Let the Records Show: Attribution of Scientific Credit in Natural History Collections

IF 1.5 3区 生物学 Q3 PLANT SCIENCES
Rebecca B. Dikow, Jenna T. B. Ekwealor, William Mattingly, Michael Trizna, Elizabeth Harmon, Torsten Dikow, Carlos F. Arias, Richard G. J. Hodel, Jennifer Spillane, Mirian T. N. Tsuchiya, Luis Villanueva, Alexander E. White, Madeline G. Bursell, Tia Curry, C. inema, Kayla Geronimo-Anctil
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Abstract

Premise of research. Natural history collections are essential resources for taxonomy, systematics, and ecological and climate change research. Mass digitization of these collections provides the opportunity to study broad biological patterns among specimens and their associated metadata at a scale that was previously impossible. The specimen metadata can also be used to study the contributions of the people that collected and identified these specimens. A proper accounting of these contributions impacts our understanding of the history of these collections and who played a role in their growth. Methodology. Here, we provide an assessment of the scientific contributions of past women in science at the Smithsonian Institution, focusing on their specimen collections and identifications. We evaluate natural history specimen collections records available from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility and Smithsonian annual reports, volumes dating to the founding of the Smithsonian in 1846. Pivotal results. We identify 40 women with specimen collections or identifications, with a total of more than 120,000 total specimens attributed to them. In cases where specimens are not yet digitized, we are able to learn more about the women’s contributions using annual reports, which provide a richer picture of their work at the Smithsonian. This work relies on collaboration as well as deep institutional knowledge. We also release a semantic search application, which allows users to search the Smithsonian annual reports. Conclusions. Collections records are a rich resource, but there are significant barriers to accurate specimen attribution, which disproportionately affect women collectors and determiners. We propose ways that we might document these problems at scale and remedy cases of misattribution in digital repositories of record.
让记录显示:自然历史藏品的科学信用归属
研究的前提。自然史馆藏是分类学、系统学、生态学和气候变化研究的重要资源。这些藏品的大规模数字化为研究标本之间广泛的生物模式及其相关元数据提供了机会,这在以前是不可能的。标本元数据还可用于研究收集和鉴定这些标本的人的贡献。对这些贡献的适当核算会影响我们对这些藏品的历史的理解,以及谁在它们的发展中发挥了作用。方法。在这里,我们对史密森学会过去的女性科学贡献进行了评估,重点是她们的标本收集和鉴定。我们评估了全球生物多样性信息设施和史密森尼年度报告中提供的自然历史标本收集记录,这些记录可追溯到1846年史密森尼学会成立。关键的结果。我们通过标本收集或鉴定鉴定了40名妇女,总共有超过12万份标本归她们所有。在标本尚未数字化的情况下,我们可以通过年度报告了解更多关于女性贡献的信息,这些报告为她们在史密森尼的工作提供了更丰富的画面。这项工作依赖于合作以及深厚的机构知识。我们还发布了一个语义搜索应用程序,允许用户搜索史密森尼年度报告。结论。标本收集记录是一项丰富的资源,但在标本准确归属方面存在重大障碍,这对女性标本收集者和鉴定者的影响尤为严重。我们提出了一些方法,可以大规模地记录这些问题,并在数字记录库中纠正错误归属的情况。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
4.30%
发文量
65
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Plant Sciences has a distinguished history of publishing research in the plant sciences since 1875. IJPS presents high quality, original, peer-reviewed research from laboratories around the world in all areas of the plant sciences. Topics covered range from genetics and genomics, developmental and cell biology, biochemistry and physiology, to morphology and anatomy, systematics, evolution, paleobotany, plant-microbe interactions, and ecology. IJPS does NOT publish papers on agriculture or crop improvement. In addition to full-length research papers, IJPS publishes review articles, including the open access Coulter Reviews, rapid communications, and perspectives. IJPS welcomes contributions that present evaluations and new perspectives on areas of current interest in plant biology. IJPS publishes nine issues per year and regularly features special issues on topics of particular interest, including new and exciting research originally presented at major botanical conferences.
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