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A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You

A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You. building an acceptable conservation module JP Brown Jessica A. Johnson DucPhong Nguyen. Introduction.

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A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You

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  1. A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You building an acceptable conservation module JP BrownJessica A. Johnson DucPhong Nguyen

  2. Introduction • Creation of a user work group resulted from a discussion between the US Holocaust Memorial Museum and the NMAI on mutual progress on conservation development. • Set up meeting of Washington Metro area EMu users (and the Field Museum) to discuss the possibility of working together on standardizing requirements. 

  3. Purpose of user work group Arrive at a core group of conservation tabs which will form a revised conservation module, rather than each institution sub-classing the current module.

  4. Features of user work group • Heterogeneous institutional backgrounds • Heterogeneous conservation specialty backgrounds • International (but English-speaking) • Communication facilitated by email and www.emuusers.org

  5. Time line • August 2005: • first meeting held at NMAI (Suitland, MD) to discuss collaboration on a new Conservation module. Participants included: The Field Museum; NMAI; NMNH Anthropology; USHMM; Winterthur Museum • Results: Agreement on treatment work flow as focus for developing common requirements • October - November 2005: • the group gathered in Chicago at the users meeting and talked to other museums. High level of interest encouraged us to take the discussion public via emuusers.org. • V.1.0.3 specs were posted on emuusers.org • V.1.0.4a specs were posted on emuusers.org

  6. Time line (cont.) • May – September 2006: • V.1.0.4b specs were posted on emuusers.org. This was the final release for discussion. • October 2006: • Next-to-final specs were released by KE. • December 2006 – January 2007: • Testing of new Conservation module by NMAI • March 2007: • Release of new Conservation module as part of KE EMu 3.2.03 • April 2007: • Implementation of new Conservation module at NMAI.

  7. Initial findings of user group Three sets of activities: • Preventive conservation activities/condition surveys. • May be on regular schedule or one-off • Data level varies: ‘done’, ‘scores’, statistical quantities. • Condition/treatment records for individual objects: • Detailed text data, images, analyses. • Management: • Additive quantities, requests, authorizations, scheduling.

  8. Stages of treatment/condition documentation

  9. Unclear issues • Non-digital assets (x-ray plates, etc.) • Push/pull of dimension/materials data to Catalog? • Reduce redundancy. • Granularity of measurement/requirement fields • ‘Analysis’ • Motivation for analysis varies (poison test, chloride/solubility test, compositional analysis) • Recording granularity varies from a detected/not-detected checkbox through to large numerical data files. • Relationship to Catalog Module • ConsRec-Catalog is 1-1 or 1-m ? • What about single treatments carried out on batches of objects? • What about multiple treatments on single catalog record?

  10. Non-digital Assets Tab

  11. Push/Pull?

  12. Granularity

  13. Analyses

  14. Problems of user work group :( • Slow (hard to maintain momentum) • Not all users familiar with KE-EMu • KE ‘draw the GUI’ design model • No public KE-EMu ERD

  15. Benefits of user group :) • Cost-effective for us and KE. • Ease overhead costs (for KE, perhaps?) • Standardize field names and design • Facilitate communications among different EMu customers • Simplify data exchanges (if any) • Slowness can be a good thing.

  16. Lesson learned • Don’t strive for unanimous agreement. Set a reasonable goal; even a 50% agreement is good enough. • Be flexible. • Involve knowledge area experts!!! Don’t rely on technical experts only. • Cut through the chase: focus on commonalities. • A time period spanning two user groups worked well for us – one for public kick-off after the initial meeting, and the next for momentum and wider consultation.

  17. NMAI Conservators learn about the Conservation Module

  18. Collaboration to Win Them Over • Conservation had been using some kind of database since 1999 • EMu provides a lot of information not previously available to Conservation • Conservation wants others to see our data • Thought a lot about workflow • Tried to make EMu screen entry as similar to old database as possible • Didn’t force changes – made collaborative decisions with staff on screen layout and new tabs

  19. Some facts… • Previous database was in SQL • At time of final migration, there were 10,000+ Treatment records • Also migrated 900+ Treatment images • Currently has 10-15 users, up to 25 through the year

  20. Record type • Use Record Type to control tab switching so relevant tabs are displayed based on specific values.

  21. Compromises • Common fields in both Catalog and Conservation. • Compromise to collapse data during migration, rather than keep them parsed.

  22. Authorization layers • Document multiple types of authorization: curatorial and conservation.

  23. NMAI customization • Goals and Rationale address NMAI-specific data needs. • Damage report, records a response to catastrophic event; revised from original Word document

  24. With time and practice, everybody’s happy.

  25. Questions? • JP Brown, Associate Conservator, Anthropology, the Field Museum, jpbrown@fieldmuseum.org • Jessie Johnson, Senior Objects Conservator, NMAI, johnsonjs@si.edu • DucPhong Nguyen, CIS Project Manager, NMAI, nguyend@si.edu

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