학술논문

Context from the data reuser’s point of view
Document Type
JOURNAL
Source
Journal of Documentation, 2019, Vol. 75, Issue 6, pp. 1274-1297.
Subject
research-article
Research paper
cat-LISC
Library & information science
cat-RMP
Records management & preservation
cat-DOCM
Document management
cat-LISC
Library & information science
cat-CCAT
Classification & cataloguing
cat-IBRT
Information behaviour & retrieval
cat-CBM
Collection building & management
cat-SCPG
Scholarly communications/publishing
cat-IKM
Information & knowledge management
cat-IMG
Information management & governance
cat-IMAN
Information management
cat-ICT
Information & communications technology
cat-INT
Internet
User studies
Research work
Information studies
Data sharing
Data curation
Data reuse
Language
English
ISSN
0022-0418
Abstract
Purpose Taking the researchers’ perspective, the purpose of this paper is to examine the types of context information needed to preserve data’s meaning in ways that support data reuse. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on a qualitative study of 105 researchers from three disciplinary communities: quantitative social science, archaeology and zoology. The study focused on researchers’ most recent data reuse experience, particularly what they needed when deciding whether to reuse data. Findings Findings show that researchers mentioned 12 types of context information across three broad categories: data production information (data collection, specimen and artifact, data producer, data analysis, missing data, and research objectives); repository information (provenance, reputation and history, curation and digitization); and data reuse information (prior reuse, advice on reuse and terms of use). Originality/value This paper extends digital curation conversations to include the preservation of context as well as content to facilitate data reuse. When compared to prior research, findings show that there is some generalizability with respect to the types of context needed across different disciplines and data sharing and reuse environments. It also introduces several new context types. Relying on the perspective of researchers offers a more nuanced view that shows the importance of the different context types for each discipline and the ways disciplinary members thought about them. Both data producers and curators can benefit from knowing what to capture and manage during data collection and deposit into a repository.