XLUM: an open data format for exchange and long-term preservation of luminescence data - Université Bordeaux Montaigne Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Geochronology Année : 2023

XLUM: an open data format for exchange and long-term preservation of luminescence data

Résumé

Abstract. The concept of open data has become the modern science meme, and major funding bodies and publishers support open data. On a daily basis, however, the open data mandate frequently encounters technical obstacles, such as a lack of a suitable data format for data sharing and long-term data preservation. Such issues are often community-specific and best addressed through community-tailored solutions. In Quaternary sciences, luminescence dating is widely used for constraining the timing of event-based processes (e.g. sediment transport). Every luminescence dating study produces a vast body of primary data that usually remains inaccessible and incompatible with future studies or adjacent scientific disciplines. To facilitate data exchange and long-term data preservation (in short, open data) in luminescence dating studies, we propose a new XML-based structured data format called XLUM. The format applies a hierarchical data storage concept consisting of a root node (node 0), a sample (node 1), a sequence (node 2), a record (node 3), and a curve (node 4). The curve level holds information on the technical component (e.g. photomultiplier, thermocouple). A finite number of curves represent a record (e.g. an optically stimulated luminescence curve). Records are part of a sequence measured for a particular sample. This design concept allows the user to retain information on a technical component level from the measurement process. The additional storage of related metadata fosters future data mining projects on large datasets. The XML-based format is less memory-efficient than binary formats; however, its focus is data exchange, preservation, and hence XLUM long-term format stability by design. XLUM is inherently stable to future updates and backwards-compatible. We support XLUM through a new R package xlum, facilitating the conversion of different formats into the new XLUM format. XLUM is licensed under the MIT licence and hence available for free to be used in open- and closed-source commercial and non-commercial software and research projects.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
https:gchron.copernicus.org:articles:5:271:2023:gchron-5-271-2023.pdf (3.63 Mo) Télécharger le fichier
Origine : Fichiers éditeurs autorisés sur une archive ouverte
Licence : CC BY - Paternité

Dates et versions

hal-04120907 , version 1 (08-06-2023)

Licence

Paternité

Identifiants

Citer

Sebastian Kreutzer, Steve Grehl, Michael Höhne, Oliver Simmank, Kay Dornich, et al.. XLUM: an open data format for exchange and long-term preservation of luminescence data. Geochronology, 2023, 5 (1), pp.271-284. ⟨10.5194/gchron-5-271-2023⟩. ⟨hal-04120907⟩
51 Consultations
8 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More