literalorigin
Literalorigin is a term used in information provenance and digital humanities to denote the exact, literal source of a statement, artifact, or data element. It emphasizes the primary source material as published or recorded, rather than a paraphrase, summary, or secondary interpretation. The concept is intended to distinguish the original material from derivative or inferred representations and to support transparent attribution.
In practical applications, literalorigin is used in data provenance frameworks, archival databases, and fact-checking workflows. A
Examples include encoding the literalorigin of a quoted passage to point to the exact edition of a
Relation to other concepts: literalorigin is related to provenance, citation linkage, and source attribution. It differs
See also data provenance, citation, source attribution, and archival management.