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Posts Tagged ‘museums’

 

 

CineFiles Redesign and Botanical Garden Plant Propagation Information sites launched

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009 by Chris Hoffman

The Informatics Services team recently released the results of two major projects: a major redesign and refactoring of CineFiles and the new Botanical Garden Plant Propagation Information web site. Hot off the presses, iNews has published an article (Campus collections: New systems for education and outreach) describing the systems and the importance of collaborative teams to their success.

UC Berkeley is home to numerous world-class museums, visual resource collections, archives, and other collecting institutions. While campus museums have always placed a strong emphasis on the stewarding and safekeeping of these collections and on fostering collections-based research, increasingly their role in education and public service has grown. Recently, IST released two systems that highlight this trend: CineFiles (for the PFA Library and Film Study Center within the UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive) and the Botanical Garden Plant Propagation Information web system (for the UC Botanical Garden).

CollectionSpace 0.2 release

Thursday, October 8th, 2009 by Chris Hoffman

On October 6, the CollectionSpace project team announced the 0.2 release of the community source collection management system.  As the news item states, this release:

allows users to login to the system, create a new intake record, and auto-fill intake and object identification numbers. Information groups within data entry screens can be collapsed and expanded to maximize screen efficiency (use the plus/minus signs to the left of the information group name; e.g. object identification information). Updates to the object, create new main page, and find/edit main page are also incorporated into this release.

Equally important, this release demonstrates that the project team is gaining momentum towards the version 1 release in June 2010.  The next release is intended to continue accelerating the pace of development and will include:

an expansion of the ID service to include a choice of sequential identification numbers; the first version of the vocabulary service, which will provide access to controlled lists; and support for acquisition.

Also tantalizing, the UCB services team is working on some of the important schema customization and multi-tenancy capabilities for the system.

Spectrum 3.2 released, Revisiting Collections

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009 by Chris Hoffman

Collections Trust, the organization behind Spectrum, has released version 3.2 of the UK Museum Documentation Standard.  According to an announcement dated September 8, 2009, from Gordon McKenna (International Development Manager for Collections Trust),

The new version has been updated to include further support for Revisiting Collections, an innovative methodology to help museums create services and exhibitions for diverse audiences. Other changes in the new edition include the revision of the Sources of Help and Advice sections, which include updated links to websites and publications providing further information on aspects of Collections Management.

The Revisiting Collections methodology is worth looking at more closely.  According to the web site

http://www.collectionslink.org.uk/increase_access/revisiting_collections/

Revisiting Collections … supports museums and archives to open up their collections for scrutiny by community groups and external experts and to reveal and capture histories hitherto hidden or ignored. A key strength of Revisiting Collections is that it provides a framework for embedding these new voices and their perspectives on objects and records directly within a museum or archive service’s catalogues and finding aids: ensuring that they become part of the story about the collections that is recorded and made accessible to all.

Collections Trust then has taken on the challenge of how to incorporate community (and other) annotations into the collection management system in a way that honors the contributor while protecting the information record of the museum.  The Revisiting Collections site includes toolkits and guides for museums and archives to use in their own efforts to explore bringing in such content.  While Spectrum is a documentation standard and not a specification for a collection management system, it is very refreshing to see an organization like this provide practical advice and tangible tools for the kinds of problems that museums, archives and libraries are facing on the ground today.

CollectionSpace 0.1 Hello World release

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009 by Chris Hoffman

The CollectionSpace project team has released version 0.1 of its open-source collection management system for museums. This Hello World release focuses on tying the technology layers together around the function of basic object entry. Those interested in collections are encouraged to experiment with the Hello World release and provide feedback to the project team. CollectionSpace is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.  Read the iNews article for more information:

http://inews.berkeley.edu/articles/Aug2009/CollectionSpace

Also worth noting, Carl Goodman and Megan Forbes (of Museum of the Moving Image) recently visited the Getty Research Institute (Los Angeles) and the the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.  Their presentations are hosted on the CollectionSpace wiki and provide a great overview of where CollectionSpace is right now.  Here’s a link to the Getty presentation:

http://wiki.collectionspace.org/display/collectionspace/Getty+Presentation+July+2009

It’s great to see this first version which focuses on technical integration.  IST will work closely with the CollectionSpace project team, as well as with campus museums, to ensure that this solution will be one that helps us manage, study, and share the world-class collections for which UC Berkeley is responsible.

