrepareData.R' script takes the database as input and adjusts the file so that it can be used for data analysis. The 'PrepareDataIA.R' and 'PrepareDataAM.R' scripts make subsets of the data and prepare the data for the meta-regression analysis and mixed-effects regression analysis, respectively. The regression analyses are performed in the 'SelectModelsIA.R' and 'SelectModelsAM.R' scripts to calculate the regression model results for the IA metric and MA/TA metrics, respectively. These scripts require the 'RandomAndFixedEffects.R' script, containing the random and fixed effects parameter combinations, as well as the 'Functions.R' script. The 'CreateMap.R' script creates a global map with the location of all studies included in the analysis (figure 1 in the paper). The 'CreateForestPlots.R' script creates plots showing the IA data distribution for both taxonomic groups (figure 2 in the paper). The 'CreateHeatMaps.R' script creates heat maps for all metrics and taxonomic groups (figure 3 in the paper, figures S11.1 and S11.2 in the appendix). The 'CalculateStatistics.R' script calculates the descriptive statistics that are reported throughout the paper, and creates the figures that describe the dataset characteristics (figures S3.1 to S3.5 in the appendix). The 'CreateFunnelPlots.R' script creates the funnel plots for both taxonomic groups (figures S6.1 and S6.2 in the appendix) and performs Egger's tests. The 'CreateControlGraphs.R' script creates graphs showing the dependency of the nutrient response to control concentrations for all metrics and taxonomic groups (figures S10.1 and S10.2 in the appendix).
The 'figures' folder contains all figures that are included in this study.
https://catalogue.elra.info/static/from_media/metashare/licences/ELRA_END_USER.pdfhttps://catalogue.elra.info/static/from_media/metashare/licences/ELRA_END_USER.pdf
https://catalogue.elra.info/static/from_media/metashare/licences/ELRA_VAR.pdfhttps://catalogue.elra.info/static/from_media/metashare/licences/ELRA_VAR.pdf
The Dutch CELEX data is derived from R.H. Baayen, R. Piepenbrock & L. Gulikers, The CELEX Lexical Database (CD-ROM), Release 2, Dutch Version 3.1, Linguistic Data Consortium, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, 1995.Apart from orthographic features, the CELEX database comprises representations of the phonological, morphological, syntactic and frequency properties of lemmata. For the Dutch data, frequencies have been disambiguated on the basis of the 42.4m Dutch Instituut voor Nederlandse Lexicologie text corpora.To make for greater compatibility with other operating systems, the databases have not been tailored to fit any particular database management program. Instead, the information is presented in a series of plain ASCII files, which can be queried with tools such as AWK and ICON. Unique identity numbers allow the linking of information from different files.This database can be divided into different subsets:· orthography: with or without diacritics, with or without word division positions, alternative spellings, number of letters/syllables;· phonology: phonetic transcriptions with syllable boundaries or primary and secondary stress markers, consonant-vowel patterns, number of phonemes/syllables, alternative pronunciations, frequency per phonetic syllable within words;· morphology: division into stems and affixes, flat or hierarchical representations, stems and their inflections;· syntax: word class, subcategorisations per word class;· frequency of the entries: disambiguated for homographic lemmata.
The merra2ools
dataset has been assembled through the following steps:
The MERRA-2 collections tavg1_2d_flx_Nx (Surface Flux Diagnostics), tavg1_2d_rad_Nx (Radiation Diagnostics), and tavg1_2d_slv_Nx (Single-level atmospheric state variables) downloaded from NASA Goddard Earth Sciences (GES) Data and Information Services Center (DISC) (https://disc.gsfc.nasa.gov/datasets?project=MERRA-2) using GNU Wget network utility (https://disc.gsfc.nasa.gov/data-access). Every of the three collections consist of daily netCDF-4 files with 3-dimensional variables (lon x lat x hour).
The following variables obtained from the netCDF-4 files and merged into long-term time-series:
Northward (V) and Eastward (U) wind at 10 and 50 meters (V10M, V50M, U10M, U50M, respectively), and 10-meter air temperature (T10M) from the tavg1_2d_slv_Nx collection;
Incident shortwave land (SWGDN) and Surface albedo (ALBEDO) fro...
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License information was derived automatically
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) is a comprehensive survey of the northern sky. This dataset contains a subset of this survey, of 100077 objects classified as galaxies, it includes a CSV file with a collection of information and a set of files for each object, namely JPG image files, FITS and spectra data. This dataset is used to train and explore the astromlp-models collection of deep learning models for galaxies characterisation.
The dataset includes a CSV data file where each row is an object from the SDSS database, and with the following columns (note that some data may not be available for all objects):
Besides the CSV file a set of directories are included in the dataset, in each directory you'll find a list of files named after the objid column from the CSV file, with the corresponding data, the following directories tree is available:
sdss-gs/
├── data.csv
├── fits
├── img
├── spectra
└── ssel
Where, each directory contains:
Changelog
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This is a clean subset of the data that was created by the OpenML R Bot that executed benchmark experiments on binary classification task of the OpenML100 benchmarking suite with six R algorithms: glmnet, rpart, kknn, svm, ranger and xgboost. The hyperparameters of these algorithms were drawn randomly. In total it contains more than 2.6 million benchmark experiments and can be used by other researchers. The subset was created by taking 500000 results of each learner (except of kknn for which only 1140 results are available). The csv-file for each learner is a table that for each benchmark experiment has a row that contains: OpenML-Data ID, hyperparameter values, performance measures (AUC, accuracy, brier score), runtime, scimark (runtime reference of the machine), and some meta features of the dataset.OpenMLRandomBotResults.RData (format for R) contains all data in seperate tables for the results, the hyperparameters, the meta features, the runtime, the scimark results and reference results.
