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If “failed” means that the results are unusable or uninterpretable and you plan to re-try the experiment (for example: an in vitro cancer cell line-based assay was contaminated with yeast), then no, it generally is not worth sharing the raw data for these experiments.

I’m about to publish a manuscript, how do I reference my data in my “Data Availability Statement” in the publication?

If your data has been submitted to the NF Data Portal, you should first create a DOI for your project or folder that contains the data. Learn more about creating a DOI: https://help.synapse.org/docs/Digital-Object-Identifiers-(DOIs).1972405096.html.

Then, send us a message at nf-osi@sagebionetworks.org telling us you are ready to release your data. We’ll review the project to make sure the data are properly annotated and to ensure that the permissions settings are correct so that the community can access the data.

Finally, include the DOI in your data availability statement. For example, this statement links to the the Synodos NF2 project:

Info

“Raw data for this manuscript is available on the NF Data Portal (nf.synapse.org) and on Synapse at https://www.doi.org/10.7303/syn2343195.

How do I cite data in the NF Portal?

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