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Research Information and Digitisation Unit

The staff unit takes on support tasks for the Department 4 Research and Transfer. This includes the implementation and operation of a current research information system (CRIS), research monitoring, standardised research reporting as well as  professional support of the department's digital infrastructure and project management of internal departmental digitisation projects such as the implementation of a digital records system.


Current Research Information System at MUHS

Information about a university's research activities, such as research projects and publications, is collected and managed in many different places within the university. Individual data repositories often remain unconnected, which means that the same information must frequently be collected again for other purposes. A Current Research Information System (CRIS) is designed to consolidate this information, sometimes referred to as research metadata, to avoid redundant data collection and make it usable for multiple purposes, such as reporting and external communication. In this context, the German Wissenschaftsrat (WR; 'Science and Humanities Council') has recommended a standard that outlines a set of core data and their definitions, which research organisations in Germany should maintain for uniform and consistent reporting. MUHS aims to report its research activities in accordance with this standard, the Kerndatensatz Forschung (KDSF; 'Research Core Dataset').

The implementation of CRIS will enable MUHS to respond to internal and external reporting requests more quickly, with improved quality and reduced effort, all from a single system. The MUHS CRIS will be implemented as part of the CRIS.NRW university consortium. In its initial phase, the CRIS will include information on projects and third-party funding, publications, doctoral programmes, patents and spin-offs, employees and organisational units at MUHS. The research information available at MUHS will be consolidated in the CRIS, allowing researchers to review, supplement, linked, and utilize the data. Key use cases for researchers include managing their own research activities, gaining transparent access to all information held about themselves, and reusing the data for their external visibility. 

Project team:

Marc Kaulisch - project management CRIS
Nina Groznykh - project assistant CRIS
Mohammad Soltani - technical administration in ZIM
Katharina Berger - external consultant CRIS.NRW

Functionalities of a CRIS at a glance
Questions and Answers

Research information, or research metadata, refers to data describing a university's research activities. This includes project titles, project management, the organisational unit carrying out the project, funding bodies, publications titles, authors, and more. 

This type of metadata is distinct from primary research data, which is managed through research data management (RDM) processes. At MUHS, the RDM team provides advice on handling primary research data.

Current research information systems (CRIS) consolidate information from both scientific and administrative sources, which is often distributed across various departments. CRIS enables a structured view of the resources and research activities of a university and its organisational units. Based on the principle of "record once - use many times", the CRIS simplifies reporting both within the university and to external stakeholders, making research more accessible and transparent to society.

The core objective of the CRIS implementation project at MUHS is to integrate the CRIS into the existing system infrastructure. Data collected through administrative processes should be available in the CRIS and, if possible, should not need to be re-collected by researchers. A key task for the CRIS team is therefore to establish interfaces with existing administrative source systems, such as third-party funding management systems, personnel management systems, and identity management systems, in order to transfer research information into the CRIS. This approach ensures that the workload for researchers is kept to a minimum. All MUHS staff will be able to use the CRIS to review, record, collect, and link research information. In the area of research and transfer, the CRIS will serve as the basis for reporting, external visibility, and integration into MUHS’s Business Intelligence (BI) system.

As a result of discussions between representatives from the rectorate, faculties, and administration, MUHS has defined the following goals for managing research information: 

  • Establish a quality-assured, standardised, KDSF-compatible database for efficiently responding to research-related reporting requests, including KDSF-compliant reporting
  • Create a user-friendly system for recording, collecting, linking, and presenting research information by integrating existing data sources, IT systems, and workflows.
  • Generate added value for researchers by providing easier access to reusable research information
  • Support transparent, data-driven, subject-specific planning and management in research for university leadership, faculties, and researchers
  • Use the collected data for a largely automated, web-based presentation of MUHS's research profile, both internally and externally

The implementation of the Current Research Information System (CRIS) is being carried out within the CRIS.NRW university consortium, using the HISinOne-RES software from HIS eG.

The pilot phase has begun in May 2024. The pilot phase aims, among other things, to prepare the CRIS production system, conduct the technical tests, validation tasks and data quality checks.  Click here for the data protection information on the pilot phase of the CRIS at MUHS.

The launch of the MUHS's CRIS is planned in two stages. At the turn of the year 2025/2026, it will be activated for a limited group of users. By the end of the first half of 2026, the CRIS will be opened up to the entire campus and the research information will be published in a new MUHS research portal.


Digital Third Party Funding Records

Project Lead

Dr. Lea Kawaletz

Project Duration

January 2024 – December 2025

Project Overview

From January to May 2024, a joint preliminary phase was conducted alongside the E-Personalakte and E-Studierendenakte subprojects to lay the foundation for the E-Drittmittelakte project. Based on the DH NRW project E-Drittmittelakte.nrw, the solution is being adapted and implemented at Marien University Hospital & School in collaboration with the company d.velop. The goal is to introduce a digital file management system for third-party funding, intellectual property rights, and contract files. The system will be integrated into the existing IT landscape at MUHS, particularly the MACH financial management system and the Current Research Information System (CRIS).

Project Objectives

  • Implementation of a digital file management system for third-party funding, intellectual property rights, and contract files
  • Migration of existing digital records into the new system
  • Development of a scanning strategy and digitization of paper-based legacy records
  • Integration with the MACH financial management system and the Current Research Information System (CRIS)