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Perhaps the next most common organization strategy is to place all materials collected as part of an experimental protocol or linguistic survey together in one resource. One such resource could include materials recorded in different times and locations and featuring different people and even different languages, but will be united by the common elicitation protocol or prompt. This organization is useful because these materials can be more easily described together–rather than repeating their descriptions across many resources–and future AILLA users will likely want to reuse all of these materials at once, for example if verifying or replicating your work.

Other possible organization strategies

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Depositors with large amounts of grammatical elicitation material may want to consider grouping materials together by linguistic phenomenon featured in the materials.

Organization by location

Depositors who collected data in numerous locations may want to consider creating resources for each of the locations.

Organization by participant

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You may want to make a resource containing all and only the materials referenced in a journal article, book chapter, or other publication. You may also choose to include a digital copy of the publication itself in the resource, in accordance with your agreements with the publisher.