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Data mediators experience with metadata – A national data centre view Peter Burnhill (Director) & Tony Mathys EDINA National Data Centre University of Edinburgh With contributions from David Medyckyj-Scott http://edina.ac.uk/ Activating metadata: the role of metadata in effective spatial data exploitation, Cambridge, 6–7th July 2005 NIEeS Metadata Workshop
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Overview EDINA national data centre Acting as a mediator Internal use of metadata Issues and challenges Dataset publishing
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EDINA A National Data Centre for Tertiary Education since 1995 –based at the University of Edinburgh Data Library Our mission... to enhance the productivity of research, learning and teaching in UK higher and further education Focus is service but also undertake r&D projects to services Major content provider within the acadmia Strategic move toward interoperability & shared services role Substantial experience in handling and delivering key geospatial data and geo-referenced information
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Existing Geo-data Services
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Services
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Our interest in metadata has a long history… Beginning in the 1980s, more than 25 years experience with geospatial metadata initiatives, policies, projects and services e.g. –ESRC Computer files cataloguing group (1980s) –Register of spatially referenced data for Scotland (1991) –“Metadata in the Geosciences” (published 1991) –Global Environmental Network for Information Exchange (GENIE) 1990s –Rawa Taio – environmental metadata service (NZ, 1996) –MetroGIS, Minneapolis/Saint Paul Metropolitan Organisation for promoting spatial data sharing (1998) –State representative on ANZLIC metadata WG –Geo-data browser – Go-Geo! portal (2000+) –Advisors to AskGiraffe and now hosting GIGateway service –UK GEMINI (Geo-spatial Metadata Interoperability Initiative)
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Simplified workflow Discover Locate Access Use Publish Fit for purpose? Preserve
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Metadata provided by EDINA Discover Locate Access Use Support information e.g. OS user guides Map sheet metadata e.g. survey date Legend files Format descriptions Explanations of key concepts Metadata records for OS products, DBDs and agcensus (114 metadata records created by EDINA and published on Go-Geo! – another 100+ still to produce ) EuroGlobalMap metadata records supplied by National Mapping Agencies
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What we are supplied with No metadata at all or partial –e.g. sheet/tile level and not ‘collection’ level or incomplete It lacks –a product specification –lineage information (history, differences between ‘editions’, why changed) –quality statement –descriptions of processing –information on file formats –coding book (definitions of attributes) and so on… Not machine readable
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Internal metadata activity Organisational memory is important to EDINA –“stored information from an organisations history that can be brought to bear on present decisions” –distributed across different retention facilities and often informal i.e. it’s in someone’s heads –now trying to formalise it – what, when, where, how, who and why Activities –creating discovery level records –documenting processing steps occurring through the life cycle of a dataset –data quality statement which describe the completeness, consistency and accuracy of the dataset –created an ISO 19115 data quality extension –how do we code processing steps?
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Issues and challenges Motivating people to document datasets is a key challenge –seen as onerous task and left undone –we were saying this in ’80s and situation no better now Difficult to fully automate – requires human interpretation If we don’t do it, risk of data loss or expensive re-acquisition Greater ROI from re-use It’s a people and organisational problem –but also concerns about IPR, copyright and mechanisms for sharing
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Dataset publishing Re introduce the concept of Dataset Publishing (Callahan, Johnson, and Shelley 1996) –analogous to publishing papers –rewards people for publishing datasets (e.g. promotion, RAE) –involves establishment of procedures (e.g. standards to use, peer review) & resources to manage procedures *Should minimise time and effort required –a dataset description is the equivalent of the bibliographic record –need tools to assist in creation, maintenance and dissemination of dataset descriptions EDINA involved in two related activities –Go-Geo! Portal Phase 4b –GRADE – (Geospatial Repository for Academic Deposit and Extraction)
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EDINA data publishing support projects Go-Geo! Portal – phase 4b JISC funded, 18 month project Go-Geo! portal serves as a discovery tool now extending to become a publication tool Promote and encourage geospatial metadata creation within UK tertiary education A pilot study with 4 universities to establish a business model for metadata creation and maintenance based on the use of Go-Geo! resources as local data management tools GRADE JISC funded project, 18 months Looking at utility of geospatial data repositories for storing and sharing of geospatial data Comparing thematic v. institutional v. informal Compendium of use cases of intended data sharing Assess interoperability aspects of geospatial data repositories www.gogeo.ac.uk www.gogeo.ac.uk/Phase4b.html edina.ac.uk/projects/grade/
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Comments and observations We need to understand better the life cycles of data and metadata as they are disseminated across the academic community –Authorship of data and metadata as data are merged, generalised, augmented, new data derived, new editions published –Tracking and recording digital rights as this happens Are we documenting what users really want to know? –Subject and content On the annotation of datasets and metadata Thesauri v. controlled terms v. ontologies Making metadata actionable
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Conclusions Metadata creation should happen close to data creation Metadata population and maintenance must be viewed as an on-going long term process Need to think more about what happens once metadata and data is published Can we really call ourselves spatial data management professionals?
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Contact details Peter Burnhill Director Edina National Data Centre p.burnhill@ed.ac.uk Tony Mathys Go-Geo Project tony.mathys@ed.ac.uk Tel.: +44 (0)131 650 3302 Fax: +44 (0)131 650 3308 EDINA web site: http://edina.ac.ukhttp://edina.ac.uk Go-Geo!: www.gogeo.ac.uk
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