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Digital libraries and data scholarship

Published: 01 January 2001 Publication History

Abstract

In addition to preserving and retrieving digital information, digital libraries need to allow data scholars to create post-publication references to objects within files and across collections of files. Such references can serve as new metadata in their own right and should also provide methods for efficiently extracting the subset of the original data that belongs to the object. This paper discusses some ideas about the requirements for such references within the context of long-term, active archival, where neither the data format nor the institutional basis can be guaranteed to remain constant.

References

[1]
Barkstrom, B. R. Digital Archive Issues from the Perspective of an Earth Science Data Producer. http://ssdoo.gsfc.nasa.gov/nost/isoas/us12/barkstrom/ Archival%20Issues.html.
[2]
http://www.gisportal.com provides numerous sources of information.
[3]
Lamport, L. The implementation of reliable distributed multiprocess systems. Computer Networks, 2, 1978.
[4]
Rosenthal, D. S. H. and V. Reich. Permanent Web Publishing. http://lockss.stanford.edu/freenix2000/ freenix2000.html

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Published In

cover image ACM Conferences
JCDL '01: Proceedings of the 1st ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
January 2001
481 pages
ISBN:1581133456
DOI:10.1145/379437
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 01 January 2001

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Author Tags

  1. EOSDIS
  2. data scholarship
  3. digital libraries
  4. object data references
  5. structural data reference

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JCDL '01 Paper Acceptance Rate 76 of 250 submissions, 30%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 415 of 1,482 submissions, 28%

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