2. • Context: The Open Agenda
• Past Reality – the development of data sharing
• The current state of play
– National data sharing infrastructures
– International e-infrastructures in archaeology
• Why should we share our data - Sticks
• Why should we share our data - ..and Carrots
Outline
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
4. Open Data
• Open data is the idea that certain data should
be freely available to everyone to use and
republish as they wish, without restrictions
from copyright, patents or other mechanisms
of control
(Wikipedia, 9 June 2013)
• Open data tradition and archaeology
5. The Open Data Movement
• Related to Open Access movement for
publications
• Data.gov & Data.gov.uk
• "A piece of data is open if anyone is free to
use, reuse, and redistribute it — subject only,
at most, to the requirement to attribute
and/or share-alike”
8. Open Data in Science
• The concept of open access to scientific data
was institutionally established in preparation for
the International Geophysical Year of 1957-8.
The International Council of Scientific Unions
established several World Data Centers to
minimize the risk of data loss and to maximize
data accessibility, further recommending in
1955 that data be made available in machine-
readable form.
• The Open-science-data movement long
predates the Internet
9. Open Data in Archaeology: Pros
• “Past belongs to everyone”
– democratisation of knowledge
• Accelerated pace of new knowledge
• Economic benefit of Open Data
• Public benefit of Open Data
– Community engagement in heritage e.g.
Finds.org.uk; Europeana;
– Justification of taxpayer investment
10. Open Data in Archaeology: Challenges
• Privacy issues – site location; indigenous
peoples; personal data
• Misuse of data
• Funding of data management & data
infrastructures
• Importance of provenance
• Legitimate concerns of information providers
12. • Context: The Open Agenda
• Past Reality – the development of data sharing
• The current state of play
– National data sharing infrastructures
– International e-infrastructures in archaeology
• Why should we share our data - Sticks
• Why should we share our data - ..and Carrots
Outline
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
13. The Reality
The prehistory of (non-)sharing
Rahtz, Sebastian 1988 `Reflections on an
Archaeological Information Exchange'
Archaeol Comput Newslett 16, 10-15
“The AIE in operation at Southampton University contains so far:
mailing list; distribution service for data and/or software; and an on-
line service. Problems include: the labour-intensive nature of the
mailing list; little use of the service by archaeologists as opposed to
UNIX-addicts....”
14. Harrison Eiteljorg, II 1994 ‘Archaeological Data
Archive Project’, CSA Newsletter VII(3)
Harrison Eiteljorg, II 2002 ‘The Archaeological
Data Archive Project Ceases Operation’, CSA
Newsletter XV (2)
“There appear to be two insurmountable problems with the
archives. One is the absence of any real possibility for
assembling a large enough body of material to be truly useful
within a reasonable time. This reflects primarily the
unwillingness of scholars to deposit materials in the archive......”
15. “The second is the inability of the Archaeological Data Archive to
become self-sufficient within the next decade or so.... Data depositors
may be willing to pay for deposit and long-term preservation, but there
has been no evidence of that for the near term.......
Archaeologists have too often treated their objects and their data as
privately owned......
Archaeology is hardly alone in finding it impossible to fund an archive
for digital data. Archaeologists will, however, be taken to task more
strongly than many scholars because their data cannot be recreated,
once lost.”
16. • “I need to tidy my data”
(“I worry that people will think my data is poor quality”)
• “I’ll do it when the research is finished / published”
(“I worry that people will steal my credit”)
• “It’s too expensive”
(“I forgot to budget for it”)
• “I haven’t got permission”
(“I can’t be bothered/ haven’t got the time”)
Common excuses....
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
17. 13 June 2013 –
European
parliament
ratifies new rules
on Open Data -
includes cultural
heritage data
Open Data in Europe
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
18. G8 Open Data Charter unveiled
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
18 June 2013: “a
new era in which
people can use
open data to
generate insights,
ideas, and services
to create a better
world for all.”
20. • Context: The Open Agenda
• Past Reality – the development of data sharing
• The current state of play
– National data sharing infrastructures
– International e-infrastructures in archaeology
• Why should we share our data - Sticks
• Why should we share our data - ..and Carrots
Outline
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
22. • UK: Archaeology Data Service
• Netherlands: eDNA
• Sweden: SNDS
• Germany: IANUS
• United States: tDAR
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
National Preservation Infrastructures
23. • Founded 1996,
University of York
• 17 staff
• Collections
• 1,300,000 metadata
records
• 25,000+ unpublished
fieldwork reports
• 700+ rich archives
• Guides to Good Practice
• DPC Decennial Award
2012
The Archaeology Data ServiceArchaeology Data Service
24. Netherlands: eDNA
• 2004-6 pilot study –
DANS & Leiden
University
• 2007 eDNA
• 2 members of staff, plus
DANS infrastructure
• 2011 – 17,000 fieldwork
reports
25. Sweden: SND
• Swedish National Data
Service, University of
Gothenburg
• 2012 first archaeological
archives, in collaboration
with Uppsala University –
GIS files, Östergötland
• Swedish Rock Art archives
27. Italy: MAPPA project
• 2011 onwards
• University of Pisa
• Network of systems,
including spatial
handling
• MAPPAopenDATA
• DOIs
• CC-BY-SA
28. United States: Open Context
• Alexandria Archive
Institute
• 2007+
• 2 staff members
• Primarily data
publication tool
• California Digital Library
provides long term
preservation
29. United States: tDAR
• 2009+
• Mellon start-up grant
• Based Arizona State
University
• Digital Antiquity
consortium
• 4+ staff members
30. Canada: Sustainable Archaeology
• 2010+
• Western & McMaster
universities
• c.3 staff members
• Funded by Canadian
Foundation for Innovation
/ Ontario Ministry of
Research and Innovation
• Physical and digital
infrastructure
31. Australia: FAIMS
• Federated Archaeological
Information Management
System
• 2012+
• University of New South
Wales
• Funded by Australian
government NECTAR
programme
• Mobile apps
• Using instance of tDAR as
repository infrastructure
32. Interoperability & Data Integration
Hansen, H.J., 1992
'European archaeological
databases: problems and
prospects', in J. Andresen
et al. (eds) Computing the
Past. Computer
Applications and
Quantitative Methods in
Archaeology. Aarhus.
