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            <title>The Virtual Lightbox for Museums and Archives: A Distributed Solution for Structured Data Reuse Across Multiple Visual Resources</title>
            <author>
               <name reg="Smith, Amy">Amy Smith</name>
            </author>
            <author>
               <name reg="Fuchs, Brian">Brian Fuchs</name>
            </author>
            <author>
               <name reg="Isaksen, Leif">Leif Isaksen</name>
            </author>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Marked up by </resp>
               <name reg="Holmes, Martin">Martin Holmes</name>
               <lb/>
               <name reg="Baer, Patricia">Patricia Baer</name>
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         </titleStmt>
         <publicationStmt>
            <p>Marked up to be included in the ACH/ALLC 2005 Conference Abstracts book.</p>
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            <p>None</p>
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            <classCode>poster</classCode>
            <keywords>
               <list>
                  <item>content reuse</item>
                  <item>rdf syndication</item>
                  <item>visual collections</item>
               </list>
            </keywords>
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            <item>MDH: Created from John Bradley's XML <date value="2005-03">March 2005</date>
            </item>
            <item>MDH: RS proofed and signed off without changes <date value="2005-05-18">18 May 2005</date>.</item>
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   <text>
      <front>
         <docTitle n="The Virtual Lightbox for Museums and Archives: A Distributed Solution for Structured Data Reuse Across Multiple Visual Resources">
            <titlePart>The <title level="m">Virtual Lightbox for Museums and Archives</title>: A Distributed Solution for Structured Data Reuse Across Multiple Visual Resources</titlePart>
         </docTitle>
         <docAuthor>
            <name reg="Smith, Amy">Amy Smith</name>
            <address>
               <addrLine>a.c.smith@reading.ac.uk</addrLine>
            </address>
         </docAuthor>
         <titlePart type="affil">University of Reading</titlePart>
         <docAuthor>
            <name reg="Fuchs, Brian">Brian Fuchs</name>
            <address>
               <addrLine>fuchs@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de</addrLine>
            </address>
         </docAuthor>
         <titlePart type="affil">Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin</titlePart>
         <docAuthor>
            <name reg="Isaksen, Leif">Leif Isaksen</name>
            <address>
               <addrLine>li103@soton.ac.uk</addrLine>
            </address>
         </docAuthor>
         <titlePart type="affil">University of Southampton</titlePart>
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      <body>
         <div0>
            <p>The​ <title level="m">Virtual Lightbox for Museums and Archives</title> (<title level="m">VLMA</title>) is a tool for collecting and reusing distributed visual archives via RDF syndication and P2P technology. It aims to assist students and scholars in locating and exporting learning object/metadata groups that may then be reused and shared among users and user-groups.</p>
            <p>The <title level="m">VLMA</title> is a response to the challenge of contextualization. It grew out of the experience of digitizing a small university collection —the <title level="m">Ure Museum of Classical Archaeology</title> (<xptr to="http://www.reading.ac.uk/Ure/"/>)— and integrating its contents into a humanities portal —the <title level="m">ECHO</title> project (<xptr to="http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/"/>)— with diverse content. Research and teaching required access to external resources, in order to provide context and points of comparison, while integration into a large portal with diverse objects demonstrated the need for a means to assemble groups of objects from diverse sources in a manner independent of their online presentation. It also became apparent that the need to allow students to collect objects from diverse online sources for reuse in other contexts, e.g. presentations, as opposed to integration into a collection's website, could not easily be met in the current situation of online collections.  Recent technological innovations, such as metadata unification (e.g. <title level="m">Dublin Core</title>), distributed metadata (e.g. <title level="m">Open Archives Initiative</title>), and meta-metadata (CIDOC's <title level="m">Conceptual Reference Model</title>), had indeed done much to ease the difficulties involved in content integration; but in all of these cases, content integration has remained almost exclusively the province of the data provider, who is responsible for repackaging harvested material. Thus, even when suitable metadata is available, collection and reuse of distributed content requires Herculean efforts on the part of the individual user. And because of the heterogeneous nature of the material collected, the individual user's efforts typically cannot themselves be rewarded with reuse in any significant fashion.  </p>
