310 likes | 479 Views
Metadata and interoperability:. The use of standards in the Resource Discovery Network (RDN). Michael Day UKOLN: the UK Office for Library and Information Networking University of Bath m.day@ukoln.ac.uk http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/.
E N D
Metadata and interoperability: The use of standards in the Resource Discovery Network (RDN) Michael Day UKOLN: the UK Office for Library and Information Networking University of Bath m.day@ukoln.ac.uk http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/ Seminar: Interoperability by Crossbrowsing Subject Based Information Gateways, Oslo, 21 November 2000.
Presentation outline • A brief historical overview • The eLib subject gateways and the ROADS project • The Resource Discovery Network (RDN)
SOSIG • Social Science Information Gateway • One of the first UK gateways (1994) • Funded as a pilot project by the ESRC • Based at the Centre for Computing in Economics (now Institute of Learning and Research Technology), University of Bristol • A model for the development of other gateways
Follett Report • Joint Funding Councils’ Libraries Review Group (December 1993): • Report commissioned by all four UK higher education funding councils • Chaired by Sir Brian Follett • Recommendation (one of many): • JISC should fund the “development of a limited number of top level networking tools in the UK to encourage the growth of local subject access tools and information servers”
eLib Programme • Follett Implementation Group on Information Technology (FIGIT) • Electronic Libraries Programme (eLib) • 1995-2001 • Funded by Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) • 3 phases, funded 100+ projects grouped together in various programme areas • Programme area for “Access to Networked Resources” projects
eLib subject gateways (1) • The eLib-funded projects: • ADAM - Art, Design, Architecture and Media • Biz/ed - Business education • EEVL - Engineering • History (previously IHR-Info) • OMNI - Biomedical sciences • SOSIG - Social sciences • ROADS - enabling software and support
eLib subject gateways (2) • Main functions: • Serve specific communities - usually subject-based • Select Internet resources according to pre-defined quality criteria • Create resource descriptions (metadata) • Display both search and browse interfaces • Use of subject classification schemes and controlled vocabularies, links to thesauri
ROADS project Resource Organisation and Discovery in Subject-based services Partners: Department of Computer Studies, Loughborough University Institute of Learning and Research Technology (ILRT), University of Bristol UKOLN http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/roads/
ROADS objectives • Main project objectives: • To develop a configurable software toolkit for distributed resource discovery services • To support subject gateways (and interoperability between them) with other tools and guidelines • To implement and test relevant standards • To enable Web page authors to describe their own resources and supply this metadata to gateways
ROADS standards (1) • Metadata format: • ROADS/IAFA templates • A metadata format based on IAFA (Internet Anonymous FTP Archive) templates • Internet-Draft • Simple • Text based • Pragmatic choice
ROADS standards (2) • Search protocol: • Whois++ search and retrieve protocol • Internet standard (RFC) • Simple (lightweight) • Cross-searching across distributed services • Query routing (centroids)
ROADS interoperability • Guidelines: • Template Registry • Cataloguing guidelines • Metadata mappings • IAFA templates / USMARC / Dublin Core • Experimental Z39.50/Whois++ gateway • Project involvement in wider standardisation initiatives: • Dublin Core • Resource Description Framework
ROADS in use • ROADS software toolkit still in use: • SOSIG • Leeds University Library selected Web sites • Finnish Virtual Library (FVL) • Software still available: • Developed as an open-source software toolkit http://www.roads.lut.ac.uk/
Taking eLib forwards ... • Towards end of eLib funding: • A recognition that gateways were useful • “... subject gateways have embedded themselves into professional practice very swiftly” (1997) • A need to consider sustainability • Most gateways are not embedded in institutions • Most gateways operate on a ‘project’ basis, short-term funding, research culture • Perceived to be in competition with each other and with private sector suppliers
The RDN • Resource Discovery Network: • Funded by the JISC • Launched in November 1999 • Objectives: • To extend coverage to areas not covered by the eLib gateways • To integrate access • To develop subject based portals for educational communities • To establish new organisational and business models (sustainability)
RDN structure BIOME Hubs SOSIG SOSIG RDN • Humbul • PSIgate • Creative Artsand Industries • ... EEVL Centre
RDN co-ordination • Co-ordination: • Part of JISC’s DNER (Distributed National Distributed Resource) Office • Based at King’s College London, with additional support from UKOLN • Roles: • Promoting and developing the network • Establishing frameworks to ensure quality, consistency, and interoperability across the RDN • Presenting gateways in various views to exploit their interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral value
RDN hubs (1) • Hubs • Faculty-level (higher education) • Some based on eLib subject gateways, others newly established • Made up of one or more gateways • Catalogue resources using a variety of schema • Offer Z39.50 targets for a central cross-searching service • Maximise potential for strategic partnerships and commercial arrangements within subject domains
RDN hubs (2) • Currently five faculty-level hubs: HUMBUL
RDN broker service (1) • RDN provides a central broker service that can access resource descriptions in all gateways • Currently based on Whois++ cross-search • Plan to move to a Z39.50 based broker using the Bath Profile http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/bath/ • Experiments with new architectures • e.g., based on sharing records through interoperability agreements defined by the Open Archives Initiative (OAI)
RDN broker service (2) SOSIG SOSIG BIOME RDN Broker ‘ResourceFinder’ Humbul
RDN interoperability • Cataloguing guidelines • mandatory fields, schemes and qualifiers • Draft rules for content based on DCMES • Minimum set includes: Title, Subject, Description, Type, Identifier and Language. • Shared list of types • Ambition to provide common subject approach for cross-browsing • co-operation with HILT project and Renardus
RDN sustainability • RDN currently has over 20,000 manually created records • 70+ staff involved at about 30 UK institutions (many part-time) • New hubs planned: • creative arts & industries • tourism, leisure & hospitality • environment & geography • Is the RDN model sustainable?
DNER Portals • Extending gateways • in breadth and depth • customised user search tools and user profiling • integration with teaching and learning • ... while retaining the existing strengths of subject gateways ...
RDN collaboration • Imesh: • Informal community largely based in Europe, the US and Australia • Collaboration with projects: • Renardus: European networked subject gateway pilot service • IMesh toolkit: architecture and toolkit for distributed subject gateways • SCHEMAS: Forum for metadata schema implementers
Summing up • ROADS • Interoperability based on common metadata format (ROADS templates) and cross-searching via Whois++ protocol • RDN • More diversity in metadata formats - broadly DCMES or ROADS • Current ResourceFinder based on Whois++ cross-search • Broker based on Z39.50 using Bath Profile
Further information (1) • Resource Discovery Network (RDN): • Funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) of the UK higher and further education funding councils with support from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the Arts and Humanities Research Board (AHRB). http://www.rdn.ac.uk/
Further information (2) • UKOLN: the UK Office for Library and Information Networking: • Funded by Resource: the Council for Museums, Archives & Libraries (the organisation that succeeded the Library and Information Commission), the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) of the UK higher and further education funding councils, as well as by project funding from the JISC and the European Union. UKOLN also receives support from the University of Bath where it is based. http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/