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Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Contents; About the Contributors; Part I Synthesis; Provenance: Past, Present and Future in Interdisciplinary and Multidisciplinary Perspective; 1 Introduction; 2 The Role of Provenance; 3 Defining and Conceptualizing Provenance; 3.1 Archival Science; 3.2 Library and Information Science; 3.3 Computer Science; 3.4 Cognitive Science in Visual Analytics; 4 Domains of Application and Use Cases; 4.1 Preservation of Digital Records and Other Digital Materials; 4.2 Cloud-Based Storage; 4.3 Digital Evidence in Litigation; 4.4 E-Science and Reproducible Research

4.5 Digital Humanities Research4.6 Open Data; 4.7 Crowd-Sourced Knowledge Management Platforms; 4.8 Knowledge Organization and Indexing; 4.9 Intelligence Analysis; 4.10 Decision-Support Systems; 4.11 "Human-in-the-Loop" Processes; 5 Methods of Capturing and Representing Provenance; 5.1 Law; 5.2 Archival Arrangement and Description; 5.3 E-Science; 5.4 Digital Preservation in Libraries; 5.5 Knowledge Organization; 5.6 Decision-Support Systems; 5.7 Visual Analytics; 6 Provenance Standards and Specifications; 6.1 Law; 6.2 The Semantic Web

6.3 The Bodleian Library's CAMELOT Data Model: An Implementation of the W3C PROV Standard6.4 Digital Libraries Preservation Metadata Standards; 6.5 Digital Records and Archives Preservation Standards; 6.6 Visual Analytics; 7 Research Challenges; 7.1 Conceptual/Theoretical; 7.2 Interoperability; 7.3 Technical Challenges; 8 Conclusion; References; Part II Archival Perspectives; Describing Archives in Context: Peter J Scott and the Australian `Series' System; 1 Peter Scott: Australia's Best Known, but Least Well-Understood Archivist; 2 The Complex Reality of Provenance

3 Evolution of the Australian `Series' System4 Post-Custodialism and the Records Continuum; 4.1 What About Functions?; 4.2 The Series System and Standards for Archival Description; References; Provenance: An Archival Perspective; 1 Definition and Conceptualization; 2 Relationship to Current Research; 3 Motivations for Research; 4 Capturing and Representing Provenance; 5 Research Challenges; Appendix: Bibliography; Selected Works; Short Bibliography; References; Research Issues in Archival Provenance; 1 Introduction; 2 A State of Confusion; 3 Out of the Morass; References

Part III Library and Information Science PerspectivesProvenance in Digital Libraries: Source, Context, Value and Trust; 1 Overview of Interest and Application of the Concept of Provenance; 2 The Relevance of the Concept of Provenance to Digital Libraries; 3 Conceptualizations and Enactments of Provenance in the Bodleian Digital Library; 4 Key Challenges in Establishing Provenance in the Bodleian Digital Library; 5 Research Challenges Associated with Provenance; References; Conceptual Provenance in Indexing Languages; 1 Introduction, Motivation, and Rationale

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