Digital and institutional repositories: emerging architectures - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Digital and institutional repositories: emerging architectures

Description:

DSpace, EPrints, Fedora, Moodle, Bodington, Sakai, Plone ... VTLS VITAL (Fedora), Proquest (Digital Commons), Ex Libris (DigiTools) The Digital Library ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:41
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: stevehi3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Digital and institutional repositories: emerging architectures


1
Digital and institutional repositories emerging
architectures
A short workshop moderated by Steve Hitchcock,
School of Electronics and Computer Science (ECS),
Southampton University On 21 and 22 June, 2006,
at the SCONUL Conference 2006,
Newcastle-upon-Tyne
2
The workshop brief
  • The question for repositories is not which
    software you should choose, but which
    applications and services you want to support.
    With growing numbers of institutional
    repositories and increasing commitment within
    institutions, alongside an active and growing
    programme of development more broadly in digital
    repositories, notably that sponsored by JISC in
    the UK, this is a picture that could change
    significantly in the next few years. This
    workshop will provide the opportunity to explore
    and discuss, from institutional perspectives,
    some of these developments, with a view to
    anticipating emerging architectures that could
    support expanded repository capabilities.

3
What is an IR? Lynch 2003
  • a university-based institutional repository is a
    set of services that a university offers to the
    members of its community for the management and
    dissemination of digital materials created by the
    institution and its community members. It is most
    essentially an organizational commitment to the
    stewardship of these digital materials, including
    long-term preservation where appropriate, as well
    as organization and access or distribution. ..
    An institutional repository is not simply a fixed
    set of software and hardware.
  • Cliff Lynch, 2003 http//www.arl.org/newsltr/226/i
    r.htm

4
What the workshop is NOT about
  • Open access
  • Technical interoperability (OAI-PMH, METS,
    Z39.50, SRW, AJAX, Web 2.0, etc., see Augmenting
    interoperability across scholarly repositories,
    New York, April 2006 http//msc.mellon.org/Meeting
    s/Interop/ )
  • National repository services (Linking UK
    Repositories)
  • Departmental repositories (e.g. Caltech)
  • Consortium repositories (e.g. White Rose)

5
Schematic by Liz Lyon, UKOLN, for eBank UK project
Searching , harvesting, embedding
Resource discovery, linking, embedding
Resource discovery, linking, embedding
Data creation / capture / gathering laboratory
experiments, Grids, fieldwork, surveys, media
Data analysis, transformation, mining, modelling
Learning object creation, re-use
Aggregator services eBank UK
Harvestingmetadata
Learning Teaching workflows
Research e-Science workflows
Repositories institutional,
e-prints, subject, data, learning objects
Institutional presentation services portals,
Learning Management Systems, u/g, p/g courses,
modules
Deposit / self-archiving
Deposit / self-archiving
Validation
Validation
Publication
Resource discovery, linking, embedding
Validation
Linking
Peer-reviewed publications journals, conference
proceedings
Quality assurance bodies
Data curation databases databanks
6
OCLC 2003 environmental scan

7
RepoMMan project, Hull
8
What this workshop IS about
  • The institutional repository
  • The institutional perspective
  • The multi-repository institution
  • Where does it exist? What does it look like?
    What will it look like?
  • Your view

9
Edinburgh example now
  • We have at present
  • A catalogue repository with records for ejournals
    and ebooks (and some web sites), which we feel
    should be accommodated in separate repositories
  • a single repository for 'research outputs'
    (eprints, research papers and reports, and
    theses)
  • a proto-research publications repository
    (currently serving as our RAE publications
    repository)
  • Separate repositories for image and museum
    collections
  • a learning objects repository
  • an archives repository
  • and a proto-repository for locally digitised
    research collections (with little in it, but
    quite a lot of planning done).
  • Thanks to John MacColl for this example

10
Edinburgh example next?
  • We wish to develop this into a more efficient
    architecture by
  • splitting out the catalogue records by their
    various types
  • splitting out the research outputs into separate
    repositories
  • introducing an image/musuem management system
    (currently being implemented)
  • introducing a licence management system
    (currently being implemented)
  • creating a digital records repository (not
    started)
  • migrating the locally digitised research
    collections from one system (Endeavor ENCompass)
    to another (probably Dspace).
  • We are also seeking to
  • apply a federated search engine to the entire
    architecture (WebFeat, currently being
    implemented).

11
Repository data types
  • Open Access (published papers. preprints, tech.
    reports, etc.)
  • Electronic Theses and Dissertations
  • Teaching Learning
  • E-science, datasets
  • Research Information (CRIS)
  • Multimedia (audio, video, images, museum
    collections)
  • Digitisation
  • Publishing
  • Preservation
  • Administration

12
Open source software?
  • Open source software
  • DSpace, EPrints, Fedora, Moodle, Bodington,
    Sakai, Plone .

13
Repository data types
  • EPrints
  • DSpace
  • Moodle, Bodington,
    Sakai, Plone
  • EPrints
  • Bepress
  • Fedora

Open Access
ETDs
TL
Datasets
Multimedia
CRIS
Digitisation
Publishing
Preservation
Administration
?Examination papers??
Web pages
Structured databases
???
14
Open source or Services?
  • Open source software
  • DSpace, EPrints, Fedora, Moodle, Bodington,
    Sakai, Plone .
  • IR Services
  • Open Repository (based on DSpace), EPrints
    Services

