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Report on the First International Workshop on Database Preservation (PresDB'07)
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ACM SIGMOD Record archive
Volume 36 ,  Issue 3  (September 2007) table of contents
COLUMN: Reports table of contents
Pages: 55 - 58  
Year of Publication: 2007
ISSN:0163-5808
Authors
Vassilis Christophides  Institute of Computer Science, Heraklion, Greece
Peter Buneman  University of Edinburgh, UK
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

The need to preserve scientific, scholarly and cultural data has long been recognized. These data sets are valuable and many of them are either impossible to reproduce (e.g. climate and demographic data) or can only be recovered at enormous costs (e.g. data from high energy physics experiments). While substantial investment has been made in archiving and preserving conventional forms of these objects, such as documents, images and numerical data in some file format, the need to preserve entire databases has only recently emerged. Databases differ from fixed digital objects studied in the past, in that they change over time, they have internal structure, and they include schemas and integrity constraints, which are basic for the current and future interpretation of the data. Increasingly, database technology is being used in the storage of large numerical scientific data sets.


Collaborative Colleagues:
Vassilis Christophides: colleagues
Peter Buneman: colleagues