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Data Cultures: a scoping literature review

journal contribution
posted on 2023-04-05, 04:43 authored by Gillian Oliver, Jocelyn CranefieldJocelyn Cranefield, Spencer LilleySpencer Lilley, Matthew Lewellen
Introduction. This paper reports the outcomes from a literature review of the concept of data cultures as the first step in extending the body of knowledge relating to information culture in the information science domain and raising awareness of the need for further research. Method. A scoping literature review was conducted of English language peer reviewed publications indexed in SCOPUS as well as specialist information and computer science databases. Results. There is a rich and growing body of research concerned with the concept of data cultures, spread across a wide range of disciplines but without any evidence of a universally adopted shared definition or understanding. Information science expertise does not appear to be widely recognised as providing any essential insight into this problem space. Conclusion. The knowledge and understanding of information cultures gained from information science research does not seem to be being applied to data dominated environments. Expertise relating to information behaviour, digital literacies, information management, digital sustainability and preservation are unique and essential perspectives to understand issues relating to data cultures.

History

Preferred citation

Oliver, G., Cranefield, J., Lilley, S. & Lewellen, M. (n.d.). Data Cultures: a scoping literature review. Information Research: an international electronic journal, 28(1). https://doi.org/10.47989/irpaper950

Journal title

Information Research: an international electronic journal

Volume

28

Issue

1

Publisher

University of Boras, Faculty of Librarianship, Information, Education and IT

Publication status

Published online

Online publication date

2023-03-15

ISSN

1368-1613

eISSN

1368-1613