Title Digital Archaeological Data in the Creative Industries: access, barriers, and the potential for inspiration
Authors Laužikas, Rimvydas ; Jovaišaitė-Blaževičienė, Indrė ; Kelpšienė, Ingrida ; Šuminas, Andrius
DOI 10.11141/ia.71.2
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Is Part of Internet archaeology.. York : University of York. 2026, iss. 71, p. [1-23].. eISSN 1363-5387
Keywords [eng] archaeology data archives ; archaeology data re-use ; quality in use, FAIR principles, non-archaeology professionals ; Archaeology Data Service ; ARIADNE Research Infrastructure, Archaeology Interactive Reports
Abstract [eng] This paper explores how creative professionals—such as artists, writers, and architects—engage with digital archaeological and heritage data. Through a quality-in-use framework, the study examines the motivations, access methods, and barriers encountered by non-archaeology professionals' audiences. The research combined interviews, eye-tracking experiments, and post-experiment questionnaires. Findings reveal three levels of interest in archaeological data within the creative industries: inspiration, improvisation, and reconstruction—each requiring varying information behaviour and degrees of data accuracy. At the heart of the study is the inspirational use of data, highlighting how non-specialists seek archaeological resources for creative purposes. Creative industries professionals were chosen as the study group because understanding their methods of accessing digital archaeological data and the barriers they face is not only relevant to the creative industries but also contributes to broader knowledge about how non-archaeology professionals engage with data and information produced by professional archaeologists in archaeology data archives, and how such data can be understood and accessed by broader audiences. The study identifies four key barriers: (i) professional archaeological terminology, (ii) search behaviours shaped by simple keyword search, (iii) lack of interpretive context, and (iv) a predominance of text over visuals—factors that limit the reuse of archaeological data in creative and public-facing contexts. These challenges limit the accessibility and creative reuse of archaeological data. The research emphasises the need for more user-friendly, visually-rich, and interpretative resources to foster engagement between archaeology and broader creative communities. This research was conducted as part of the TETRARCHs (Transforming Data Re-use in Archaeology) project.
Published York : University of York
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2026
CC license CC license description