TY - JOUR
T1 - Library cultures of data curation
T2 - Adventures in astronomy
AU - Darch, Peter T.
AU - Sands, Ashley E.
AU - Borgman, Christine L.
AU - Golshan, Milena S.
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding from the National Science Foundation (award # 1145888) and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (awards #20113194, #201514001) supported this research. The UCLA Institutional Review Board, Study Protocol ID# 10‐000909, provided oversight for this study. We thank L. Wynholds and David S. Fearon for conducting early interviews. We thank Bernadette M. Boscoe, Irene V. Pasquetto, Michael J. Scroggins, and Sharon J. Traweek for comments on drafts. We also thank Sharon J. Traweek for mentorship and advice during the fieldwork. Finally, we are very grateful to those people we interviewed and observed in the institutions we studied for their time and efforts.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Association for Information Science and Technology
PY - 2020/12
Y1 - 2020/12
N2 - University libraries are partnering with disciplinary data producers to provide long-term digital curation of research data sets. Managing data set producer expectations and guiding future development of library services requires understanding the decisions libraries make about curatorial activities, why they make these decisions, and the effects on future data reuse. We present a study, comprising interviews (n = 43) and ethnographic observation, of two university libraries who partnered with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) collaboration to curate a significant astronomy data set. The two libraries made different choices of the materials to curate and associated services, which resulted in different reuse possibilities. Each of the libraries offered partial solutions to the SDSS leaders' objectives. The libraries' approaches to curation diverged due to contextual factors, notably the extant infrastructure at their disposal (including technical infrastructure, staff expertise, values and internal culture, and organizational structure). The Data Transfer Process case offers lessons in understanding how libraries choose curation paths and how these choices influence possibilities for data reuse. Outcomes may not match data producers' initial expectations but may create opportunities for reusing data in unexpected and beneficial ways.
AB - University libraries are partnering with disciplinary data producers to provide long-term digital curation of research data sets. Managing data set producer expectations and guiding future development of library services requires understanding the decisions libraries make about curatorial activities, why they make these decisions, and the effects on future data reuse. We present a study, comprising interviews (n = 43) and ethnographic observation, of two university libraries who partnered with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) collaboration to curate a significant astronomy data set. The two libraries made different choices of the materials to curate and associated services, which resulted in different reuse possibilities. Each of the libraries offered partial solutions to the SDSS leaders' objectives. The libraries' approaches to curation diverged due to contextual factors, notably the extant infrastructure at their disposal (including technical infrastructure, staff expertise, values and internal culture, and organizational structure). The Data Transfer Process case offers lessons in understanding how libraries choose curation paths and how these choices influence possibilities for data reuse. Outcomes may not match data producers' initial expectations but may create opportunities for reusing data in unexpected and beneficial ways.
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U2 - 10.1002/asi.24345
DO - 10.1002/asi.24345
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85081958977
SN - 2330-1635
VL - 71
SP - 1470
EP - 1483
JO - Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
JF - Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
IS - 12
ER -