            <p>The <title level="m">VLMA</title> seeks to complement other methods of content integration with a <soCalled>point-of-reuse</soCalled> approach. Through this approach collections with intrinsically heterogeneous metadata sets are syndicated via RDF and then <soCalled>collected</soCalled> —browsed, stored, viewed, and reused— at the peer/client level. The idea is to add to the current integration options available to collections publishers/users a <soCalled>distributed</soCalled> variant, in which each peer determines its own strategy for metadata integration and content reuse. The problem of how to integrate collection metadata then becomes a question of reuse and syndication at the level of the individual user, rather than the provider, with content federation strategies flourishing or withering depending upon the current needs of the user community.</p>
            <p>Syndication of content can take several forms--a lecture, a student paper, or actual resyndication across the network in the form of a new collection. The latter possibility is particularly exciting, as it provides an easy method for bringing added value to published content (for example, an online scholarly article that discusses related artworks in diverse collections might provide a unified set of illustrations rather than, as is necessary at present, laboriously providing links to the diverse websites on which these objects might be illustrated) as well as a simple way of creating thematically related collections with distributed content. </p>
            <p>The <title level="m">VLMA</title> method for content syndication is designed to be simple. A content producer seeds the network by syndicating already published content using a syndication tool which writes RDF to a lightbox namespace. The basic units of lightbox namespace are services, collection objects, and images, each of which is represented by an RDF fragment. In the simplest instantiation of a service, a consumer browses online objects in a collection, which s/he then captures to the lightbox. The lightbox then displays the images and metadata sets associated with this object, and "syndicates" them as a local collection, which appears in the service hierarchy alongside other collection browsers that have been discovered on the network. The consumer then has several reuse options, such as annotation, publication, export and local storage, which allow syndication with added value. </p>
            <p>The <title level="m">VLMA</title> is an open-source tool, written in Java under a GPL, and funded in its first phase (through March 2005) by <title level="m">JISC</title>.   A functioning prototype applet is available from the project's website (<xptr to="http://www.reading.ac.uk/Ure/VLMA.htm"/>; <xptr to="http://www.sourceforge.org/VLMA/"/>). A crucial feature of the current implementation is an RDF store web service, which has been implemented with <title level="m">Sesame</title> (<xptr to="http://www.openrdf.org"/>), an open-source RDF database, as a backend. The use of such a service allows not only reduction in applet size but also significant latency reduction in RDF harvesting and querying, as visual collections clients typically access the same RDF material. The project has also agreed to pursue parallel development with Virtual Lightbox (<xptr to="http://mith2.umd.edu/products/lightbox/"/>), developed at the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities, and has designed its code in a modular fashion so as to be easily able to incorporate developments at MITH. </p>
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      <back>
         <div type="Bibliography">
            <head>Bibliography</head>
            <listBibl>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="Ure Museum of Classical Archeology">Ure Museum of Classical Archeology</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>University of Reading</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21" to="http://www.rdg.ac.uk/Ure/index.php"/>
                  </note>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="Virtual Lightbox for Museums and Archives">Virtual Lightbox for Museums and Archives</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>Joint Information Systems Committee &amp; Max Planck Institute for the History of Science</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21" to="http://www.reading.ac.uk/Ure/VLMA/"/>
                  </note>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="Virtual Lightbox">Virtual Lightbox</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21" to="http://mith2.umd.edu/products/lightbox/"/>
                  </note>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="ECHO">ECHO (European Cultural Heritage Online)</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>European Commission</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21" to="http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/"/>
                  </note>
               </biblStruct>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title level="m" type="WWW document">
                        <name reg="Sesame">Sesame</name>
                     </title>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>openRDF.org</publisher>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
                  <note>
                     <xptr crdate="2005-03-21" to="http://www.openrdf.org/"/>
                  </note>
               </biblStruct>
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