MDA and SPECTRUM. Authors: Nick Poole and Gordon McKenna

Similar documents
CO-ORDINATION MECHANISMS FOR DIGITISATION POLICIES AND PROGRAMMES:

ccess to Cultural Heritage Networks Across Europe

MINERVA: IMPROVING THE PRODUCTION OF DIGITAL CULTURAL HERITAGE IN EUROPE. Rossella Caffo - Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali, Italia

JTC1 Smart Ci,es workshop. Welcome!

Digitisation Plan

Roadmap for European Universities in Energy December 2016

Whole of Society Conflict Prevention and Peacebuilding

Engaging UK Climate Service Providers a series of workshops in November 2014

Knowledge Exchange Strategy ( )

Engaging Stakeholders

WG/STAIR. Knut Blind, STAIR Chairman

Department of Arts and Culture NATIONAL POLICY ON THE DIGITISATION OF HERITAGE RESOURCES

RESEARCH AND INNOVATION STRATEGY. ANZPAA National Institute of Forensic Science

Project overview Athens, 14 October 2016

Doing, supporting and using public health research. The Public Health England strategy for research, development and innovation

1. Recognizing that some of the barriers that impede the diffusion of green technologies include:

VISUAL ARTS COLLECTION COORDINATOR

ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL IMPACT REPORT

icd - institute for cultural diplomacy

Mul6lingual Linked Data Technologies for the Single Digital Market

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL. on the evaluation of Europeana and the way forward. {SWD(2018) 398 final}

Online Access to Cultural Heritage through Digital Collections: the MICHAEL Project

Digital Preservation Policy

Committee on Development and Intellectual Property (CDIP)

International Conference on Research Infrastructures 2014

SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT RESPONSE TO THE REPORT BY THE MUSEUMS THINK TANK

Report OIE Animal Welfare Global Forum Supporting implementation of OIE Standards Paris, France, March 2018

OPEN BOARD MEETING! Barcelona, 2 July 2015! 17:00 18:00!!

Comments from CEN CENELEC on COM(2010) 245 of 19 May 2010 on "A Digital Agenda for Europe"

Social Innovation 2015: Pathways to Social Change Vienna, November 18 th, Maria Schwarz-Woelzl (ZSI) & Wolfgang Haider (ZSI)

FP7 Funding Opportunities for the ICT Industry

2nd Call for Proposals

COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION. of on access to and preservation of scientific information. {SWD(2012) 221 final} {SWD(2012) 222 final}

Practical measures to encourage the diffusion of green technologies: Licensing Fast tracking of green patents The GreenXchange Platform

LIBER s role in supporting European Research Libraries. Wouter Schallier Executive Director

University of Massachusetts Amherst Libraries. Digital Preservation Policy, Version 1.3

Social Innovation and new pathways to social changefirst insights from the global mapping

Our position. ICDPPC declaration on ethics and data protection in artificial intelligence

European Commission. 6 th Framework Programme Anticipating scientific and technological needs NEST. New and Emerging Science and Technology

RICHES Renewal, Innovation and Change: Heritage and European Society

Joint Programming Initiative Healthy and Productive Seas and Oceans

Overview of BSI and standardisation (Smart Cities & Big Data)

Delivering Diversity; Promoting Participatlo 7. Conference Proceedings AIID September 1999 Imperial College, London

Creative Informatics Research Fellow - Job Description Edinburgh Napier University

Digital Education Action Plan: priorities, actions and timeframe

The Europeana Data Model: tackling interoperability via modelling

First MyOcean User Workshop 7-8 April 2011, Stockholm Main outcomes

Case study in academic and industry collaboration: the development of an adolescent targeted sun protection intervention in NSW

Horizon 2020 and CAP towards 2020

At its meeting on 18 May 2016, the Permanent Representatives Committee noted the unanimous agreement on the above conclusions.

