I think this is a rather different situation from the one libraries commonly 
deal with, where there is a pretty clear distinction between data representing 
the full text of a 189-page book by Author X, and the descriptive data that is 
made up by catalogers or publishers, and is not part of Author X's work at all. 
 In addition, it is somewhat useful to distinguish between full-text data and 
descriptive metadata because the nature of the work you can do with these two 
types of data can be so very different.

You simply can't use the average library catalog to look up Author X's novel 
that starts with the sentence "So a string walks into a bar."  The actual data 
(the novel) is not in the catalog (which is composed only of metadata).

Genny Engel
Sonoma County Library
gen...@sonoma.lib.ca.us
707 545-0831 x581
www.sonomalibrary.org


-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Nate 
Vack
Sent: Monday, February 13, 2012 7:57 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Metadata

My take on this discussion, coming from a research lab: Metadata isn't meta.

For example, in recordings of, say, blood pressure over time, it's
common to think about things such as participant identifiers,
acquisition dates, event markers, and sampling rates as "metadata,"
and the actual measurements as "data."

But really: those meta things aren't ancillary to data analysis;
they're essential in keeping analyses organized, and often important
parameters in running an analysis at all.

Breaking things down into data versus metadata I think, encourages a
false (and not very interesting) dichotomy. If information has a use,
call it what it is: data. Store everything that's useful.

If you don't yet have a use in mind for your data, then you have a
place to start working :)

-n

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