Metadata is data about data.
However, this definition is not particularly useful if you are not already clear what ‘data’ are and how to interpret them.
Instead, it is more useful to think of the difference between data and information: for data to become information, you need to understand the context in which the data are situated. Metadata is what provides this essential context.
Metadata + Data = Information
Example: this is some data but without any context, or metadata, it is very hard to know what any of it means.
Brown | ||
42 | ||
175 | ||
Green | ||
Very handsome |
Now, we have added some metadata in the form of ‘fields’ which describe each piece of data. We can see that these data refer to someone with brown eyes and size 42 feet. However, we are still missing some important pieces of contextual information – in particular, whilst we know the numbers 42 and 175 refer to shoe size and height respectively, we are not told what units these data have been measured in.
Fields | Data | |
Eye colour | Brown | |
Show size | 42 | |
Height | 175 | |
Favourite colour | Green | |
Self-description | Very handsome |
Applying additional metadata provides further information about the units in which numerical data is presented and makes the data even easier to interpret.
Fields | Unit | Data |
Eye colour | Brown | |
Shoe size | Paris points | 42 |
Height | Centimetres | 175 |
Favourite colour | Green | |
Self-description | Very handsome |
In this way, metadata provides the ‘what’, ‘how’, ‘where’, ‘when’, ‘why’ and ‘who’ of the data. It allows us to make sense of the data by providing the contextual information of where it comes from, the circumstances in which it was collected.
The Learning Hub is a resource for students and educators
tel | +44 (0)20 7331 5102 |
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closer@ucl.ac.uk |
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