Welcome to the AMA 3150 library portal. This portal provides quick links to the resources you need to succeed in your course. Whether you are online or on-Grounds, UVA Library services and support are available to all students.
These are our "best bets" data sources available to you through UVA Library. They cover a broad range of topics.
These are great places to look for a dataset that is clean, readily downloadable, and easy to import into your statistical software. If you are a little flexible about your topic, looking here first will save you some effort that you might spend looking for data, cleaning data, etc.
This is our #1 strategy for how to start looking for data when you have no idea where to start looking!
Every empirical academic paper is going to have a methods section. Look for articles similar to a topic you are interested in, and check the methods section. What data are they using?
Here is a real-life example. A group of students asked Jenn about Major League Baseball injuries, and she found this: Injury Rates in Major League Baseball During the 2020 COVID-19 Season. The very first line of the Methods section states, “Data from the 2018-2020 MLB transaction reports were extracted online at mlb.com/transactions.”
Also see News sources’ GitHub repos: NYTimes, Washington Post, BuzzFeed News, etc.
Still can't find exactly what you are looking for? UVA Library can help. Our Data Librarians would love to meet with you or your group.
Book an appointment with our data librarian or email us at data@virginia.edu. We can work with you in person, over zoom, or via email.
Unlike many other disciplines, Math and Statistics don't have a single citation style in publications. However, we recommend you use APA citation style. We recommend using a citation generator to create accurate citations you can copy into your paper. You will have an in-text citation in your paper where you reference websites, journals, data sources, etc. At the end of your paper you will have a "References" section where you will have the full citation.
Example-
In-text citation:
"College Basketball Dataset" (Kaggle, 2023)
"Vulnerable Catchments" (Ministry for the Environment, 2016)
Reference Entry:
College Basketball Dataset. (2023, September 12). Kaggle. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/andrewsundberg/college-basketball-dataset
Ministry for the Environment. (2016). Vulnerable catchments (Version 17) [Data set]. https://data.mfe.govt.nz/layer/53523-vulnerable-catchments/