Archaeologists collect and create a variety of data as part of their research and exploration. Open Context is a platform for cleaning, curating, and sharing this data. In this episode Eric Kansa describes how they process, clean, and normalize the data that they host, the challenges that they face with scaling ETL processes which require domain specific knowledge, and how the information contained in connections that they expose is being used for interesting projects.
IntroductionIntroduction
How did you get involved in the area of data management?
I did some database and GIS work for my dissertation in archaeology, back in the late 1990’s. I got frustrated at the lack of comparative data, and I got frustrated at all the work I put into creating data that nobody would likely use. So I decided to focus my energies in research data management.
Can you start by describing what Open Context is and how it started?
Open Context is an open access data publishing service for archaeology. It started because we need better ways of dissminating structured data and digital media than is possible with conventional articles, books and reports.
What are your protocols for determining which data sets you will work with?
Datasets need to come from research projects that meet the normal standards of professional conduct (laws, ethics, professional norms) articulated by archaeology’s professional societies.
What are some of the challenges unique to research data?
What are some of the unique requirements for processing, publishing, and archiving research data?
You have to work on a shoe-string budget, essentially providing "public goods". Archaeologists typically don’t have much discretionary money available, and publishing and archiving data are not yet very common practices.
Another issues is that it will take a long time to publish enough data to power many "meta-analyses" that draw upon many datasets. The issue is that lots of archaeological data describes very particular places and times. Because datasets can be so particularistic, finding data relevant to your interests can be hard. So, we face a monumental task in supplying enough data to satisfy many, many paricularistic interests.
How much education is necessary around your content licensing for researchers who are interested in publishing their data with you?
We require use of Creative Commons licenses, and greatly encourage the CC-BY license or CC-Zero (public domain) to try to keep things simple and easy to understand.
Can you describe the system architecture that you use for Open Context?
Open Context is a Django Python application, with a Postgres database and an Apache Solr index. It’s running on Google cloud services on a Debian linux.
What is the process for cleaning and formatting the data that you host?
How much domain expertise is necessary to ensure proper conversion of the source data?
That’s one of the bottle necks. We have to do an ETL (extract transform load) on each dataset researchers submit for publication. Each dataset may need lots of cleaning and back and forth conversations with data creators.
Can you discuss the challenges that you face in maintaining a consistent ontology?
What pieces of metadata do you track for a given data set?
Can you speak to the average size of data sets that you manage and any approach that you use to optimize for cost of storage and processing capacity?
Data archiving is a complicated and difficult endeavor due to issues pertaining to changing data formats and storage media, as well as repeatability of computing environments to generate and/or process them. Can you discuss the technical and procedural approaches that you take to address those challenges?
Once the data is stored you expose it for public use via a set of APIs which support linked data. Can you discuss any complexities that arise from needing to identify and expose interrelations between the data sets?
What are some of the most interesting uses you have seen of the data that is hosted on Open Context?
What have been some of the most interesting/useful/challenging lessons that you have learned while working on Open Context?
What are your goals for the future of Open Context?
The intro and outro music is from The Hug by The Freak Fandango Orchestra / CC BY-SA
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