Dear Colleagues

Join us on Tuesday 1/10 for a free Webinar on “International Metadata Standards 
and Enterprise Data Quality Metadata Systems” presented by Tedd Habermann (HDF 
Group).

Tuesday January 10th at 0900 am Pacific Time, 1200 noon Eastern Time.

Register now via https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3238549206667117058 
<https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3238549206667117058>


Abstract: 
Well-documented data quality is critical in situations where scientists and 
decision-makers need to combine multiple datasets from different disciplines 
and instrumentation to address scientific questions or difficult decisions. 
Standardized data quality metadata could be very helpful in these situations. 
Many efforts at developing data quality standards falter because of the 
diversity of approaches to measuring and reporting data quality. The “one size 
fits all” paradigm does not generally work well in this situation.

The ISO data quality standard (ISO 19157) was recently endorsed by the U.S. 
Federal Geographic Data Committee. Rather than seeking to align different 
quality measurement systems (a daunting task), the standard focuses on 
systematically describing how data quality is measured. ISO 19157 also 
introduces the idea of standard data quality measures that can be well 
documented in a shared repository and used for consistently describing how data 
quality is measured across an enterprise. The standard includes recommendations 
for properties of these measures that include unique identifiers, references, 
illustrations and examples. Metadata records can reference these measures using 
the unique identifier and reuse them along with details (and references) that 
describe how the measure was applied to a particular dataset.

A second important new feature of ISO 19157 is the inclusion of citations to 
existing papers or reports that describe quality of a dataset. This capability 
allows users to find this information in a single location, i.e. the dataset 
metadata, rather than searching the web or other catalogs. This presentation 
will describe these and other capabilities of ISO 19157 with examples of how 
they can be used to describe data quality and also compare these approaches 
with other standards.


About DataONE: 
DataONE enables universal access to data and also aids researchers in 
fulfilling their need for data management and in providing secure and permanent 
access to their data. These needs are filled by offering the scientific 
community a suite of tools and training materials that cover all aspects of the 
data life-cycle; from data collection to management, analysis and publication.


Amber E Budden, PhD
Director for Community Engagement and Outreach
DataONE
University of New Mexico
1312 Basehart SE
Albuquerque NM 87106

cell: 505.205.7675
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

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