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
This index was compiled by Miss Mollie Bentley from various records she has used relating to the police. These include: Almanac listings, Colonial Secretary's Office Records, Police Gazettes, various police department occurrence books and letter books, police journals, government gazettes, estimates, York police records etc.\r \r Entry is by name of policeman. Information given varies but is usually about appointments, promotions, retirements, transfers etc.\r \r The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed.\r \r The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card.\r \r The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including:\r \r * Some cards are missing\r * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information\r * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not\r * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card\r * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced.\r It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians.
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 (CC BY-NC 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Proposing relevant catalyst descriptors that can relate the information on a catalyst’s composition to its actual performance is an ongoing area in catalyst informatics, as it is a necessary step to improve our understanding on the target reactions. Herein, a small descriptor-engineered data set containing 3289 descriptor variables and the performance of 200 catalysts for the oxidative coupling of methane (OCM) is analyzed, and a descriptor search algorithm based on the workflow of the Basin-hopping optimization methodology is proposed to select the descriptors that better fit a predictive model. The algorithm, which can be considered wrapper in nature, consists of the successive generation of random-based modifications to the descriptor subset used in a regression model and adopting them depending on their effect on the model’s score. The results are presented after being tested on linear and Support Vector Regression models with average cross-validation r2 scores of 0.8268 and 0.6875, respectively.
Data from the IFLS, merged across waves, most outcomes taken from wave 5. Includes birth order, family structure, Big 5 Personality, intelligence tests, and risk lotteries
This table contains variable names, labels, and number of missing values. See the complete codebook for more.
[truncated]
This dataset was automatically described using the codebook R package (version 0.8.2).
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License information was derived automatically
Remarks on kernels and bandwidth selection for semiparametric density product estimator method. (DOC)
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Grades (G1–G3) assigned to a selection of ten breast tumour samples by 732 pathologists, with simulated results and parameter estimates from the Bayesian latent trait model.
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
1859 York district Census. Entry is by name of person, Place of occupation, age, religion, occupation, literacy, arrival ship and date. Details of marriage, wife and children and employer are given.\r \r The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed.\r \r The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including:\r \r * Some cards are missing\r * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information\r * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not\r * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card\r * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced.\r It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Details of the 10 additional datasets (the top five datasets are on species-habitat interactions; the second five datasets are wider biological datasets).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Primary study population and key variables in total and subset by region.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Vegetation variables in the case study dataset.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
All methods r with respect to certain subsets.
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Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The zip-file contains the data and code accompanying the paper 'Effects of nutrient enrichment on freshwater macrophyte and invertebrate abundance: A meta-analysis'. Together, these files should allow for the replication of the results.
The 'raw_data' folder contains the 'MA_database.csv' file, which contains the extracted data from all primary studies that are used in the analysis. Furthermore, this folder contains the file 'MA_database_description.txt', which gives a description of each data column in the database.
The 'derived_data' folder contains the files that are produced by the R-scripts in this study and used for data analysis. The 'MA_database_processed.csv' and 'MA_database_processed.RData' files contain the converted raw database that is suitable for analysis. The 'DB_IA_subsets.RData' file contains the 'Individual Abundance' (IA) data subsets based on taxonomic group (invertebrates/macrophytes) and inclusion criteria. The 'DB_IA_VCV_matrices.RData' contains for all IA data subsets the variance-covariance (VCV) matrices. The 'DB_AM_subsets.RData' file contains the 'Total Abundance' (TA) and 'Mean Abundance' (MA) data subsets based on taxonomic group (invertebrates/macrophytes) and inclusion criteria.
The 'output_data' folder contains maps with the output data for each data subset (i.e. for each metric, taxonomic group and set of inclusion criteria). For each data subset, the map contains random effects selection results ('Results1_REsel_
The 'scripts' folder contains all R-scripts that we used for this study. The 'PrepareData.R' script takes the database as input and adjusts the file so that it can be used for data analysis. The 'PrepareDataIA.R' and 'PrepareDataAM.R' scripts make subsets of the data and prepare the data for the meta-regression analysis and mixed-effects regression analysis, respectively. The regression analyses are performed in the 'SelectModelsIA.R' and 'SelectModelsAM.R' scripts to calculate the regression model results for the IA metric and MA/TA metrics, respectively. These scripts require the 'RandomAndFixedEffects.R' script, containing the random and fixed effects parameter combinations, as well as the 'Functions.R' script. The 'CreateMap.R' script creates a global map with the location of all studies included in the analysis (figure 1 in the paper). The 'CreateForestPlots.R' script creates plots showing the IA data distribution for both taxonomic groups (figure 2 in the paper). The 'CreateHeatMaps.R' script creates heat maps for all metrics and taxonomic groups (figure 3 in the paper, figures S11.1 and S11.2 in the appendix). The 'CalculateStatistics.R' script calculates the descriptive statistics that are reported throughout the paper, and creates the figures that describe the dataset characteristics (figures S3.1 to S3.5 in the appendix). The 'CreateFunnelPlots.R' script creates the funnel plots for both taxonomic groups (figures S6.1 and S6.2 in the appendix) and performs Egger's tests. The 'CreateControlGraphs.R' script creates graphs showing the dependency of the nutrient response to control concentrations for all metrics and taxonomic groups (figures S10.1 and S10.2 in the appendix).
The 'figures' folder contains all figures that are included in this study.