Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and Preservation

Older data in paper or analog format (e.g., field/lab notebooks, photos, maps) held in labs, offices, and archives across research institutions are an often overlooked resource for potential reuse in new scientific studies. However, there are few mechanisms to help researchers find existing analog d...

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Main Authors: Shannon L. Farrell, Lois G. Hendrickson, Kristen L. Mastel, Julia A. Kelly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2020-12-01
Series:Data Science Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://datascience.codata.org/articles/1217
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spelling doaj-e435823dd1c74b23acd9d5fdf8373e652021-01-11T05:09:00ZengUbiquity PressData Science Journal1683-14702020-12-0119110.5334/dsj-2020-051806Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and PreservationShannon L. Farrell0Lois G. Hendrickson1Kristen L. Mastel2Julia A. Kelly3University of MinnesotaUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of MinnesotaOlder data in paper or analog format (e.g., field/lab notebooks, photos, maps) held in labs, offices, and archives across research institutions are an often overlooked resource for potential reuse in new scientific studies. However, there are few mechanisms to help researchers find existing analog data in order to reuse it. Yet, in the literature, reuse of historical data is particularly important in studies of biodiversity and climate change. We surveyed life science researchers at the University of Minnesota to understand and explore current and potential future use of historical data, attitudes around sharing and reusing data, and preservation of the data. Large amounts of historical data existed on our campus. Most researchers had reused or shared it, and many continued to add to their data sets. Some data had been scanned, over half of researchers have re-keyed some of their data into machine-readable format, and nearly all that were converted to a digital format were stored on unstable platforms and legacy formats. Researchers also expressed concerns about long-term preservation plans, or who to contact for assistance in planning for the future of the data, since much of these data are at risk for loss. Currently produced digital data sets are subject to guidelines and requirements developed at a national level. Solutions for historical analog data could benefit from a similar high-level treatment, and it will take experts from various fields to lead this effort. Given libraries’ expertise in data management and preservation, librarians are in a position to collaborate on devising cross-disciplinary solutions.https://datascience.codata.org/articles/1217data managementdata sharingpreservationdata reusehistorical dataanalog data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon L. Farrell
Lois G. Hendrickson
Kristen L. Mastel
Julia A. Kelly
spellingShingle Shannon L. Farrell
Lois G. Hendrickson
Kristen L. Mastel
Julia A. Kelly
Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and Preservation
Data Science Journal
data management
data sharing
preservation
data reuse
historical data
analog data
author_facet Shannon L. Farrell
Lois G. Hendrickson
Kristen L. Mastel
Julia A. Kelly
author_sort Shannon L. Farrell
title Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and Preservation
title_short Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and Preservation
title_full Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and Preservation
title_fullStr Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and Preservation
title_full_unstemmed Historical Scientific Analog Data: Life Sciences Faculty’s Perspectives on Management, Reuse and Preservation
title_sort historical scientific analog data: life sciences faculty’s perspectives on management, reuse and preservation
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Data Science Journal
issn 1683-1470
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Older data in paper or analog format (e.g., field/lab notebooks, photos, maps) held in labs, offices, and archives across research institutions are an often overlooked resource for potential reuse in new scientific studies. However, there are few mechanisms to help researchers find existing analog data in order to reuse it. Yet, in the literature, reuse of historical data is particularly important in studies of biodiversity and climate change. We surveyed life science researchers at the University of Minnesota to understand and explore current and potential future use of historical data, attitudes around sharing and reusing data, and preservation of the data. Large amounts of historical data existed on our campus. Most researchers had reused or shared it, and many continued to add to their data sets. Some data had been scanned, over half of researchers have re-keyed some of their data into machine-readable format, and nearly all that were converted to a digital format were stored on unstable platforms and legacy formats. Researchers also expressed concerns about long-term preservation plans, or who to contact for assistance in planning for the future of the data, since much of these data are at risk for loss. Currently produced digital data sets are subject to guidelines and requirements developed at a national level. Solutions for historical analog data could benefit from a similar high-level treatment, and it will take experts from various fields to lead this effort. Given libraries’ expertise in data management and preservation, librarians are in a position to collaborate on devising cross-disciplinary solutions.
topic data management
data sharing
preservation
data reuse
historical data
analog data
url https://datascience.codata.org/articles/1217
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