Candidate Brief. Head of Interpretation Science Museum. November Contact: Liz Amos

From FP7 towards Horizon 2020 Workshop on " Research performance measurement and the impact of innovation in Europe" IPERF, Luxembourg, 31/10/2013

Developing the Arts in Ireland. Arts Council Strategic Overview

Public consultation on Europeana

Research DG. European Commission. Sharing Visions. Towards a European Area for Foresight

THE DRAFT NATIONAL POLICY ON DIGITISATION AND INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY BUILDING

The Enterprise Europe Network. in Hungary Zita Majoros, Consultant. Title. Sub-title. 28 th January, Kiev, Ukraine

NEMO POLICY STATEMENT

Media Literacy Expert Group Draft 2006

Capturing the impacts of Liverpool 08 Evaluating European Capital of Culture

A F.A.I.R. model for Australia s research outputs: emerging policies and new strategies

April 2015 newsletter. Efficient Energy Planning #3

RECOMMENDATIONS. COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION (EU) 2018/790 of 25 April 2018 on access to and preservation of scientific information

Realising the Flanders Research Information Space

The New Delhi Communiqué

We would be delighted to discuss your needs and how we could support you, so please get in touch. Our contact details appear on the final page.

Reaction of the European Alliance for Culture and the Arts to the European Commission s proposal for the EU future budget

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 9 December 2008 (16.12) (OR. fr) 16767/08 RECH 410 COMPET 550

Parenteral Nutrition Down Under Inc. (PNDU) Working with Pharmaceutical Companies Policy (Policy)

Working together to deliver on Europe 2020

WHY ACCOUNTANCY & SOCIAL DESIGN

Science Integration Fellowship: California Ocean Science Trust & Humboldt State University

RegionArts - overview, methodology and outputs

Science and Heritage Programme Call for Research Cluster Proposals - Specification

Communication and Dissemination in HORIZON 2020 European Commission Directorate-General for Research and Innovation

ONR Strategy 2015 to 2020

Memorandum on the long-term accessibility. of digital information in Germany

Training Programme 2015

Technology forecasting used in European Commission's policy designs is enhanced with Scopus and LexisNexis datasets

Agreements in R&D and Technology Transfer: Best Practices and Model Agreements

DEPUIS project: Design of Environmentallyfriendly Products Using Information Standards

SEAS-ERA STRATEGIC FORUM

SHTG primary submission process

SUSTAINABLE OCEAN INITIATIVE: KEY ELEMENTS FOR THE PERIOD

University of Dundee. Design in Action Knowledge Exchange Process Model Woods, Melanie; Marra, M.; Coulson, S. DOI: 10.

URBAN TRANSITIONS ALLIANCE INDUSTRIAL LEGACY. SUSTAINABLE FUTURE.

Written response to the public consultation on the European Commission Green Paper: From

IP KEY SOUTH EAST ASIA ANNUAL WORK PLAN FOR 2018

Information points report

Digital Out Of Home & Digital Signage Oi Orientation, ti Strategy t &Development tworkshops

An Introduction to SIMDAT a Proposal for an Integrated Project on EU FP6 Topic. Grids for Integrated Problem Solving Environments

Christophe DESSAUX Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication Association MICHAEL Culture

December Eucomed HTA Position Paper UK support from ABHI

The Green Economy: Trade and Sustainable Development Implications. From Rio to Rio:Technology Transfer, Innovation and Intellectual Property

Standard of Knowledge, Skill and Competence for Practice as an Architectural Technologist

Report on the linkage modalities and the rolling workplan of the Technology Executive Committee for

Culture Media and Sport Select Committee Countries of Culture Inquiry: Written Evidence Submitted by DACS

SMA Europe Code of Practice on Relationships with the Pharmaceutical Industry

National Workshop on Responsible Research & Innovation in Australia 7 February 2017, Canberra

New ideas, new firms?

