对用户利益的认识不足阻碍了博物馆的开放数据计划

IF 0.4 Q4 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE Evidence Based Library and Information Practice Pub Date : 2023-09-24 DOI:10.18438/eblip30372
Jordan Patterson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Booth, P., Navarrete, T., &;Ogundipe, A.(2022)。博物馆开放数据生态系统的比较研究。文献学报78(4),761-779。https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-05-2021-0102目标:利用Nardi和O 'Day(1999)对生态系统的定义,即“在特定的当地环境中,由人、实践、价值观和技术组成的系统”,了解艺术博物馆如何制定政策,与它们所处的各种开放数据(OD)生态系统进行互动和响应。设计——多个案例研究,包括访谈和随后的定性分析,以及文档分析。背景-欧洲艺术博物馆OD生态系统。研究对象:研究对象包括挪威、荷兰和西班牙三个独立的中型艺术博物馆的7名管理人员;这些国家的文化政策机构的代表人数不详;来自每个博物馆OD生态系统的数量不详的政府、博物馆和研究文件。方法:研究人员确定了3家有OD倡议的博物馆,并对每家机构的相关工作人员进行了深入访谈。研究人员还采访了国家OD政策相关机构的代表。研究人员对他们的数据进行了编码,并列出了五个关键的OD“生态系统组成部分”,他们用它来分析正在考虑的3个特定的博物馆生态系统。主要成果-文化遗产机构的开放数据倡议受到许多内部和外部压力。博物馆通常会对环境做出反应,自上而下的政策要求似乎是推进开放数据倡议的有效手段。然而,博物馆工作人员和其他利益相关者似乎没有充分理解开放数据的价值主张。因此,博物馆参与了OD倡议,即使益处尚未得到证明,并且如何使用OD,由谁使用OD仍然不清楚。结论-吸毒过量最终用户的需求和愿望仍然不明确,也很难理解。因此,博物馆花费资源和精力来提供OD,同时仍然不确定他们的投资回报。对用户的关注可能会导致“生态系统组件之间更稳健的信息流”。
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Insufficient Understanding of User Benefits Impedes Open Data Initiatives at Museums
A Review of: Booth, P., Navarrete, T., & Ogundipe, A. (2022). Museum open data ecosystems: A comparative study. Journal of Documentation 78(4), 761-779. https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-05-2021-0102 Objective – Using Nardi and O’Day’s (1999) definition of ecosystem as “a system of people, practices, values, and technologies in a particular local environment,” to understand how art museums form their policy to interact with and respond to the various open data (OD) ecosystems in which they operate. Design – Multiple case study consisting of interviews and subsequent qualitative analysis, as well as document analysis. Setting – European art museum OD ecosystems. Subjects – Subjects included 7 management staff members at 3 separate mid-size, art-based museums located in Norway, the Netherlands, and Spain; an unspecified number of representatives from a cultural-policy agency in each of those countries; an unspecified number of government, museum, and research documents from within each museum’s OD ecosystem. Methods – The researchers identified 3 museums with OD initiatives and conducted in-depth interviews with relevant staff members at each institution. The researchers also interviewed representatives from relevant national OD policy-related agencies. The researchers coded their data and developed a list of five key OD “ecosystem components,” which they used to analyze the 3 specific museum ecosystems under consideration. Main Results – Open data initiatives at cultural heritage institutions are subject to a number of internal and external pressures. Museums are typically responsive to their environments, and top-down policy requirements appear to be an effective means of advancing open data initiatives. Nevertheless, the value proposition of open data appears to be insufficiently understood by museum staff and other stakeholders. As a result, museums participate in OD initiatives even when the benefit remains undemonstrated and the use of OD—how and by whom—remains unclear. Conclusion – The needs and wants of OD end-users remain ill-defined and poorly understood. As a result, museums expend resources and effort to supply OD, while remaining uncertain about the return on their investment. Attention to users could result in “more robust information flows between ecosystem components.”
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来源期刊
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
44
审稿时长
12 weeks
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