Abstract

The proliferation of Web, database and social networking technologies has enabled us to produce, publish and exchange digital assets at an enormous rate. This vast amount of information that is either digitized or born-digital needs to be collected, organized and preserved in a way that ensures that our digital assets and the information they carry remain available for future use. Digital curation has emerged as a new inter-disciplinary practice that seeks to set guidelines for disciplined management of information. In this paper we review two recent models for digital curation introduced by the Digital Curation Centre (DCC) and the Digital Curation Unit (DCU) of the Athena Research Centre. We then propose a fusion of the two models that highlights the need to extend the digital curation lifecycle by adding (a) provisions for the registration of usage experience, (b) a stage for knowledge enhancement and (c) controlled vocabularies used by convention to denote concepts, properties and relations. The objective of the proposed extensions is twofold: (i) to provide a more complete lifecycle model for the digital curation domain; and (ii) to provide a stimulus for a broader discussion on the research agenda.

Highlights

  • We live in a world where our personal and collective memory is informed by all kinds of digital information: personal images and videos, work documents, spreadsheets, e-books, emails, blogs, RSS feeds etc

  • A conceptualisation of digital curation practice and field of inquiry, proposed on the basis of these insights, introduced a broader digital curation lifecycle including the activity of appraisal, and that of use experience, consonant with recent Web 2.0 and social computing practices. It provided for semantic notions of “knowledge enhancement” and “presentation” for digital information assets, which go beyond the syntactic notion of “tranform” in the Digital Curation Centre (DCC) approach; and called for attention and explicit support for the overarching context management processes of goal and usage modelling, domain modelling, and management of authorities (Constantopoulos & Dallas, 2008)

  • We present the digital curation lifecycle model introduced by the DCC

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Summary

Introduction

We live in a world where our personal and collective memory is informed by all kinds of digital information: personal images and videos, work documents, spreadsheets, e-books, emails, blogs, RSS feeds etc. A conceptualisation of digital curation practice and field of inquiry, proposed on the basis of these insights, introduced a broader digital curation lifecycle including the activity of appraisal, and that of use experience, consonant with recent Web 2.0 and social computing practices It provided for semantic notions of “knowledge enhancement” and “presentation” for digital information assets, which go beyond the syntactic notion of “tranform” in the DCC approach; and called for attention and explicit support for the overarching context management processes of goal and usage modelling, domain modelling, and management of authorities (Constantopoulos & Dallas, 2008).

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