Transcription:

Authors: Nick Poole and Gordon McKenna

1 The Political Background It is useful to provide a brief overview of the current political and professional climate in UK museums by way of context for MDA s activity. 1.2 Museum policy in recent years has been dominated by a social policy agenda which focuses on access to and engagement with collections over their long-term management and care. This focus has delivered some important programmes, not least the national Inspiring Learning for All framework and industry-wide activity to make collections more accessible. 1.3 Over the past 12-18 months, however, the sector has seen a shift back towards a more balanced view which appreciates the intrinsic link between effective collections management and the ability of museums to deliver greater access. 1.4 The key documents in this shift have been: Collections for the Future the result of an inquiry by the UK Museums Association to identify ways of making collections more dynamic (http://www.museumsassociation.org) Understanding the Future Museums and the 21st Century a sector-wide consultation from the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (http://www.culture.gov.uk) into future priorities for collections 1.5 As part of this increased focus on the management and use of collections, there is greater awareness of both the importance and potential of museum documentation and Knowledge Management. 2 SPECTRUM The Story So Far 2.1 SPECTRUM will be familiar to most, if not all, members of CIDOC. Originallypublished in 1994 and subsequently revised in two further editions, 2

SPECTRUM is recognised throughout the UK as the industry standard for documentationpractice in museums (http://www.mda.org.uk/spectrum). 2.2 The SPECTRUM standard incorporates two main elements: A Procedural standard, defining best practice across 21 collections and information management procedures An Informational standard, defining over 400 Units of Information that are the basis of a standard architecture for museum information 2.3 SPECTRUM itself has been developed by MDA in partnership with hundreds of museum professionals throughout the UK and internationally. As such, it represents a unique focus for consensus on current best practice. 3 SPECTRUM - Revised Edition 3.1 In March 2005, MDA published the Revised Edition of SPECTRUM. This edition represented a significant review and update of the 2nd edition and has since been licensed to over 2500 museum organisations and individuals worldwide. 3.2 The Revised Edition also represents a shift in MDA s thinking about the standard itself. MDA is positioning SPECTRUM as an open standard, published by MDA but owned by the whole of the museum sector. This approach has the following key features: SPECTRUM is now available free of charge for non-commercial use from the MDA website (subject to registration) Instead of publishing sequential editions, the standard will be kept up to date on an ongoing basis, with revisions being published to the sector periodically MDA is keen to encourage the museums industry to contribute to the development of the standard as part of a global community of practitioners 3

4 SPECTRUM XML 4.1 The Revised Edition of SPECTRUM was published as a series of XHTML pages as part of MDA s long-term commitment to making the standard more readily accessible to the cultural heritage community. 4.2 MDA is now investigating the publication of future editions of SPECTRUM as a structured XML document. A key driver for this work is to provide an update to the SPECTRUM XML Schema version 1.5, originally published by the Consortium for the Interchange of Museum Information (http://www.cni.org/pub/cimi/framework.html) 4.3 The ultimate aim of this activity is to ensure that SPECTRUM can be used as the basis of a national and international interchange format for museum information, linked to the Conceptual Reference Model developed by CIDOC (http://cidoc.ics.forth.gr/). 5 SPECTRUM Internationally 5.1 As demonstrated by the worldwide distribution map (see Appendix), the Revised Edition of SPECTRUM has already seen significant interest in the international community. MDA is committed to building this profile and ensuring that as wide a group of practitioners as possible is able to contribute to the ongoing development and implementation of the standard. 5.2 MDA has already held discussions with representative organisations in a number of EU Member States about the possibility of licensing the standard (on a non-commercial basis) for translation and localisation, and this work will be progressing over the next few months. 5.3 MDA s aim is to enable the creation of national instances of SPECTRUM which support museum practitioners in managing their information. The creation of a SPECTRUM XML schema has the potential to provide a mechanism by which this can happen without impacting on the integrity of the standard. 4

