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Data, Information, and Databases BDIS 6.1

Data, Information, and Databases BDIS 6.1. BSAD 141 Dave Novak. Topics Covered. Information types: transactional – vs - analytical Five characteristics of information quality Database versus a DBMS RDBMS: advantages and terminology Multi-user issues. The Need for High-Quality Information.

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Data, Information, and Databases BDIS 6.1

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  1. Data, Information, and DatabasesBDIS 6.1 BSAD 141 Dave Novak

  2. Topics Covered • Information types: transactional –vs- analytical • Five characteristics of information quality • Database versus a DBMS • RDBMS: advantages and terminology • Multi-user issues

  3. The Need for High-Quality Information • Data are everywhere • Which data are important? • Which data should the organization store? • Which data need to be further manipulated? • Which data are required to make different types of decisions? • How does the organization convert various data into information that is needed?

  4. The Need for High-Quality Information • Recall difference between data and information from Lecture #1

  5. The Need for High-Quality Information • The need to obtain and analyze the many different levels, formats, and granularities of organizational information to make decisions

  6. The Need for High-Quality Information • CRITICAL TO REMEMBER! • Decisions are only as good as the quality of the data and information that are used to make the decisions… • Crap in  Crap out • Using technology to help you make a decision using poor quality data doesn’t help

  7. Data Quality Problems Example of Low Quality Data

  8. Characteristics of High Quality Information • 1) Accurate • 2) Complete • 3) Consistent • 4) Unique • 5) Timely

  9. 1) Accurate • Are the data (is the information) correct, precise, and exact? • For example: • Are the data factual? • Are values error-free? • Have data been verified? • Correct spelling • Precise numbers

  10. 2) Complete • Are the data whole (complete) and do they have all the necessary parts? • For example • Are there missing values or pieces of data? • Full street address • Area code along with phone number • Empty fields • Full Names

  11. 3) Consistent • Are the data are in agreement with themselves and with known facts? • For example • Does summary information agree with detailed information? Can you reconcile the data? • Do mathematical manipulations yield correct results? • Are data manipulations performed consistently for the entire data set?

  12. 4) Unique • Are the data unique (one of a kind) or are there redundant, repetitious or unnecessary data stored in the same database? • For example: • Are there duplicate records for the same “event”? • Are there different versions of “the same” file or event (which is the latest or most accurate?)

  13. 5) Timely • Are the data current with respect to decision-making needs? • Timeliness depends on the situation • Real-time information – Immediate, up-to-date information • Real-time system – Provides real-time information in response to requests • “Real-time” is a relative description that depends on the use or need

  14. How can data be of “poor” quality? • Customers intentionally enter inaccurate information to protect their privacy or because they are irritated • Different data entry standards and formats • Operators enter abbreviated or erroneous information by accident or to save time • Third party and external information contains inconsistencies, inaccuracies, and errors

  15. What is a Database? • Database – a collection of information organized in a way that provides efficient retrieval • There are electronic and physical databases (paper/print) • A database can be a very simple collection of data such as alphabetically arranging names in an address book

  16. What is a Database Management System (DBMS)? • Database management systems (DBMS) – A set of computer programs / software that allow users to store, modify, query, and retrieve data in a systematic and controlled manner

  17. Database Management System (DBMS) • A database (the physical collection of data) is typically not portable across different DBMS • Like application software, different DBMS are generally designed to work with specific system software and specific database schema • A database is typically something inside the DBMS, although in the case of a MS Excel workbook the database is a standalone object

  18. Database Management System (DBMS) • A very popular and common DBMS is the relational DBMS (RDBMS) • A standard program and user interface is the Structure Query Language (SQL) • A programming language used to create, modify, and retrieve information from a database • Different databases use different (proprietary) variations to standard SQL

  19. Database Management System (DBMS) • According to the following source (which I did not verify with the Gartner report) the top five commercial RDBMS vendors in 2011 were: • http://itknowledgeexchange.techtarget.com/eye-on-oracle/oracle-the-clear-leader-in-24-billion-rdbms-market/ • Oracle (≈ 50% market share) • IBM (≈ 20% market share) • Microsoft (≈ 17% market share) • SAP • Teradata

  20. Database Management System (DBMS) • Oracle: Oracle Database and MySQL • IBM: DB2 and Informix • Microsoft: SQL Server • SAP: Sybase Enterprise and Sybase IQ • Teradata

  21. Single File Data Management • MS Excel is a database, but it is not a DBMS! • Each worksheet is a single large two-dimensional matrix • A database is simply an organized collection of data that can be accessed • A DBMS is software that is used to manage the database and provides a set of tools used to manipulate and query data

