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(how) do archaeologists share their data?

Authors: Batlle-Baró, Sabina;

(how) do archaeologists share their data?

Abstract

This poster was presented in the colloquium Digital Archaeology Bern 2023 that took place in Bern (Switzerland) on 1-3 February 2023. The poster shows the research plan, methodology, and preliminary results of a study on Catalan archaeologists data management, sharing and reuse, which is part of the author's PhD. Abstract The benefits of data opening for both science and society have been widely exposed. Data sharing not only helps making research more sustainable but also accelerates innovation, and Archaeology is not an exception. In fact, the openness of Archaeology in general and of archaeological research data has been seen not only as a beneficial practice but necessary, as a practically imperative solution to the already destructive nature of the archaeological research method, as well as an ethical obligation for a discipline that studies a public good such as heritage and uses mostly public funding. In the road leading to open archaeological research data, researchers play a crucial role, as they are the ones who collect, work, and manage the data during most of their lifecycle. Considering this, it feels necessary to assess their points of view, to fully understand how they are managing and sharing (or not) their data, and why. Understanding the researchers’ perceptions and their current research data management practices can allow us not only to get to know the real starting point and evaluate the implementation of open data, but also to define the challenges this new model must overcome and develop a better strategy to foster its implementation. My study focuses Catalan archaeology researchers, as this region has a dynamic and complex yet well-defined archaeological community that includes more than seven research institutions and nearly 30 research groups. With the goal to get to know these researchers’ practices and perspectives, I am conducting a series of interviews to 40 of the principal investigators of archaeological research projects. During the interviews, topics such as data management practices, data sharing practices, reuse practices as well as opinions around archaeological open data, its possibilities and challenges, are discussed. In this poster, I will be presenting the theoretical background of the study, the methodology applied, the design of the questionnaire, and an overview of the preliminary results gathered up to the moment.

{"references": ["Asp\u00f6ck, E. (2019). Moving towards an open archaeology: projects, opportunities and challenges. Mitteilungen der V\u00d6B, 72 (2), 538-554.", "Beck, A.; Neylon, C. (2012). A vision for Open Archaeology. World Archaeology, 44 (4), 479-497", "Chawinga, W. D.; Zinn, S. (2019). Global perspectives of research data sharing: A systematic literature review. Library and Information Science Research, 41 109-122", "Costa, S. (2014). Defining and Advocating Open Data in Archaeology. CAA2012 Proceedings of the 40th Conference in Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology, Southampton, United Kingdom, 26-30 March 2012", "Edwards, B. (2015). Open Archaeology: Definitions, Challenges and Context. Open Source Archaeology 1-5. De Gruyter", "Kansa, E. (2012). Openness and archaeology's information ecosystem. World Archaeology, 44 (4), 498-520", "Kansa, E. C. (2013). On ethics, sustainability and open access in archaeology. The SAA Archaeological Record 15-22", "Kintigh, K. W. (2015). Extracting Information from Archaeological Texts. Open Archaeology, 1 96\u2013101", "Lake, M. (2012). Open archaeology. World Archaeology, 44 (4), 471-478", "Lynam, F. (2016). Untangling the web of data. Acritical analysis of the Archaeological Semantic Web. Department of Classics, School of Histories and Humanities, Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin", "Marwick, B. (2018). A Standard for the Scholarly Citation of Archaeological Data as an Incentive to Data Sharing. Advances in Archaeological Practice, 6 (2), 125-143. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aap.2018.3", "Marwick, B.; et al. (2017). Open science in Archaeology. The SAA Archaeological Record, 17 (4), 8-14", "Moore, R.; Richards, J.D. (2015). Here today, gone tomorrow: Open access, open data and digital preservation. In Open source archaeology: Ethics and practice, ed. A.T. Wilson and B. Edwards, 30\u201343. Berlin: De Gruyter Open.", "Previtali, M. (2019). Archaeological documentation and data sharing: digital surveying and open data approach applied to archaeological fieldwoks. Virtual Archaeology Review, 20 (20), 17-27", "Wilson, A. T. (2015). Open Source Archaeology Ethics and PracticeDeutsche Nationalbibliothek. ISBN: 978-3-11-044016-4"]}

This research was supported by an FPI grant (Formación de Personal Investigador) from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MCINN) to Sabina Batlle Baró (PRE2019-091286).

Related Organizations
Keywords

Catalonia, Archaeology, Open data, Data sharing, Research data

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This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).
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popularity
This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network.
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influence
This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).
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impulse
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