229-37.
46. Why ARIADNE
• Huge number of archaeological data
available in digital format
• Large number of non-communicating
archaeological datasets – the “information
silos”
• Increasing interest of the research
community for data sharing, both passive
(“access”) and active (“provide”)
• Social pressure for opening data vaults
47. What is ARIADNE
• ARIADNE is a Research Infrastructure project
aiming at the integration of archaeological
datasets in Europe
• Four years’ duration
• Starting 1st February 2013
• 23 partners from 17 countries
• Coordinated by PIN-U. of Florence (IT)
• Affiliated to DARIAH
49. Project Goals
• Shape the research community
• Share, access, use and re-use archaeological data
• Overcome fragmentation
• Foster/support interoperability
• Establish accepted standards and common protocols
• Enable resource discovery and faceted searches
• Explore new methods
• Create useful tools for searching and browsing
Connect, not assemble
Make data discoverable, accessible, understandable, usable
50. Progress in the first year
Joint Research
• Creation of the ACDM (ARIADNE Catalogue
Data Model) and of the Registry describing
archaeological digital resources
• Designing dataset integration
• Working on an extension of CIDOC-CRM
suitable for archaeological documentation
– Mapping metadata schemas to CIDOC-CRM
– Draft proposal for excavation data
51. Success stories
• Agreement with PACTOLS (multilingual French
thesaurus) for integration in the ARIADNE system
• Mapping the Italian documentation system on the
ARIADNE standard
• Progress into incorporating SITAR (archaeological
datasets on Rome)
• DAI implementing the novel ARIADNE extension for
new datasets
• ARIADNE inspiring new research projects in Austria
• and more…
52. SITAR
• Geographic coverage: Rome (incl. Ostia) and Fiumicino
• Temporal coverage: from Paleolithic to present
• Georeferenced dataset
• Open Data
• 3100 reports
• Images, documents, etc.
• Unique of its kind in Italy
53. • Context: The Open Agenda
• Past Reality – the development of data sharing
• The current state of play
– National data sharing infrastructures
– International e-infrastructures in archaeology
• Why should we share our data - Sticks
• Why should we share our data - ..and Carrots
Outline
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
54. Why should we share our data?
The Sticks
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
• Because
governments and
funding bodies
tell us to....
• And invoke
sanctions if we
don’t
55. • Research Councils
– EPSRC
• Published research papers should include a short
statement describing how and on what terms any
supporting research data may be accessed.
• Research organisations will ensure that EPSRC-funded
research data is securely preserved for a minimum of
10-years
Sticks in the UK
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
59. http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
The policy states that, to be eligible for submission to
the post-2014 REF, authors’ final peer-reviewed
manuscripts must have been deposited in an
institutional or subject repository on acceptance for
publication. Deposited material should be
discoverable, and free to read and download, for
anyone with an internet connection.
The requirement applies only to journal articles and
conference proceedings with an International Standard
Serial Number.
68. • Context: The Open Agenda
• Past Reality – the development of data sharing
• The current state of play
– National data sharing infrastructures
– International e-infrastructures in archaeology
• Why should we share our data - Sticks
• Why should we share our data - ..and Carrots
Outline
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
69. Why should we share our data?
The Carrots
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
• Professional ethics
“Excavation as
destruction”
• Academic reputation
• International impact/
exposure
• Re-use
• Feedback
70. Why should we share our data?
The Carrots
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
Plus, increasingly:
• Data citation i.e.
DOIs
• Publication citation
e.g. Data papers
• Research Impact
credit
71. • Cool, H. E. M. & Bell, M. (2011) Excavations at
St Peter’s Church, Barton-upon-Humber [data-
set]. York: Archaeology Data Service
[distributor] <doi: 10.5284/1000389>
• NB http://dx.doi.org/10.5284/1000389
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
Sample citation
81. • Is there a difference?
• The archive tradition
• The archive as part of dissemination strategy
• Linking publication and archive
• Supporting and testing
• Supplementary data – needs to be archived
Open Access vs Open Data
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
92. “The Value and Impact of the ADS”
September 2013
http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk
Neil Beagrie Charles Beagrie Ltd.
John Houghton Centre for Strategic
Economic Studies,
Victoria University
93. The KRDS Benefits Framework
– Framework arranged on 3 dimensions with two sub-
divisions each
– Individual benefits identified and assigned within this
Internal External
WHO BENEFITS?
Benefit
from
Curation of
Research Data
97. The Economic Impact of the ADS
07/03/2015
http://archaeologydataservice
.ac.uk
97
Return over 30 years?
Increase in returns on investment in
data and related infrastructure arising
from additional use facilitated by ADS
ADS Value/Impact Analysis
£1 cost provides up to £8.30 return
98. How to achieve integration
Data sharing requires:
•Suitability of someone else’s data
•Interoperability of datasets
•Trust in data collected by others
•Guarantee of data “provenance”
•Suitable licensing agreements
•Suitable repositories
99. Looking to the future
• 50% of all journals now require data to be
deposited in an archive
• Need a new metaphor for publication
• Blurring of publication and other forms of
dissemination
• Data management not for its own sake – no
preservation without re-use