museums and digital repositories

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Museums and Digital Repositories October, 2005

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Museums and Digital Repositories. October, 2005. The punch line…. In the digital realm, museums: * are very much like libraries * tend to share the same policy issues. Museums and libraries in the digital realm. * Differences in physical formats disappear when objects are digital - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Museums and Digital Repositories

Museums and DigitalRepositories

October, 2005

Page 2: Museums and Digital Repositories

The punch line…

In the digital realm, museums:

* are very much like libraries

* tend to share the same policy issues

Page 3: Museums and Digital Repositories

Museums and libraries in the digital realm

* Differences in physical formats disappear when objects are digital

*Underlying shared purpose becomesmore obvious

Page 4: Museums and Digital Repositories

Some Harvard background

• “Digital Repository Service”– in production for 5 years– terabytes of data, millions of objects– 29 depositors (4 of them museums)– provides both object access and preservation– operates as a service– partially cost recovered

• recover marginal cost of storage

Page 5: Museums and Digital Repositories

Some Harvard museums active contributors

Page 6: Museums and Digital Repositories
Page 7: Museums and Digital Repositories

Some Harvard museums active contributors

Page 8: Museums and Digital Repositories
Page 9: Museums and Digital Repositories

Some Harvard museums active contributors

Page 10: Museums and Digital Repositories
Page 11: Museums and Digital Repositories

Some Harvard museums active contributors

Page 12: Museums and Digital Repositories
Page 13: Museums and Digital Repositories

But not yet all…

Page 14: Museums and Digital Repositories

Carrots, not sticks

Internal grant program

(all museum contributors have gotten at least one grant…and all have continued to use services afterwards!)

Page 15: Museums and Digital Repositories

Lots of policy…

(and most of it quite comfortable to museums)

Page 16: Museums and Digital Repositories

Repository policy aims

* it’s not about disk storage

* long time horizons

* service to the Harvard community

* depositors must take some responsibility

Page 17: Museums and Digital Repositories

Policy (1)

Data must be “library-like” in purpose(i. e., support research and teaching)

Page 18: Museums and Digital Repositories

Policy (2)

Data must be of persistent value

Page 19: Museums and Digital Repositories

Policy (3)

Data must be of accessible tothe entire Harvard community

(hedged a bit for temporarily “dark” collections)

Page 20: Museums and Digital Repositories

Policy (4)

Data must be findable through University-wide discovery tools

some issue with museums here…

Page 21: Museums and Digital Repositories

Discovery

• “Public catalogs” not traditional in museums– particularly not union catalogs!– frequently oriented to exhibitions rather than

catalogs

• Museum collection management systems not always consistent with library access systems– descriptive practices, metadata formats

Page 22: Museums and Digital Repositories

Discussing discovery

• Persuasion when integrating data makes sense– our visual arts catalog ("arts, material culture,

and social history“) fits well for art and archeology images, but not for fish specimens

• Some museums have their own independent discovery tools

Page 23: Museums and Digital Repositories
Page 24: Museums and Digital Repositories

Discussing discovery

• Persuasion when integrating data makes sense– our visual arts catalog ("arts, material culture, and

social history“) fits well for art and archeology images , but not for fish specimens

• Some museums have their own independent discovery tools

• and there are on-going discussions in other cases….

Page 25: Museums and Digital Repositories

Policy (5)

Depositors are responsible for intellectual property issues

Page 26: Museums and Digital Repositories

IP issues in museums – many additional issues

* Artists rights

* NAGPRA

* Multiple levels of rights

* etc…

Page 27: Museums and Digital Repositories

Policy (6)

Depositors are responsible forpaying repository fees

Page 28: Museums and Digital Repositories

Policy (7)

Repository and depositors shareresponsibility for preservation

Page 29: Museums and Digital Repositories

Preservation

Repository agrees to try to preserveobjects if:

* in recommended formats

*accompanied by appropriate metadata

Page 30: Museums and Digital Repositories

Museum data formats

• Mostly reformatting (parallel to libraries)– visual images– text images

• archival material

• field notes

• published documentation

• Born digital text coming (also like libraries)

• Field databases (a bit more interesting…)

Page 31: Museums and Digital Repositories

Shared responsibility

* Formats and metadata

* Preservation action decision-making

* Funding

Page 32: Museums and Digital Repositories

In sum…

• Museums are much like libraries in this domain – persistent research data– interested in public accessibility– understand metadata– curatorial understanding and interest in their

collections data– persistent organization to take long-term

responsibility (financial, preservation)– familiar data types

Page 33: Museums and Digital Repositories

The big difference

Mind-set, traditions, formatsfor discovery