What is Metadata?
Metadata can be described as ‘data about data’. It is information that has been documented to help other researchers discover and cite someone's data. Metadata makes data easily searchable, easily located from a citation and easily understood by people who might want to use that data. It is the descriptive information that gives context to data.
The National Information Standards Organization (NISO) defined metadata as follows “Metadata is structured information that describes, explains, locates, or otherwise makes it easier to retrieve, use or manage an information resource.”
University of Pretoria repositories are committed to making the metadata they create as open as possible to encourage discovery of materials, research, and a variety of current and future uses. The library avoids placing additional restrictions on reuse, except in cases of ethical, contractual or legal obligations.
Three main types of Metadata
Descriptive Metadata
This type of metadata identifies resources by their descriptions.It helps connect users to resources, and provides important context about a resource once it is discovered. Descriptive metadata may include elements such as title, author, subject, publisher, idetifier, date of publication etc.
Metadata description therefore tries to answer the following questions and many more during the discovery process: who created the data, what the data file contains, when the data were generated, where the data were generated,why the data were generated.
Administrative metadata
This type of data fascilitates the nanagement of resources. It can include elements such as the file type, as well as when and how the asset was created, rights and use of data.
Structural Metadata
This metadata type indicates how digital assets are organised and how they are related to one another. It includes the physical structure of data and it is generally used in machine processing.
If metadata is to function effectively, it needs to be created and structured consistently by making use of metadata standards/schema.
A metadata standard or schema is a set of elements that have been standardized for a particular field of research which is used to describe data in a consistant manner. Different disciplines have different schemas but the most generally used is the Dublin Core, in which the Simple Dublin Core Elements are useful for documenting metadata for research data.
Other useful metadata standards include:
When metadata is created, a researcher should bear this in mind
Metadata checklist
See also a document on Figshare Metadata for research data