Electronic Resources in the Virtual Learning
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(Chandos Information Professional Series) Jane Secker (Auth.) - Electronic Resources in the Virtual Learning Environment. A Guide for Librarians-Chandos Publishing (2004)
http://persival.cs.columbia.edu/) which is a project based at Columbia
University for building a Digital Library for Patient Care. The international digital libraries programme In 1998 the NSF issued a call for proposals to begin addressing some of the research challenges associated with creating international digital libraries. The call requested multi-country, multi-team projects involving at least one research team in the United States and one in another country. The NSF would support the US part of a joint project while the non-US parts needed to gain their support from other sources. The UK Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) was the first to join the NSF in this endeavour and issued a matching call. JISC committed £500,000 per year for three years to fund new development work in this programme. The NSF committed a similar amount. The German Research Foundation, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DSF) and the European Union also joined the NSF to work on collaborative digital library projects. The programme aimed to create innovative and beneficial ways to access networked resources. It planned to make many software tools available for wider use. Specific objectives of the programme were to: ■ assemble collections of information that are not otherwise accessible or usable because of technical barriers, distance, size, system fragmentation or other limits; ■ create new technology and the understanding to make it possible for a distributed set of users to find, deliver and exploit such information; ■ evaluate the effect of this new technology and its international benefits. 4 This programme ran from August 1999 until July 2003. Projects investigated topics such as using the Open Archives Initiative (OAI) to set up an e-print archive (discussed in more detail in Chapter 5), digital 4 The digital library preservation, cross-domain searching and metadata construction. They included projects such as: ■ Open Citation Project: looking at the set up of e-print archives: http://opcit.eprints.org/ ■ Cross-domain Resource Discovery: http://sca.lib.liv.ac.uk/cheshire/ ■ HARMONY: metadata for resource discovery of multimedia digital objects: http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/discovery/harmony/ ■ IMESH Toolkit: an architecture and toolkit for distributed subject gateways: http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/metadata/imesh-toolkit/ ■ Online Music Recognition and Searching: http://www.omras.org/ These projects raised many issues which remain topical for digital libraries, including the setting up of e-print archives, metadata construction and cross-domain searching. Of these projects, the Open Citation Project is discussed in more detail later in this chapter. Much of the pioneering digital library research concentrated on the technicalities of the digitisation process. Scanning material to create images was relatively unproblematic, although the real benefit of digitisation comes from facilitating access to the text of material. Many experiments to perfect techniques such as optical character recognition (OCR), used to convert scanned images into machine-readable text, were undertaken, and a large amount of literature was generated for librarians, such as that by Ogg (1992). Later digital library projects were more concerned with issues such as sustainability and interoperability. These issues, among others, were identified by DELOS (2001) in their paper ‘Digital Libraries: Future Directions for a European Research Programme’ which set out a framework for research for the European Union from 2002 to 2006. UK digital library initiatives In the UK during the corresponding period, the British Library was one of the key players in developments and initiatives in digitisation. The British Library’s Strategic Objectives, published in 1993, stated that by the year 2000 it would be a major centre for the storage of, and access to, digital texts. This led to the launch of the Initiatives for Access programme, a series of projects and experiments using ICTs to facilitate access to collections. For example, one of the first projects resulted in the 5 Electronic Resources in the Virtual Learning Environment production of a digital version of the Beowulf manuscript, now available on the British Library’s website. The programme was regarded as an overwhelming success and is documented in the 1998 publication Towards a Digital Library (Carpenter et al., 1998). In developing the digital library, the British Library sought to improve access, for all users, to their collections. The Library also hoped digitisation would have benefits for the conservation and preservation of collections, in Download 1.99 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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