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Fun with Geospatial Metadata, CUGIR, CORC, MARC, and OAI: The CSDGM to MARC Grant Project Adam Chandler, Olin Library Elaine Westbrooks, Mann Library Vivek.

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Presentation on theme: "Fun with Geospatial Metadata, CUGIR, CORC, MARC, and OAI: The CSDGM to MARC Grant Project Adam Chandler, Olin Library Elaine Westbrooks, Mann Library Vivek."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fun with Geospatial Metadata, CUGIR, CORC, MARC, and OAI: The CSDGM to MARC Grant Project Adam Chandler, Olin Library Elaine Westbrooks, Mann Library Vivek Uppal, Dept. of Computer Science Metadata Working Group October 12, 2001

2 2 Project Workflow Converter Authority Control

3 3 Problem How do we create a persistent URL pointing to “deep web” digital objects across very different systems?

4  What is GIS?  What is CUGIR?  What are Geospatial Metadata?  What is CORC? 4 Overview (1)

5 Overview (2)  What is the FGDC Clearinghouse?  Bucket Architecture  What is OAI?  Demonstration  Outcomes 5

6 “A system for capturing, storing, checking, manipulating, analyzing and displaying data which are spatially referenced to the Earth.” (DoE, 1987) 6 What is GIS?

7 GIS Procedures Data Hardware Software People 7

8 8 Examples of GIS

9 CUGIR  Brief History  Subject areas  Unrestricted access to data & metadata  National Geospatial Data Clearinghouse & NSDI 9

10 Geospatial Metadata  Brief History  Definition  Purpose / Uses / Benefits  CUGIR Examples: TAZTAZ Content Standard for Digital Geospatial Metadata 10

11  What is CORC? Pathfinders Harvests Metadata Authority Control Classification  Metadata: MARC / DC-RDFMARCDC-RDF 11 CORC

12 FGDC Clearinghouse 12

13 13

14 14 CUGIR

15 15

16 16 Show Metadata

17 17

18 18 http://130.11.52.184/servlet/FGDCServlet/retrieve?on=2 &el=F&db=current&rp=3&mr=1&ac=current&cid=181 Non-Persistent URL

19 Clearinghouse Problems  0 hits for users 50% of time (unpublished research)  > 10% or more or nodes are offline (Z39.50)  FGDC Clearinghouse is not well known  Record maintenance is a undefined  Harvesting is not a part of model  Data/Metadata are coupled with the server software (i.e., “smart archive, dumb object” DL model) 19

20 Open Archives Initiative Data Provider Service Provider http (get request) xml response  low-barrier interoperability  data-provider & service-provider model  metadata harvesting model  shared metadata format & parallel, community-specific metadata formats  authentication : on purpose outside protocol Source: Herbert Van De Sompel, CS 502, Spring 2001 20

21 21 OAI example

22 22

23 23 “Buckets are part of the larger ‘Smart Object, Dumb Archive’ DL Model (Maly, Nelson, & Zubair, 1999). SODA is a reaction to the vertically integrated (and non- interoperable) DLs that tended to grow from the ad-hoc origins of many popular DLs (Esler & Nelson, 1998). Separating the functionality of the archive from that of the DL allows for greater interoperability and federation of DLs. The archive's purpose is to provide DLs the location of buckets (the DLs can poll the buckets themselves for their metadata), and the DLs build their own indexes.” Buckets Source: M. Nelson: “Smart Objects and Open Archives.” D- Lib Magazine, February 2001, 7(2) http://www.dlib.org/dlib/february01/nelson/02nelson.html

24 24 On Buckets and OAI “Just as buckets break the dependency of the information objects on archives, the Open Archives Initiative (OAI) breaks the dependency of archives on DLs …” - Michael L. Nelson

25 25 On Buckets and OAI “The OAI does not address the issue of smart objects, but the archives in the OAI are very similar to the archives described in the SODA model in that they have minimal functionality. OAI archives aim for greater interoperability through performing less sophisticated functions (no keyword search functions defined, T&C is not handled at the protocol level) -- a sort of Reduced Instruction Set Computer philosophy for archives.” - Michael L. Nelson

26 26 Problem Revisited How do we create a persistent URL pointing to “deep web” digital objects across very different systems?

27 27 Project Workflow Converter Authority Control

28 28 Step 1: Convert SGML -> MARC

29 29 Step 2: MARC & Bucket Location

30 30 Step 3a: Import to CORC (MARC) 30 MARCView: 856 “Bucket”

31 31 Step 3b: Import to CORC (DC RDF) 31 DC RDFView: 856 “Bucket”

32 32 Step 4a: Import DC-RDF

33 33 Step 4b: Import DC RDF to Local Mysql Database

34 34 MARC Record in Voyager 34 Click here to see bucket

35 35 Table: Bucket

36 36 Table: DC

37 37 Project Outcomes 1. Access for patrons -1,300 MARC Records in OPAC -1,300 MARC Records in CORC/WorldCat -2,600 DC-RDF Records in OAI 2. OAI data provider (DLF agreement) 3. CORC evaluation 4. Foundation for CUGIR 2.0 5. Data for cross-collection access research


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