15
Multi-repository institution
???

I N T E R OPERAB ILITY
???
Open Access
CRIS
ETDs
Digitisation
TL
Publishing
Datasets
Preservation
Multimedia
Administration
16
An interoperating network?
  • Repository deployment is fragmented, and
    repositories tend to exist in isolation rather
    than being embedded into an interoperating
    network of services. We've got bits and pieces
    but it doesn't operate as a whole and there are
    big gaps in provision in some areas. Within
    institutions, repositories tend not to inter-work
    with other applications. Nor are they well
    integrated with other institutional repositories
    (although there are some examples of innovative
    workflows, for example between laboratory
    repository and cross-institutional repository in
    R4L/eBank). R4L Repository for the Laboratory
    http//r4l.eprints.org/
  • eBank UK http//www.ukoln.ac.uk/projects/eba
    nk-uk/
  • Rachel Heery and Andy Powell, Digital
    Repositories Roadmap looking forward, JISC,
    April 2006 http//www.jisc.ac.uk/uploaded_document
    s/rep-roadmap-v15.doc

17
The Institutional Repository

???
Open Access
CRIS
???
ETDs
Digitisation
Publishing
TL
Preservation
Datasets
Multimedia
Administration
18
Open source or Services or LMS?
  • Open source software
  • DSpace, EPrints, Fedora, Moodle, Bodington,
    Sakai, Plone .
  • IR Services
  • Open Repository (based on DSpace), EPrints
    Services
  • IR Services library management systems
  • VTLS VITAL (Fedora), Proquest (Digital Commons),
    Ex Libris (DigiTools)

19
The Digital Library

Library Management System
Institutionally-generated content
Open Access
Library content
Library Services OPAC OpenURL resolver E-journals
Etc.
CRIS
ETDs
Digitisation
TL
Publishing
Datasets
Preservation
Multimedia
???
Administration
???
20
What is an IR? Lynch 2006
  • As I've looked more at various institutional
    deployments and planned deployments, I think that
    the distinction between digital libraries,
    digital collection management systems, digital
    archives, and institutional repositories is less
    clear than I might have felt in 2003."
  • Cliff Lynch, 2006, quoted in http//poynder.blogsp
    ot.com/2006/03/institutional-repositories-and-litt
    le.html

21
Networkflows
  • "Historically, users have built their workflow
    around the services the library provides. As we
    move forward, the reverse will increasingly be
    the case. On the network, the library needs to
    build its services around its users' work- and
    learn-flows (networkflows).
  • "one of the discussion points around
    institutional repositories is about which goals
    they support open access, curation of
    institutional intellectual assets, reputation
    management. And which processes? Over time, it is
    clear that what we now call institutional
    repositories will be part of wider research
    process support. What is currently the
    institutional repository will be a component of
    the workflow/curation/disclosure apparatus that
    develops to support research activities."
  • Lorcan Dempsey, Networkflows, January 2006
    http//orweblog.oclc.org/archives/000933.html

22
Integration, workflow, portals
  • The role of the repository will influence the
    level of integration and interaction required.
  • Where a repository is being used for multiple
    content types and as an everyday working tool
    then greater integration is required to allow it
    to take on this role. Integration may also be
    focussed at the presentation level for end-user
    interaction (e.g., presenting a search or deposit
    screen within a portal) or can be at the data
    level for the exchange of information between
    systems.
  • Alma Swan and Chris Awre, LINKING UK
    REPOSITORIES, A6.6 Repository integration in
    local infrastructure
  • http//www.jisc.ac.uk/uploaded_documents/Linking_U
    K_repositories_appendix.pdf

23
The Digital Library
Portal

Library Management System
Institutionally-generated content
Open Access
Library content
Library Services OPAC OpenURL resolver
CRIS
ETDs
Digitisation
TL
Publishing
Datasets
Preservation
Multimedia
???
Administration
???
24
Embedding IRs in institutional strategy
  • Often institutions are not clear as to their
    strategy for establishing repositories. There are
    real benefits for institutions in effectively
    managing their digital assets (promoting research
    outcomes, fulfilling preservation
    responsibilities, facilitating added value
    services such as overlay journals, data mining,
    etc). Such benefits can be assisted by leveraging
    the open access agenda. Despite this,
    repositories are not yet fully embedded in
    institutional strategy and there is perhaps a
    misplaced confidence that institutions will take
    on the full range of repository business
    functions. Interoperability between institutional
    libraries, repositories, learning management
    systems and MIS is still rare.
  • Rachel Heery and Andy Powell, Digital
    Repositories Roadmap looking forward, JISC,
    April 2006 http//www.jisc.ac.uk/uploaded_document
    s/rep-roadmap-v15.doc

25
Assessing the costs
  • From a spreadsheet on the costs of setting up and
    maintaining Open Source repository "There was a
    range, from about 6,886.62 for a set-up cost,
    all the way to over 1 million."
  • Rebecca Kemp, list posting, November 2005
  • http//www.library.yale.edu/llicense/ListArchives
    /0511/msg00030.html

26
Wider frameworks
  • Where do wider services national frameworks and
    services, Web search and other Web services fit
    into the institutional agenda?
  • Need for IRs to be visible, searchable and usable
    by local and distant users

27
Summary
  • One repository or multi?
  • OSS vs Services vs extended LMS
  • IR or DL
  • Build around workflows
  • Embed in institutional strategy
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com