0 the selection and care of objects to be shown in a museum or to form part of a collection of art, an exhibition,, etc.: --
his curation of the 2016 Meltdown festival
the curation of archaeological artefacts
The vaccine information in the database is collected by manual curation from over 1,600 peer-reviewed papers.
Protein annotation information that is catalogued was derived through manual curation using published literature by expert biologists and through bioinformatics analyses of the protein sequence.
Using e-portfolios in this way promotes data and knowledge curation and assists students in conducting research in an organized and discriminating way.
Such platforms disrupt traditional industries by creating new sources of supply and relying on curation for developing quality.
Contributions are monitored by a group of admins, but the bulk of peer review, editorial curation, and maintenance is the responsibility of the user community.
Successful digital curation will mitigate digital obsolescence, keeping the information accessible to users indefinitely.
The term "curation" in the past commonly referred to museum and library professionals.
Basic implementation involves curation of data from social media on large scale and to make sense out of it.