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DIGITAL MANUSCRIPT INTEROPERABILITY SharedCanvas and IIIF in Practice Benjamin Albritton Digital Manuscript Product

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Presentation on theme: "DIGITAL MANUSCRIPT INTEROPERABILITY SharedCanvas and IIIF in Practice Benjamin Albritton Digital Manuscript Product"— Presentation transcript:

1 DIGITAL MANUSCRIPT INTEROPERABILITY SharedCanvas and IIIF in Practice Benjamin Albritton Digital Manuscript Product Manager blalbrit@stanford.edu @bla222

2 Summary: 2010-2013 Funding from Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Initial meeting of scholars and curators – Paris, 2010 Digital Manuscript Technical Working Group – 2010-pres. Data Model: SharedCanvas Data Sharing Framework: IIIF (International Image Interoperabiity Framework)

3 DMSTech and IIIF Bibliothèque nationale de France British Library Oxford University Stanford University Johns Hopkins University University of Fribourg (e-codices) Saint Louis University (T-PEN) Drew University (DM) TextGrid Los Alamos National Laboratory Yale University Harvard University Cambridge University ARTstor Cornell University Princeton University Walters Art Museum National Library of Norway The National Archives (UK) … and more

4 Interoperability – One Definition Primary Goal: Image and metadata sharing across collections and institutions “Killer app”: a single viewer that reads content from multiple repositories

5 Imagine an image viewer…

6 With content from any repository…

7 That lets scholars compare…

8 And investigate in detail…

9 http://iiif.io/mirador/

10 Synopsis Two primary motivators Comparative viewing of images Viewing of annotations Part of the current Stanford-led Mellon grant for Digital Manuscript Interoperability Goals: Support for use-cases at Yale, University of Toronto and Johns Hopkins University Comparative viewing for manuscript images in a book, across books, across collections, across repositories Support annotation and transcription viewing Support light-weight annotation creation

11 How do we do it? 1. Represent the physical object in a common data model (SharedCanvas) 1. Deliver the data via common API (IIIF)

12 Data Model: SharedCanvas http://www.shared-canvas.org

13 How do we do it? 1. Represent the physical object in a common data model (SharedCanvas) 1. Deliver the data via common API (IIIF) http://iiif.io

14 IIIF API Development and Current Status Work driven by real-world use-cases Scholarly projects and interviews Personae developed http://www.stanford.edu/group/dlss/dms-viewer/personas/ Development work referred back to these use-cases on an ongoing basis Confirmed that APIs actually support real needs Status Image API at 1.1 release Metadata API at 1.0 release

15 Deliver via API: IIIF http://library.stanford.edu/iiif/image-api

16 Implementation Meeting at Harvard in October 2013 Eight institutions Stanford Yale Harvard University of Kentucky (vHMML) Oxford University University of Fribourg (e-codices) Los Alamos National Laboratory Biblissima (France) Goal: 6-8 institutions with: Mirador installed Showing content from all other institutions Prototype ability to add more content Development contributions?

17 Result: 9 institutions sharing content

18 Mirador Development Process Two-year grant cycle: Design Creation of personas: http://www.stanford.edu/group/dlss/dms-viewer/personas/ Creation of mock-ups and wire-frames http://www.stanford.edu/group/dlss/dms-viewer/mocks/#1 Development Phased development of different components Comparative image viewing – COMPLETE Annotation and transcription viewing – IN PROCESS Annotation creation - FUTURE 1.0 public release planned for December 2013 2.0 public release planned for December 2014 Post-2014: ongoing development of a community of adopters and committers for this open source project

19 Next Steps: Image Choice

20

21 Next Steps: Annotation viewing

22 Next Steps: Transcription viewing

23 Next Steps: Multiple text representations

24 Next Steps: Workspace Sharing

25 The Beinecke as Institutional Leader Technical implementation is relatively easy Institutional buy-in to share content, and lots of it, is more of a challenge The Beinecke could play a leading role as one of the major North American manuscript repositories Benefits: Increased access to scholarly and public use of the content Transcription and annotation of Beinecke content Crowd-supported cataloging Comparison of Beinecke books with related or comparable books in other repositories in a single interface


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