From anarchy to good practice: the evolution of standards in archaeological computing

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Abstract

This paper reviews the importance of standards in archaeological computing and traces their development, and the tensions surrounding their deployment. Three categories of standards are defined: technical, content and metadata standards. Standards are shown to be particularly important to current initiatives which seek to achieve interoperability between distributed electronic resources. If we are to achieve the potential advantages of a semantic web for heritage data over traditional search engine technologies, standards are essential. The paper introduces the Archaeotools project, which is seeking to create a faceted browse interface to archaeological resources. It concludes that data standards and ontologies are essential to the success of such projects.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)27-35
Number of pages8
JournalArcheologia e Calcolatori
Volume20
Publication statusPublished - 2009

Bibliographical note

Reproduced with permission from the publisher.

Keywords

  • Archaeological computing

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