1 / 28

VidArch

VidArch. Preserving Video Objects and Context: A Demonstration Project. Helen R. Tibbo School of Information and Library Science University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill tibbo@ils.unc.edu. Funding for this Project.

risa
Download Presentation

VidArch

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. VidArch Preserving Video Objects and Context: A Demonstration Project Helen R. Tibbo School of Information and Library Science University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill tibbo@ils.unc.edu

  2. Funding for this Project This work was supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation #IIS 0455970 DigArch Program IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  3. Sanghee Oh Yaxiao Song VidArch Team • Gary Marchionini • Helen Tibbo • Christopher Lee • Paul Jones Special Thanks to SILS Students: • Dawne Howard • Terrell Russell IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  4. VidArch Partners • National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) • Association of Computing Machinery (ACM) • Open Video (OV) • ibiblio IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  5. Challenges of Video Preservation • Temporal medium with multiple information representation channels; • Multiple visual and audio • Human-readable or machine-readable content • Video object’s meaning is greater than the sum of its parts; • Preservation must attend to the whole as well as the parts. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  6. Preservation & Access • Are integrally intertwined; • Accessibility and use promote longevity (Conway); • “Mechanisms to ensure long-term persistence should operate harmoniously with mechanisms supporting dissemination and use. (Lavoie & Dempsey) IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  7. Goals of Project • Make videos not only accessible, but also understandable in the future; • Develop a preservation framework for digital video context that includes preservation of persistent context; • Develop a workflow model that focuses on the capture of contextual information; • Explore the design and feasibility of a video or multimedia-enhanced finding aid; • Develop decision support tools for the acquisition, ingest, and preservation of context. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  8. Theoretical Foundation • Builds from OAIS Reference Model; • Blends conceptualizing power of archival finding aids with complexity and information-rich nature of video; • Based in the vision that long-term provision of contextualized access • Makes digital objects understandable over time; • Is essential to long-term preservation; • Is dependent on metadata. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  9. Metadata • Several schemes and standards – METS, NLNZ, etc.; • Preservation metadata – PREMIS; • What is needed for long-term access and understandability? • Object-specific annotations; • Collection-level descriptions and integration/ links among objects; • State of the world information. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  10. Context… • Can make materials useful and comprehendible across time and space; • Is a hallmark of a well-written finding aid; • Is often expensive to capture. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  11. Open Video • Housed within SILS; • Collects and makes available digitized video content for a wide audience; • Significantly, Open Video began as a project to provide researchers with access to video to facilitate the study of video problems; • It now finds itself a repository with preservation as well as access needs. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  12. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  13. NASA Collection • 2003, partnered with NASA Langley’s Center for Distance Learning; • OV provides digital video file version of four educational programs; • Video comes from NASA and passes through the OV workflow. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  14. NASA Collection on OV IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  15. NASA’s Own Video Site IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  16. ACM Collection • Videos presented at research conference sponsored by the Association of Computing Machinery; • SIGCHI has accepted juried videos since 1983; • 427 videos in OV’s ACM collection; • Videos of widely varying quality with a range of metadata. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  17. VidArch Methodology • Explore Open Video workflow; • Identify sources of context from OV workflow process; • Build framework to articulate sources of context in OAIS model and OV workflow; • Create media-enhanced finding aids that capture context. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  18. Finding Aids • Traditional tools of archivists but have not often been exploited in digital library settings; • FAs provide context for access and understandability over time; • FAs can contain several levels of hierarchy: • the entire collection; • series and subseries; and • listing of individual materials. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  19. EAD Finding Aids • Encoded Archival Description FAs designed to be highly accessible and interoperable; • EAD FAs can take advantage of multiple media, hyperlinks, and interactive behaviors. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  20. Finding Aids & Context • Traditionally, context in finding aids relates to the entities involved in the creation of the records • individuals, • organizations and functions, and • the nature of the records themselves. • FAs involve substantial intellectual work and professional judgment on the part of archivists. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  21. VidArch View of Finding Aids • FAs should be considered not just access devices but also digital objects; • FAs should be ingested into the OAIS and preserved along with the target videos; • Identifying a typology of elements (related actors, events, objects, locations, times), to be documented within video collections; • Finding aids can be enriched with links to media objects. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  22. NASA Collection Finding Aid IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  23. Digital Archiving & OAIS Model • OAIS indicates the importance of contextual information but does not describe how to specify it. • We seek to develop a further articulation of how context can best be preserved within the OAIS framework. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  24. Life Cycle of Digital Videos from NASA in Open Video IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  25. Workflow and Sources of Context • The solid arrows in the figure show current information flows; • Dashed arrows indicate potential for capturing further contextual information; • 1st Stage: Functional provenance within NASA; • 2nd Stage: Video production activities NASA; • 3rd Stage: Distribution of the video. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  26. OAIS, SIPS, & AIPS • An OAIS differs from other types of information systems in that it accepts “responsibility to preserve information and make it available for a Designated Community” over the “long-term.” • This responsibility is only assured for information that has been submitted to the OAIS as an SIP and then ingested in order to become an AIP. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  27. Curator’s OAIS Responsibilities • Curators of digital video collections must decide what subset of the total potential documentation (existing or created by the curator) related to the digital videos should be • reflected in the descriptive and access tools of the archive and • submitted to the archive as SIPs in order to be ingested for long-term preservation. IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

  28. Thank You! Slides from this presentation will be found at: http://ils.unc.edu/vidarch tibbo@ils.unc.edu IS&T Archiving Conference 2006 Ottawa, Canada, May 26, 2006

More Related