Download - Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Transcript
Page 1: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

About METS

Page 2: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Attrib

utio

n: h

ttp://w

ww

.flickr.com

/ph

oto

s/tom

bo

the

tom

ina

tor/3

04

23

32

01

6/size

s/l/

Page 3: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

describe

locate

access

preserve

Page 4: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Attrib

utio

n: h

ttp://w

ww

.flickr.com

/ph

oto

s/sug

ree

/30

24

63

77

89

/sizes/l/

Page 5: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

archival

tifflarge jpeg

small jpeg

TEI transcription ?audio ?video ?

PDF ?

Page 6: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

complex

Page 7: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

METSdocument

access

administration

preservation

location

structure

description

Page 9: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

National Library of WalesDigital Libraryhttp://ohio.llgc.org.uk/dig-lib.php

Page 10: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

National Libraryof Portugal

Page 11: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Columbia UniversityDigital Scriptoriumhttp://scriptorium.columbia.edu/

Page 12: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Det KongeligeBibliotek, Denmarke-Manuscriptshttp://www.kb.dk/en/kb/nb/ha/index.html

Page 13: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Others ….

• Oxford University, England• New York University, USA• Harvard University, USA• EU projects ??• University of Gras, Austria• National Library of New Zealand• And others ….

Page 14: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)
Page 15: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)
Page 16: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

mandatory

physical

logical

<structMap>structural map section

Page 17: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

loves structMap

locations

groups

<fileSec>file section

Page 18: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

embed (mdWrap)

reference (mdRef)

<dmdSec>descriptive metadata section

Page 19: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

rights

source

provenance

technical

<amdSec>administrative metadata section

Page 20: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

METS endorses

DescriptiveMARCMODS EADDC VRATEIHDR*DDI*FGDCLOMOTHER/OTHERMDTYPE

AdministrativeNISOIMGLC-AVISO 10115:2003 NAPPREMISPREMIS:OBJECTPREMIS:AGENTPREMIS:RIGHTSPREMIS:EVENTTextMDMETSRIGHTSOTHER/OTHERMDTYPE

Page 21: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

METS in detail

• metsHdr ->secondary element• dmdSec ->secondary element• amdSec -> secondary element • fileSec ->primary element• structMap ->primary element• structLink ->secondary element• behaviourSec ->secondary element

Page 22: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

<fileSec>

• Usefully groups content files by specifying location and links to pertinent metadata

• <fileGrp>: container element for files sharing something in common

• <file>: element representing a single, typically integral, content file

• Typically <file> elements are referenced from the <structMap>

Page 23: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

METS example

Page 24: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

<structMap>

• The only required element in METS

• Hierarchically arranges: – content files– parts of files– sequences and/or parallel groups of files into

a coherent whole.

Page 25: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

<structMap>• <structMap>: container

element for single, structural arrangement of content

• <div>: a structural division of the content

• <fptr>: points to a single manifestation of the content represented by the parent <div>

• <mptr>: points to content represented by external mets file (to be covered later)

Page 26: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Divs are pages of pdf

Page 27: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)
Page 28: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Digital Repository Software• A group of services that follow the OAIS

reference model ensuring the long-term storage and preservation of digital objects in a repository.

Page 29: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Digital Repository Software

• Fedora is the repository we ingest to

• Supports METS version 1.1

• Current software supports only Dublin Core descriptive metadata.

• Integration of METS into the workflow has begun

Page 30: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

METS + Digital Repository software

Page 31: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

METS + Digital Repository software

• A variety of front-ends : some more basic to shield user from METS complexity

• METS File Validation: Use an existing METS toolkit for procedural

construction, validation, marshalling and unmarshalling of METS document

• Factors influencing encoding decisions– For ingest at another institution or into a repository

(DSPACE, Fedora, Greenstone)– For preservation

Page 32: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Software used

• MSSQLServer

• Apache Tomcat

• Java SDK

• Fedora digital repository

• .NET framework

Page 33: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Staff Resources for METS

• Areas of expertise for existing staff, e.g., SW engineers, XML programmers, descriptive cataloging, preservation knowledge

• Skill levels of staff involved in existent or new workflow processes

• What additional or re-training would be needed? For whom? By whom?

Page 34: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Thank you

Gill HamiltonSystems Librarian

[email protected]

Tarik RahmanRepository Developer

[email protected]

National Library of ScotlandInformation Systems Development Team

Page 35: Proposed use of METS (Metadata Encoding & Transmission Standard) at National Library of Scotland (NLS)

Questions?