<p>This book explores&nbsp;<i>provenance</i> the study and documentation of how things come to be.&nbsp; Traditionally defined as the origins source or ownership of an artifact provenance today is not limited to historical domains.&nbsp; It can be used to describe what did happen (<i>retrospective provenance</i>) what could happen (<i>subjunctive provenance</i>) or what will happen (<i>prospective provenance</i>). Provenance information is ubiquitous and abundant; for example a wine label that details the winery type of grape and country of origin tells a provenance story that determines the value of the bottle.&nbsp; This book presents select standards used in organizing provenance information and provides concrete examples on how to implement them.&nbsp; Provenance transcends disciplines and this book is intended for anyone who is interested in documenting workflows and recipes.&nbsp; The goal is to empower readers to frame and answer provenance questions for their own work.&nbsp; Provenance is increasingly important in computational workflows and e-sciences and addresses the need for a practical introduction to provenance documentation with simple-to-use multi-disciplinary examples and activities.&nbsp; Case studies and examples address the creation of basic records using a variety of provenance metadata models and the differences between PROV ProvONE and PREMIS are discussed.&nbsp; Readers will gain an understanding of the uses of provenance metadata in different domains and sectors in order to make informed decisions on their use.&nbsp; Documenting provenance can be a daunting challenge and with clear examples and explanations the task will be less intimidating to explore provenance needs.</p>
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