Title
Do the stars align?: Stakeholders and strategies in libraries' curation of an astronomy dataset
Abstract
AbstractAbstractWhen developing university‐based research data curation services, libraries face critical decisions around organization and sustainability that can affect dataset producers' satisfaction with these services. We present a study, involving interviews (n = 43) and ethnographic observation, of how two libraries partnered with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to curate a significant astronomy dataset. Each library took different decisions: one library assigned activities to a unit specializing in digital curation, while the other distributed activities across its existing units. Neither approach proved a silver bullet. While library staff members felt the outcomes largely met their expectations, SDSS leaders expressed mixed opinions. We identify three factors that contributed to these differences in perspective: differing strategic motivations for undertaking this Data Transfer Process, SDSS leaders' misperceptions about libraries, and organizational mismatches. These factors contributed to four differences in perspective between SDSS leaders and library staff: provenance as technical information or as information about social context, dataset as a live research object or as a static object to be preserved, systems and services tailored to the dataset or easily adaptable to other datasets, and obstacles as setbacks or as opportunities. Only those differences that emerged when SDSS collaboration members and library staff communicated frequently were resolved.
Year
DOI
Venue
2021
10.1002/asi.24392
Periodicals
DocType
Volume
Issue
Journal
72
2
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
2330-1635
0
0.34
References 
Authors
0
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Peter Darch131.44
Ashley Sands2376.22
Christine L. Borgman31520208.55
Milena S. Golshan4143.21