6 Working in Partnership 6.1 To coincide with the release of the Revised Edition of SPECTRUM, MDA launched the MDA Partners Scheme. The purpose of the Scheme is to enable MDA to work with software developers and vendors to ensure that the next generation of Collections Management software is directly linked to the development of the SPECTRUM standard. 6.2 The key elements of the Scheme are: A license to participating vendors to incorporate the text of SPECTRUM in their software A Compliance Framework which allows MDA to validate candidate systems for compliance with SPECTRUM The right for vendors to market their software as SPECTRUM Compliant 6.3 Since its launch in 2005, the MDA Partners Scheme has seen rapid takeup throughout the UK and internationally. Members of the Scheme now include 8 of the world s leading Collections Management Software vendors, including companies based throughout Europe and in the United States. 6.4 MDA is keen to regard partnership as a mutually beneficial relationship. It provides museums with the reassurance that systems are standards-compliant, while also giving commercial organisations an opportunity to contribute to the ongoing development of the standard. 7 MDA s Work 7.1 Alongside the development of SPECTRUM, MDA has been working to deliver a range of products and services which help museums engage with the standard. These include a UK-wide programme of quality-assured training events and seminars, as well as published material and presentations. 7.2 Alongside this core work, MDA has also developed two national initiatives geared towards raising awareness and professional standards in collections management: 5

Collections for All a UK-wide advocacy campaign which is working to provide evidence of the social, economic, professional and intellectual impact of good collections information management (http://www.collectionsforall.org.uk) Collections Link a national advisory service covering 16 areas of collections management practice including documentation, conservation, online publishing and rights management (http://www.collectionslink.org.uk) 8 MDA and Terminology 8.1 MDA s work has always included a focus on terminological standards. As an increasing number of UK museums provide online access to their information resources, the application of standard thesauri and ontologies is a key factor in delivering semantically interoperable digital cultural content. 8.2 To address this requirement, MDA has developed SPECTRUM Terminology (http://www.mda.org.uk/spectrum-terminology/index.htm), an online service comprising 3 elements: Terminology Essentials general information about terminology for museum practitioners Terminology Workshop guidance on the creation and application of terminologies Terminology Bank a growing repository of existing terminologies and related resources 8.3 The long-term aim for SPECTRUM Terminology is to create an environment in which museum practitioners can share or download terminologies for real-world applications. 8.4 MDA has recently entered into partnership with the University of Leicester, the UK Museums Computer Group and the 24 Hour Museum (http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk) to create a Semantic Web Thinktank. The Thinktank will investigate the potential of new approaches including Topic Maps, SKOS and social tagging and their application in museums. 6

9 MDA and Intellectual Property Rights 9.1 Rights Management is a key element of the Revised Edition of SPECTRUM, and MDA is working to provide expert advice and guidance for museums in engaging with and managing their documented information as an important part of their Intellectual Property. 9.2 MDA supports the work of the Museums Copyright Group (http://www.museumscopyright.org.uk) and has established its own Intellectual Property Advisory Committee to help shape the future development of its IP-related work. 9.3 In addition, MDA has been working to address the potential and risks associated with emerging open licensing frameworks such as Creative Commons (http://www.creativecommons.org) and the BBC Creative Archive (http://creativearchive.bbc.co.uk/). 10 Future Priorities for 10.1 Overall, this is an exciting time in MDA s 27-year history. There is increasing awareness both of the importance and potential of information management in museums to support a range of activities including publishing, collections management and dissemination. 10.2 MDA welcomes the opportunity of discussing with CIDOC the potential for future collaboration in the development of the SPECTRUM standard. Our particular priorities over the next 2-3 years include: The ongoing revision and publication of the SPECTRUM standard in partnership with the cultural heritage community and MDA Partners The development of SPECTRUM XML and the associated schema as a mechanism for data interchange The relationship between SPECTRUM and the development of the Conceptual Reference Model 7

The exploration of Topic Maps as a mechanism to support true semantic interoperability between cultural resources and datasets The large-scale implications of publication and disclosure of museum information This document is copyright MDA 2006 Nick Poole and Gordon McKenna July 2006 MDA (Europe) Ltd. The Spectrum Building The Michael Young Centre Purbeck Road Cambridge CB2 2PD +44 (0)1223 415 760 www.mda.org.uk 8