Modern science, supported by e-science, has faced challenges in dealing with the large volume and variety of data generated primarily by technological advances in the processes of collecting and processing scientific data. Therefore, there was also an increase in the complexity of the analysis and experimentation processes. These processes currently involve multiple data sources and numerous activities performed by geographically distributed research groups, which must be understood, reused and reproducible. However, initiatives by the scientific community with the goal of developing tools and sensitize researchers to share their data and source codes related to their findings, along with scientific publications, are often insufficient to ensure the reproducibility and reuse of scientific results. This research aims to define a computational strategy to support the reuse and reproducibility of scientific data through data provenance management during its entire life cycle. Two principal components support our strategy in this research, an application profile that defines a standardized model for the description of provenance metadata, and a computational architecture for the management of the provenance metadata that enables the description, storage and sharing of these metadata in distributed and heterogeneous environments. We developed a functional prototype for the accomplishment of two case studies that considered the management of provenance metadata during the experiments of species distribution modeling. These case studies enabled the validation of the computational strategy proposed in the research, demonstrating the potential of this strategy in supporting the management of scientific data.
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