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Funder and publisher requirements for data management, curation and sharing have prompted many universities to provide data services to help their researchers address such concerns. At Johns Hopkins University (JHU), these services, provided by the Data Management Services (DMS) group, have matured into stable offerings in the areas of data management planning, education, and data archiving. Although the focus of these services at JHU and other universities has been on data, the software produced during the research process has not received as much attention. Because software is part of scholarship (along with publications and data), the increasing importance given to addressing research transparency, reproducibility, and reuse by funders, publishers, and research communities means that there is a nascent gap in software-specific service provision that merits investigation. JHU DMS has begun investigating this gap by developing various conceptual approaches related to incorporating software into existing data services workflows. This lightning talk will outline an experimental software archiving service along with the difficulties encountered so far in using existing data management workflows and platforms to capture and curate research software
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