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Introduction to Metadata

Introduction to Metadata. Working with Data about Data Dot Porter, DHO Metadata Manager 10 March 2009. What is metadata?. Metadata is… data about data!. (from the Greek preposition μετά meaning "after” or "with”). Basically, metadata is any kind of information that describes something else.

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Introduction to Metadata

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  1. Introduction to Metadata Working with Data about Data Dot Porter, DHO Metadata Manager 10 March 2009

  2. What is metadata? Metadata is… data about data! (from the Greek preposition μετά meaning "after” or "with”) Basically, metadata is any kind of information that describes something else. • In the context of today’s workshop, Metadata is descriptive information about digital resources: • individual files • collections of files (or: relationships among files) • complete projects (or: relationships among files and • collections)

  3. What is metadata? • In the context of today’s workshop, Metadata is descriptive information about digital resources: • individual files • collections of files • complete projects • Metadata may describe (e.g.) • the content of a photograph • the photograph itself • the digital version of that same photograph • the relationship between that photograph and other photographs or texts, etc. We’ll come back to this!

  4. Why metadata? “Hardware and software come and go—sometimes becoming obsolete with alarming rapidity—but high-quality, standards-based, system-independent metadata can be used, reused, migrated, and disseminated in any number of ways, even in ways that we cannot anticipate at this moment. “Hardware and software come and go—sometimes becoming obsolete with alarming rapidity—but high-quality, standards-based, system-independent metadata can be used, reused, migrated, and disseminated in any number of ways, even in ways that we cannot anticipate at this moment. Digitization does not equal access. The mere act of creating digital copies of collection materials does not make those materials findable, understandable, or utilizable to our ever-expanding audience of online users. But digitization combined with the creation of carefully crafted metadata can significantly enhance end-user access; and our users are the primary reason that we create digital resources.” Digitization does not equal access. The mere act of creating digital copies of collection materials does not make those materials findable, understandable, or utilizable to our ever-expanding audience of online users. But digitization combined with the creation of carefully crafted metadata can significantly enhance end-user access; and our users are the primary reason that we create digital resources.” From the “Introduction” to Introduction to Metadata, Online Edition, Version 3.0 <http://www.getty.edu/research/conducting_research/standards/intrometadata>

  5. Different ways of thinking about metadata • Authoritative vs. user-created • Different types of metadata to describe various aspects of the same thing • Ontologies, taxonomies, vocabularies • Metadata standards and formats More about DHO recommendations this afternoon!

  6. Authoritative metadata • AKA ‘top-down’ • Created by project team • Formalized; focus on control • Specialists in (at least one aspect of) the field • Focus and coverage will depend on the requirements of the project and repository

  7. User-created metadata • AKA ‘bottom-up’ • Social tagging • May be open or within a community • Less focused; what the “tagging public” sees • Generally less structured, not prescriptive 7 April 2009: Introduction to Semantic Web

  8. Types of metadata • Descriptive: Facilitates discovery and describes intellectual content • Administrative: Facilitates management of digital and analog resources • Technical: Describes the technical aspects of the digital object • Structural: Describes the relationships within a digital object • Preservation: Supports long-term retention of the digital object and may overlap with technical, administrative, and structural metadata From Best Practice Guidelines for Digital Collections at University of Maryland Libraries, edited by Susan Schreibman <http://www.lib.umd.edu/dcr/publications/best_practice.pdf>

  9. Types of metadata • Descriptive: Facilitates discovery and describes intellectual content • Administrative: Facilitates management of digital and analog resources • Technical: Describes the technical aspects of the digital object • Structural: Describes the relationships within a digital object • Preservation: Supports long-term retention of the digital object and may overlap with technical, administrative, and structural metadata From Best Practice Guidelines for Digital Collections at University of Maryland Libraries, edited by Susan Schreibman <http://www.lib.umd.edu/dcr/publications/best_practice.pdf>

  10. Descriptive metadata It is always necessary to differentiate between the description of… • Content • Source (if there is one!) • Digital file/object For born-digital objects, the digital object is the source

  11. Content: • a painting • a sculpture • a text • a building • Source: • paper photograph of a painting or a building • sketch of a sculpture • a manuscript, containing a text microfilm of a manuscript that is itself scanned… both manuscript and microfilm are “source” • Digital file/object: • scan or digital photo of a paper photograph • scan or digital photo of a sketch of a sculpture • scan or digital photo of a manuscript • born-digital photo of a building No “source” – digital image is taken directly

  12. Administrative metadata • Facilitates management of files • Describes the creation/derivation of files • Responsible Individuals and institutions • Dates • Locations • Technical specifications (e.g., file size, file format)

  13. Structural metadata • Describes/defines relationships between and among files • AKA describing collections • AKA describing projects Relationships are usually, but need not be, 1:1 Identifying what collection or project a file belongs to Identifying what files belong to which collection or project Identifying what project a collection belongs to

  14. Ontologies, taxonomies, controlled vocabularies • Controlled vocabulary: a list of terms • Taxonomy: a collection of controlled vocabulary terms organized into a hierarchical structure • Ontology: a formal representation of a set of concepts within a domain, and the relationships between these concepts

  15. Ontologies, taxonomies, controlled vocabularies • Concepts separate from format • Created by scholarly communities, learned bodies, projects, etc. • Whenever possible, use what is available

  16. Internet Assigned Numbers Authority Language Subtag Registry (http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry) Controlled vocabulary • Controlled list of explicitly enumerated terms • Unambiguous definitions for each term • If the same term is commonly used to mean different concepts in different contexts, then its name is explicitly qualified to resolve this ambiguity. • If multiple terms are used to mean the same thing, one of the terms is identified as the preferred term in the controlled vocabulary and the other terms are listed as synonyms or aliases.

  17. Taxonomy • Controlled vocabulary, hierarchical structure • Terms in parent-child relationships with one another

  18. Ontology CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (http://cidoc.ics.forth.gr/) • Represents the concepts that make up a domain • Controlled vocabulary • Hierarchical Similar to a taxonomy (terms are sometimes interchanged), the difference is philosophical An Ontology is developed to reason about a domain, and may be used to define a domain

  19. Metadata standards and formats The first questions of metadata: • What do we want to describe? • How to we want to describe it? Using accepted standards, expressed in widely-used or easily mapped formats, will ensure that our metadata is accessible.

  20. Metadata standards • Standards are widely-used (hence standard) prescriptive recommendations guiding • Defining fields: “name” “title” “identifier” “subject” “physicalDescription” “location” • Structure and hierarchy within the metadata itself • Controlled vocabularies

  21. Metadata formats • Extensible Markup Language (XML) • Allows for combining and interoperability • XML flexibility • Any other conceivable format • MS Word? PDF? Post-it notes? • Excel, FileMaker Pro, Access DB, CSV

  22. In some but not all cases, the semantics of metadata is separate from the format of metadata Identifier: 0-89236-361-4 Creator: Howard Besser Creator: Jennifer Trant Title: Introduction to Imaging: Issues in Constructing an Image Database Publisher: The Getty Art History Information Program Date: 1995 Subject: Image processing—Digital techniques

  23. Metadata mapping • Moving metadata from one standard/format to another standard/format • Not always pretty…

  24. Metadata mapping • Moving metadata from one standard/format to another standard/format • Not always pretty… • Important: base the design of your project metadata on an existing standard, and plan it out ahead of time!

  25. How much is enough? ROBUST Standards are great! Just because it’s there doesn’t mean you have to use it! YOUR NEEDS ARE NOT NECESSARILY EVERYONE ELSE’S – AND THAT IS OKAY! Open Access (not magic, a bit scary, but very useful)

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