Indianapolis Museum of Art Dashboard

Thursday, September 4th, 2008 by Chris Hoffman

I was talking this morning with Peter Cava (Data Warehouse Services Manager here at UC Berkeley) about the (potential) intersection between business intelligence systems used for administrative systems here and the kinds of data aggregation and analysis performed by research scientists and faculty working with museum collections. Afterward, I was looking at the preliminary program for the Museum Computer Network conference this fall and saw that Rob Stein at Indianapolis Museum of Art is giving a talk about a dashboard that they have developed to help measure various aspects about the museum’s performance. I can’t resist when these kinds of connections happen — they always lead in interesting directions. The IMA Dashboard is up on the web, and they should be applauded for their emphasis on transparency. I also enjoyed reading the blog post at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney featuring an interview with Rob about the project, and this pointed me to a report written by Maxwell L. Anderson for the Getty, titled “Metrics of Success in Art Museums.”

Now it’s time to get in touch with Rob!

Research directions using aggregated museum data sets

Sunday, August 10th, 2008 by Chris Hoffman

For quite awhile now, I’ve been thinking about the value of aggregating content and information in museum collections. I think it is generally accepted now that museums and collections of many kinds need to make larger portions of their collections available online to the public, and efforts to digitize collections and webify collections data are producing wonderful results. At the same time, aside from good public relations, what’s in it for the museums and for scholarship in general? What new information or new research directions might emerge from aggregations of museum content? Not surprisingly, in natural history and biodiversity research, the power of numbers, of volume, has been recognized for a long time. Single specimens are nice as types, but in order to learn something about ecological systems and evolution, you need statistically valid numbers. In cultural heritage collections, the possibilities are less clear. Some recent work in England has been interesting though perhaps more from the perspective of studying the history of museums and even of colonialism. Museum studies are still especially interested in the individual object or the subcollection. Rather than focusing on the unique individual object or specimen, what can we learn by unlocking and aggregating content in collections? What research questions emerge? What are the limitations and the opportunities?

Here’s one idea I’ve been thinking about that would pertain to Anthropology and Archaeology collections. We could look at the combinations of material and technique across culture, time and space. We’d expect certain combinations to be visible, but I suspect we would be surprised on numerous occasions. The semantic index that supports the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology’s Delphi system could be an excellent source for this project. I might even revisit some of my dissertation materials. Yikes…

What would be problematic about such a study? Data quality within and across collections would be an important consideration. Would we know which objects were documented at a sufficient level of detail? Would we know which parts of the collection were studied more closely? Would we know which museum specialists were “good” at their jobs? Would we know which objects or collections had been reviewed by multiple museum specialists? The number of biases would be large and problematic. But hey, I’m an archaeologist by training. I’m used to studying a messy data set and making a large number of assumptions.

What kinds of things can be done to address these biases? We could select only sets of data that had been carefully studied, but that in and of itself will create bias. We could try to enrich the data ourselves, but the sheer scope of that effort is terrifying. That’s where crowd sourcing, tagging and annotation could come in. By getting our collections online and allowing other experts (including the public) to enrich our content, we can incrementally improve the quality of our information. Other projects are showing how this can be productively done. However, how much work has been done on assessing the quality of tagging and annotation in a setting such as this? Interestingly the CalPhotos system has been allowing reviewers to annotate and re-identify species for many years. CalPhotos then might provide a good context in which to study the results of annotation and review.

Nina Simon on IMLS Meeting on Museums and Libraries in the 21st Century

Monday, July 21st, 2008 by Patrick Schmitz

Nina Simon (who writes the Museum 2.0 blog) recently wrote about her impressions of the IMLS Meeting on Museums and Libraries in the 21st Century that took place last week. The meeting was preliminary to a large report that NAS is commissioning on the subject.  It is an interesting survey of the state of attitudes in the industry, from the perspective of someone who wants to see things move forward.

She includes notes on the six topics that the workshop discussed:

  1. How do you plan for the future?
  2. What are the essential differences and similarities between libraries and museums?
  3. How do you measure and articulate the value of museums and libraries?
  4. How can our expertise and assets be applied towards new ends?
  5. Who owns the stuff? Who controls the experience?
  6. How do we reimagine physical space and assets?

Her general observations:

  1. Some leaders are more radical than I hoped, and these people have a hard time advocating for change when their accountability is to those who have not changed.
  2. Some leaders are more conservative than I feared, and these people are alternately smug and desperate about maintaining their power.
  3. Meetings about the future end up being about the present. We were much less creative and forward-thinking than we could have been. Dream big, share it in the comments, and help this be a more productive study.

Read the post – it is interesting, and a good introduction to that blog, if you do not know it already.


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