  22. Relational Database Management System (RDBMS) • Data are organized as a set of formal tables • Data can be accessed and combined in different ways without reorganizing the data within the tables • Data can be manipulated in different ways and combined with data in other tables without altering the original data in the table • RDBMS can be easily extended / scaled – new data and new categories of data can be added without changing existing data

  23. RDBMS Terminology • Data model – A picture of logical data structures that detail the relationships among data elements • Metadata – Formal description of data structures (like tables and fields) and any constraints of the table or values within the table • Data about the containers of data

  24. RDBMS Terminology • Data dictionary – Compiles all of the metadata about the elements in the data model

  25. Entity Sets (Tables) • Relational table or entity set – Each table consists of columns (fields/attributes) and rows (records/entities) • The table has a name that describes the group of related entities within the table • For example, a table labeled “Student” would contain a group of student entities

  26. Entity / Record / Row • A person, place, thing, transaction, or event about which data are being collected and stored • The individual rows in a table contain entities • Each row is also referred to as a record • Example?

  27. Attributes / Field / Column • The data elements that describe the characteristics of a specific entity • The columns in each table contain the attributes • Example?

  28. What is a Relationship? • 1) When designing a relational DB, data need to be separated into tables that contain related data elements • For example we would not store data related to customer (name, address, phone, etc.) and data related to the customer’s particular order (orderID, date, shipping method, etc.) in the same table

  29. What is a Relationship? • All information specific to a customer would go into a “Customer” table • Allinformation specific to the specific orders would go into an “Order” table • We would then create a relationship between the tables to match a particular customer with a particular order

  30. What is a Relationship? • A relationship in an RDB is an association between the entities within the different tables • There are THREE (3) types of relationships: • One-to-One (1:1) • One-to-Many (1:M) • Many-to-Many (M:M)

  31. Creating Relationships Through Keys • KEYS are used to create relationships between the entities in different tables in the RDB • Primary key • Foreign key

  32. Creating Relationships Through Keys • For our purposes: • Every table in a RDB MUST have a primary key • The foreign key is not required in every table and will only appear on the “many” side of the relationship

  33. Advantages of RDBMs • RDBMS advantages from a business perspective include • 1) Flexibility • 2) Scalability and performance • 3) Improved information integrity (quality) • Reduced information redundancy • 4) Information security

  34. 1) Flexibility • Handle changes quickly and easily • Provide users with different views of the data • Arranging data items in different ways depending on the user need • Showing a particular user only some of the available fields while not showing them other fields

  35. 1) Flexibility: Schema Different database schema can be “owned” by or associated with different users The schema is a user personalized set of tables, views, and indexes

  36. 2) Scalability and Performance • A DBMS must expand to meet increased demand, while maintaining acceptable performance levels • Scalability – Refers to how well a system can adapt to increased demands • Performance – Measures how quickly a system performs a certain process or transaction

  37. 3) Information Integrity • Information integrity – a measure of information quality • Know that data have not been entered incorrectly or altered in an unauthorized manner • Integrity constraint – rules that help ensure the quality of information • We will discuss entity integrity and referential integrity (there is also domain integrity)

  38. 3) Information Integrity: Controlling Redundancy • Redundant data are ok if they serve a specific purpose such as being used as backup directly linked to the source • Backup systems promote fault tolerance, • Unintentional redundancy is not good • Wasted storage • Difficult to modify • Possible inconsistencies

  39. 4) Information Security • Information is an organizational asset and must be protected • RDBMS offer several security features • Accesslevel – Determines the level of access each individual user has • Who can access the DBMS • Accesscontrol – Determines the types of things each group can do • Types of access, such as power to create, modify, delete, and/or read • Which types of SQL statements can be executed

  40. Multiuser Issues • DBMS serve many different users with different needs • Many users may require concurrent access to the same data • Must preserve integrity of data and the performance of the system

  41. Multiuser Issues • Problem: if multiple users (say tens or even hundreds of users) access the same data concurrently, how does the DBMS allow one user to change data without being overwritten by another user? This is typically referred to as the Lost-update problem

  42. Multiuser Issues • Concurrent transactions are addressed through the use of transactions and locks • Transactions – single indivisible action that affects some data • Once a transaction is committed, it is permanent and changes are visible to all users • If transaction is not committed, changes are “rolled back” or reversed

  43. Multiuser Issues • Locks – literally “locks” the data so that changes cannot be made on the data while another transaction is in process

  44. Enterprise DBMS

  45. Learning Outcomes • Five characteristics of quality information • Define database, DBMS, RDBMS, and supporting components and terminology • Advantages of RDBMS • What is SQL? • Describe the lost-update problem and how it is addressed

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