DIGITAL ARCHIVES

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DIGITAL ARCHIVES. Into the Light Gabrielle V. Michalek, Head Digital Library Initiatives Carnegie Mellon University. A Sound Digital Archives. Accessibility Interoperability Sustainability Preservation. Carnegie Mellon’s Digital Collections. Senator Heinz - 850,000 images - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of DIGITAL ARCHIVES

DIGITAL ARCHIVES

Into the Light

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Head Digital Library Initiatives Carnegie Mellon University

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

A Sound Digital Archives

Accessibility

Interoperability

Sustainability

Preservation

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Carnegie Mellon’s Digital Collections

Senator Heinz - 850,000 images

Herbert Simon - 153,000 images

Allen Newell - 145,000 images

Over 1 Million Images Online http://diva.library.cmu.edu/

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Other CMU Digital Projects

SmartWeb Exhibit http://shelf1.library.cmu.edu/IMLS/MindModels/

Million Book Project http://www.rr.cs.cmu.edu/mbdl.doc

Universal Libraryhttp://ul.cs.cmu.edu/

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

History

1992 Began work on Senator Heinz Papers

1995 Developed Helios System to digitize, create metadata, OCR, and provide access to collection

1999 Applied technology to Simon and Newell Collections

2000 Migrated to DIVA

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

DIVA

DigitalInformationVersatileArchive

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

DIVA

New platform Oracle based Takes in any XML File Supports heterogeneous

collections Full text or fielded searching Browsing and sorting

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Use of Standards

Metadata Creation – EAD, Dublin Core, etc

Imaging – 600 DPI, 8 Bit Greyscale, 24 Bit Color

OCR – ASCII Text

Data Structure – Metadata Encoding and Transmission Standard (METS)

Metadata

What is it and why is it important?

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Descriptive Metadata

Data that describes the digital object such as a bibliographic record or finding aid, i.e. MARC record

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Structural Metadata

Represents the relationship between multiparts objects, i.e. chapters of a book

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Administrative Metadata

“Data that supports the unique identification, maintenance, and archiving of digital objects, as well as related functions of the organization managing the repository”, i.e.who created this object, which software, version was used, etc.

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

What We Are Using

Archival Collections - Encoded Archival Description (EAD)

Books, Journals, Photographs, etc. – Dublin Core

Metadata Encoding and Transmission Standard - METS

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

METS Incorporates descriptive, structural, and

administrative metadata

Allows you to bind heterogeneous collections together and show relationships between information

Becomes a wrapper for the collection

XML DTD http://www.loc.gov/standards/mets/

Gabrielle V. Michalek, Carnegie Mellon University

Goals

Accessibility

Interoperability

Sustainability

Preservation

Thank You

http://diva.library.cmu.edu/