Skip to main content

Public Plans

Public plans are plans created using the DMP Tool service and shared publicly by their owners. They are not vetted for quality, completeness, or adherence to funder guidelines.

Plans (1318)

  • Featured
NIH-Default DMSP

Impact of autism genetic liability on behavioral reinforcement and accumbal dopamine

Alexxai Kravitz, Washington University in St. Louis (wustl.edu)
  • Featured
NIH-Default DMSP

Development of Cutibacterium-specific immunoassays to identify true Cutibacterium acnes infections.

William Mccoy iv, Washington University in St. Louis (wustl.edu)
  • Featured
NIH-Default DMSP

Development of Cutibacterium-specific immunoassays to identify true Cutibacterium acnes infections.

William Mccoy iv, Washington University in St. Louis (wustl.edu)
  • Featured
NIH-Default DMSP

Effects of Placental Dysfunction on Brain Growth in Congenital Heart Disease

Cynthia Ortinau, Washington University in St. Louis (wustl.edu)
  • Featured
NIH-Default DMSP

Accumbal adaptations that contribute to weight regain after weight loss

Alexxai Kravitz, Washington University in St. Louis (wustl.edu)
  • Featured
DataWorks! Data Management and Sharing Plan Challenge

FAIR annotated dataset of stroke MRIs, CTs, and metadata

Andreia Faria, Johns Hopkins University (jhu.edu)
  • Featured
Arctic Data Center: NSF Polar Programs

Coastal Ocean Processes of North Greenland

Andreas Muenchow, University of Delaware (udel.edu)
  • Featured
Digital Curation Centre (português)

Compatibilização entre aços/concretos inovadores: Uma abordagem interdisciplinar e multiescala

Guilherme Koga, Universidade Federal de São Carlos (ufscar.br)
  • Featured
DataWorks! Data Management and Sharing Plan Challenge

Using natural language processing to determine predictors of healthy diet and physical activity behavior change in ovarian cancer survivors

Damian Yukio Romero Diaz, University of Arizona (arizona.edu)
  • Featured
Hakai Institute Data Management Plan

Hakai Institute Juvenile Salmon Program Time Series

Brett Johnson, Hakai Institute