{"title":"最后的房子在山上:数字修复数据和媒体保存和访问","authors":"M. A. López, R. Tringham, C. Perlingieri","doi":"10.2312/VAST/VAST09/109-116","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The idea of embedding, interweaving, entangling and otherwise linking the data and media from archaeological excavations with their interpretation and meaningful presentation in an open access sharable platform has long been an ambition of those of us working in the digital documentation of archaeological research and the public presentation of cultural heritage. Formidable barriers still exist to making it possible for projects to achieve these aims, ranging from intellectual property concerns to providing commitments to the long-term sustainability of the digital content. Working in collaboration with the contributors, archaeological project managers, publishers and information technologists, we devised a content licensing agreement that makes it possible for the primary research media and data, combined with the monograph texts, to be freely and openly accessible in perpetuity.\n The aim of our project, Last House on the Hill (LHotH), is to holistically reconstitute the rich multimedia and primary research data with the impressive texts of the monograph, the printed final report of the Berkeley Archaeologists at Çatalhöyük (BACH) project, in which a team from UC Berkeley excavated a group of Neolithic 9000-year old buildings at this famous cultural heritage location in Central Anatolia, Turkey. The Last House on the Hill brings together the published text, complete project database (including all media formats such as photographs, videos, maps, line drawings), related websites, data and media outside the direct domain of the BACH project, and recontextualised presentations of the data as remixes, movies, and other interpretive works by BACH team members and many others. We are achieving this through an event-centered, CIDOC-CRM compatible implementation ontology, expressed with the open source Omeka web-publishing platform, providing open access, transparency and open-endedness to what is normally the closed and final process of monograph publication.\n This paper describes the strategy, goals, architecture and implementation for the project, emphasizing the novel and innovative approaches that were required to make the project successful.","PeriodicalId":168094,"journal":{"name":"IEEE Conference on Visual Analytics Science and Technology","volume":"270 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-09-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"10","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Last house on the hill: digitally remediating data and media for preservation and access\",\"authors\":\"M. A. López, R. Tringham, C. 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Working in collaboration with the contributors, archaeological project managers, publishers and information technologists, we devised a content licensing agreement that makes it possible for the primary research media and data, combined with the monograph texts, to be freely and openly accessible in perpetuity.\\n The aim of our project, Last House on the Hill (LHotH), is to holistically reconstitute the rich multimedia and primary research data with the impressive texts of the monograph, the printed final report of the Berkeley Archaeologists at Çatalhöyük (BACH) project, in which a team from UC Berkeley excavated a group of Neolithic 9000-year old buildings at this famous cultural heritage location in Central Anatolia, Turkey. 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引用次数: 10
摘要
将考古发掘的数据和媒体与它们的解释和有意义的呈现结合在一个开放的共享平台上,将其嵌入、交织、纠缠或以其他方式联系起来,一直是我们这些从事考古研究数字文献和文化遗产公开展示工作的人的抱负。从知识产权问题到对数字内容的长期可持续性承诺,使项目实现这些目标的可能性仍然存在巨大的障碍。通过与贡献者、考古项目经理、出版商和信息技术专家的合作,我们制定了一项内容许可协议,使主要的研究媒体和数据,以及专著文本,能够永远自由和公开地访问。我们的项目,最后的房子在山上(LHotH)的目的是全面重建丰富的多媒体和主要的研究数据与专著的令人印象深刻的文本,伯克利考古学家在Çatalhöyük (BACH)项目的最终报告,其中来自加州大学伯克利分校的一个团队挖掘了一组新石器时代的9000年历史的建筑在这个著名的文化遗产位置在安纳托利亚中部,土耳其。The Last House on The Hill汇集了已出版的文本、完整的项目数据库(包括所有媒体格式,如照片、视频、地图、线条图)、相关网站、巴赫项目直接领域之外的数据和媒体,以及巴赫团队成员和许多其他人以混音、电影和其他解释性作品的形式重新呈现的数据。我们通过一个以事件为中心、与CIDOC-CRM兼容的实现本体来实现这一目标,该本体通过开源的Omeka网络出版平台来表达,为通常封闭的专著出版过程提供开放访问、透明度和开放性。本文描述了项目的策略、目标、架构和实现,强调了使项目成功所需的新颖和创新的方法。
Last house on the hill: digitally remediating data and media for preservation and access
The idea of embedding, interweaving, entangling and otherwise linking the data and media from archaeological excavations with their interpretation and meaningful presentation in an open access sharable platform has long been an ambition of those of us working in the digital documentation of archaeological research and the public presentation of cultural heritage. Formidable barriers still exist to making it possible for projects to achieve these aims, ranging from intellectual property concerns to providing commitments to the long-term sustainability of the digital content. Working in collaboration with the contributors, archaeological project managers, publishers and information technologists, we devised a content licensing agreement that makes it possible for the primary research media and data, combined with the monograph texts, to be freely and openly accessible in perpetuity.
The aim of our project, Last House on the Hill (LHotH), is to holistically reconstitute the rich multimedia and primary research data with the impressive texts of the monograph, the printed final report of the Berkeley Archaeologists at Çatalhöyük (BACH) project, in which a team from UC Berkeley excavated a group of Neolithic 9000-year old buildings at this famous cultural heritage location in Central Anatolia, Turkey. The Last House on the Hill brings together the published text, complete project database (including all media formats such as photographs, videos, maps, line drawings), related websites, data and media outside the direct domain of the BACH project, and recontextualised presentations of the data as remixes, movies, and other interpretive works by BACH team members and many others. We are achieving this through an event-centered, CIDOC-CRM compatible implementation ontology, expressed with the open source Omeka web-publishing platform, providing open access, transparency and open-endedness to what is normally the closed and final process of monograph publication.
This paper describes the strategy, goals, architecture and implementation for the project, emphasizing the novel and innovative approaches that were required to make the project successful.