Open Context: Community Data-sharing and Tagging

The Alexandria Archive Institute is now "beta-testing" Open Context.
Open Context is a free, open-access online database resource for archaeology
and related fields. It is a highly-generalized tool that pools and
integrates individual researcher datasets and museum collections.
Funding for the development of Open Context came from the William and
Flora Hewlett Foundation.
Open Context has a variety of
demonstration datasets now available for exploration and testing. These
include field archaeology contextual records and finds registers,
geo-archaeological samples, and a variety of zooarchaeological
analyses. We are also adding museum and reference collection datasets.
Some projects have rich image collections and narrative material, and
others are of primary interest for specialist comparative analyses.
To
help make sense of this widely varying body of material, we have
developed a user folksonomy system. Individual users can add value to
the pooled content by identifying and annotating items of interest
using a tagging system. The folksonomy system also enables community
members to establish and share meaningful links between items from
different projects and collections (even if these projects use
different recording systems). We think the folksonomy system can be a
powerful tool for semantic data integration.
We believe Open
Context represents some significant achievements, but still requires
further development. We are working toward interoperability with other
systems and developing partnerships to assist in OAI standards
compliance and support from institutional repositories. We are also
working with the Science Commons to find "some rights reserved"
frameworks that create incentives for sharing primary data.
We
would also like to see some of this framework incorporated into
institutionally-backed digital repository systems. Thus, we are eager
to partner with other related initiatives. We already have an
established a partnership with the University of Chicago OCHRE project.
The data structures underlying Open Context are based on the pioneering
efforts this group. Open Context uses a subset of the global schema
described in OCHRE's "Archaeological Markup Language" (ArchaeoML).
Because of this, data imported into Open Context is fully compatible
with the OCHRE system. Besides OCHRE, there are several other
initiatives looking to create digital resources for archaeology, and we
would like to broaden the scope of our collaborations.
How to cite this work
Eric Kansa. "Open Context: Community Data-sharing and Tagging." Academic Commons Issue Name (Spring 2008): 12 October 2008. <http://www.academiccommons.org/>.| Attachment | Size |
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