
Some questions/issues that occur to me:
- Should it include links to individual files, just their names, or route users to the data package only?
- If we expose individual files like that, we should try to ensure that all the contextual metadata is getting downloaded by users who click links to individual files.
- Are we counting hits to pages and files through the API in the view and download counts?
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*context* is king, or at least that’s the party line J.
dryad’s model is data-package centric, despite file representation near-independence.
theoretically, there may be no problems w/ utopia approach (i like it..); but the pressing question is if users understand the context. indeed, consistency across projects is key, and the Elsevier approach can serve as a good model. (Hilmar conveys links are not working, but is this just the temp. DOI situation that has been resolved or more?).
best wishes, jane
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We are trying to avoid users downloading a datafile without the accompanying readme or other metadata that they need to understand its contents, without the link to the paper, and without documentation of where/when it was published on Dryad. So my feeling is that even an individual file download should ultimately be packaged ina larger bundle (even if not a data package as we define it), and that bundle should at least include a human-readable manifest along with the datafile. I take this also to follow from the recommendations of the NISO-NFAIS for supplementary materials:
http://www.niso.org/apps/group_public/document.php?document_id=7964&wg_abbrev=suppbusiness
Our practice doesn't align with this very well yet, and I'm not sure how best to square the need to provide API access to the bitstream while preserving context. Ideas?
In the absence of an elegant, immediate solution for managing this tradeoff, isn't it preferable just to direct users to the landing page for the package?
Todd
(Hilmar conveys links are not working, but is this just the temp. DOI situation that has been resolved or more?
-----Original Message-----
From: drya...@googlegroups.com [mailto:drya...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Vision, Todd J
Sent: Monday, February 20, 2012 1:27 PM
To: Dryad Developers
Subject: Re: [dryad-dev] Fwd: Dryad and Utopia
Jane, exactly.
We are trying to avoid users downloading a datafile without the accompanying readme or other metadata that they need to understand its contents, without the link to the paper, and without documentation of where/when it was published on Dryad. So my feeling is that even an individual file download should ultimately be packaged ina larger bundle (even if not a data package as we define it), and that bundle should at least include a human-readable manifest along with the datafile. I take this also to follow from the recommendations of the NISO-NFAIS for supplementary materials:
http://www.niso.org/apps/group_public/document.php?document_id=7964&wg_abbrev=suppbusiness
Our practice doesn't align with this very well yet, and I'm not sure how best to square the need to provide API access to the bitstream while preserving context. Ideas?
**if we were to implement the Dryad DCAP 3.0, there is a property, "dcterms:isPartOf/Associated Dryad Data Package Identifier" that could provide this link, so the user could easily get the full load of contextual material. Although, it is supposed to be the key to this sort of linking, we don't have evidence of it working, b/c it hasn't been implemented. Indeed, Dryad could follow our suggestion below, and it may provide a solution. My concern is that it may place too much of a burden on the user (searcher), and could cause frustration too. A users may say...what happened to the link for the dataset I found? The link clicked just gives me the publication or a higher level of information, and I want the nugget. The best approach in my opinion would be to provide the 'isPartOf" association, or perhaps the description for individual data files needs to be revisited.
See below, following **
-----Original Message-----
From: drya...@googlegroups.com [mailto:drya...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Vision, Todd J
Sent: Monday, February 20, 2012 1:27 PM
To: Dryad Developers
Subject: Re: [dryad-dev] Fwd: Dryad and Utopia
Jane, exactly.**if we were to implement the Dryad DCAP 3.0, there is a property, "dcterms:isPartOf/Associated Dryad Data Package Identifier" that could provide this link, so the user could easily get the full load of contextual material. Although, it is supposed to be the key to this sort of linking, we don't have evidence of it working, b/c it hasn't been implemented. Indeed, Dryad could follow our suggestion below, and it may provide a solution. My concern is that it may place too much of a burden on the user (searcher), and could cause frustration too. A users may say...what happened to the link for the dataset I found? The link clicked just gives me the publication or a higher level of information, and I want the nugget. The best approach in my opinion would be to provide the 'isPartOf" association, or perhaps the description for individual
We are trying to avoid users downloading a datafile without the accompanying readme or other metadata that they need to understand its contents, without the link to the paper, and without documentation of where/when it was published on Dryad. So my feeling is that even an individual file download should ultimately be packaged ina larger bundle (even if not a data package as we define it), and that bundle should at least include a human-readable manifest along with the datafile. I take this also to follow from the recommendations of the NISO-NFAIS for supplementary materials:
http://www.niso.org/apps/group_public/document.php?document_id=7964&wg_abbrev=suppbusiness
Our practice doesn't align with this very well yet, and I'm not sure how best to square the need to provide API access to the bitstream while preserving context. Ideas?
| Mark Diggory (Schedule a Meeting) 2888 Loker Avenue East, Suite 305, Carlsbad, CA. 92010 Esperantolaan 4, Heverlee 3001, Belgium http://www.atmire.com |
Hello Mark,
Yes, great, what you list below is essentially the same as the Dryad AP 3.0; dcterms is viewed as a bit more compliant w/DCAM, but this doesn’t matter in this context.
So, now, maybe I’m not understanding Todd’s question (or he would like more context w/the file metadata? The one thing I notice is that I can’t click on the dc:relation metadata to easily navigate up to the parent/package metadata or down to the children. In other words, the relation IDs are not hypertext in the Dryad, or at least via my view in Firefox. Is this the case w/other folks, or just me?
best wishes, jane
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Hello Mark,
Yes, great, what you list below is essentially the same as the Dryad AP 3.0; dcterms is viewed as a bit more compliant w/DCAM, but this doesn’t matter in this context.
So, now, maybe I’m not understanding Todd’s question (or he would like more context w/the file metadata? The one thing I notice is that I can’t click on the dc:relation metadata to easily navigate up to the parent/package metadata or down to the children. In other words, the relation IDs are not hypertext in the Dryad, or at least via my view in Firefox. Is this the case w/other folks, or just me?
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