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Using OAI and other light-weight protocols to facilitate scholarly communication
<!--HTML-->This presentation describes how we share and harvest sets of various OAI metadata, repurpose it through the Ockham Library Network, and demonstrate an alternative to traditional scholarly communication. The Ockham Library Network is a sponsored National Science Foundation Digital Li...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2005
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1552900 |
Sumario: | <!--HTML-->This presentation describes how we share and harvest sets of various OAI metadata,
repurpose it through the Ockham Library Network, and demonstrate an alternative to
traditional scholarly communication. The Ockham Library Network is a sponsored
National Science Foundation Digital Library grant with co-PI's at Emory University,
Virginia Tech, Oregon State University, and the University of Notre Dame. One of the
purposes of Ockham is to exploit modular, light-weight protocols (such as OAI-PMH and
SRW/U) into systems for learning, teaching, and scholarship. To date we have
implemented a number of such services:
* Ockham Digital Library Services Registry - A distributed directory of digital
library services, collections, and agents. The contents of the Registry are described
using the same XML schema articulated by the Information Environment Service Registry
(IESR), and the records are shared among participating institutions on a peer-to-peer
network utilizing OAI to propagate registry records amongst the distributed nodes.
* Find Similar Service - An index of selected OAI-accessible content supplemented
with an additional "find more like this one" function. This system first harvests OAI
content and saves it to an underlying database. Searches against the database are
supplemented with alternative search strategies and the means to finding similar
items through semantic and statistical analysis.
* MyLibrary@Ockham - A process for doing metadata re-mediation. MyLibrary is an
open source database application used to store data about any information resource.
It's database structure is rooted in Dublin Core and enhanced with a facet/term
approach to classification. As OAI content is harvested from repositories, it can be
automatically classified with these facets/terms, and saved to the underlying
database. Thus, reports written against MyLibrary can not only be keyed on Dublin
Core elements but also on any of the locally facet/term combinations. Such a process
enhances and amalgamates OAI-accessible content.
* Ockham Alert - A current awareness service. This system regularly harvests data
from the National Science Foundation OAI Repository, indexes it, and provides an SRU
interface to the index. The XML resulting from searches is returned to the user as
HTML, RSS, or email. Since new data is added daily and data older than three months
is daily removed, repeated queries to the index return a changing set of results
facilitating a "What's new?" service against an OAI repository.
* Harvest-to-Query (H2Q) - A software appliance for collecting OAI content and
providing a Z39.50/SRU/SRW interface to the collection. H2Q allows content providers
and content users to easily create query-accessible collections for use with
federated search tools and other information retrieval systems.
The purpose of this particular implementation is not only to demonstrate what the
software/protocol can do, but also how OAI and open access publishing can provide an
alternative to the traditional scholarly communication model. If scholars publish
electronically, then librarians can collect, organize, archive, and disseminate this
scholarly material. In other words, by working together both librarians and scholars
can facilitate the scholarly communication process. |
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