Inherent Vice
inherent vice: n. ~ The tendency of material to deteriorate due to the essential instability of the components or interaction among components.
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Archive for the 'conferences' Category

Recent Presentations

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

I’m a little behind getting the word out,  but here are links to a recent poster and presentation:

ALISE 2010:  Patchwork Prototyping a Collections Dashboard (poster)

iConference 2010: Cultural Heritage Information Dashboards

Stay tuned for more on Dashboards at Museums and the Web 2010:

Modelling CDWA Lite as an OWL-DL Ontology

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Ooops….after the iSchools 2009 conference, I updated a page on my website that contained my poster “Modelling CDWA Lite as an OWL-DL Ontology” but never posted anything here at Inherent Vice.  You can also download the full poster from the IDEALS repository.

I’ve also just posted the beta version of the OWL file on my website as well. I do this with some trepidation, since this is probably the first full OWL model that I’ve created from top to bottom. As I note in the paper, the current structure of the CDWA Lite XML schema forces ontology developers to make some choices about how certain parts of the schema are modelled in an ontology.

This was a useful learning exercise, but I’m not sure if I will take this particular OWL model forward. I had intentionally avoided using the CIDOC-CRM and the improvements suggested by the MuseumDAT project. CDWA and CDWA Lite have enough of a toehold here in the United States and had impacted other influential standards such as the VRACore and Cataloging Cultural Objects. I felt that it deserved a fair shake to stand on its own. But some of the problems I encountered in trying to create an OWL model suggest that modeling CDWA using CRM would be a worthwhile next step.

If you’re working on a similar project I would be interested in hearing from you and would appreciate any comments or feedback on the ontology itself.

ALISE 2009

Monday, January 19th, 2009

I’m in  Denver this week attending the Association of Library and Information Science Educators iCreate Conference 2009.

Tuesday will be a busy day as I’m participating in the WISE workshop panel:

Stepping out of CMS: Student Communication Technologies Beyond the Course Management System
Panel Presentation and Discussion of effective practices for instructor/student, student/student, and student/instructor communication strategies outside the context of the online course management system, as well as with the wider community of LIS professionals, alumni and prospective students.

and I’ll be presenting a “work in progress” poster:

Blended Methods for Ontology Development

Ontologies represent an important backbone for knowledge representation on the emerging Semantic Web. As a formal specification of concepts within a domain, developing an ontology requires translating the knowledge of domain experts into the classes, properties and relationships used by machine-processable languages such as RDF and OWL. Current ontology development practices owe much to knowledge and software engingeering processes, however the methods for capturing the knowledge of domain experts reamins under-theorized. While “mixed” qualitative and quantitative methods have received extensive discussion in the literature, less attention has been paid to blending the kinds of formal methods used in ontology development and qualitative methods used elsewhere in LIS research. The resulting “knowledge acquisition bottleneck” has lead some ontology developers to turn towards mining large textual datasets for base concepts using natural language processing techniques. While these tools are improving, automated population of an ontology still requires intervention and evaluation by domain experts – particularly in areas where textual sources present conflicting or incomplete representations of a domain.

Lee (2000) has identified the lack of agreement on concepts of “collections” among LIS professionals and their users – exactly the kind of domain that challenges automated techniques. The research discussed here is working towards an ontology for cultural heritage “collections” as identifiable entities that are more than the sum of their parts. As part of the work in progress, this poster explores how qualitative approaches, such as Glaser & Strauss’ Grounded Theory, can be used to inform the development of such an ontology.

Of course this “work in progress” abstract was written a few months ago and after digging into this topic a little deeper the focus of my poster has shifted just a bit.   What you’ll see tomorrow (I’ll post the final version here) focuses more on the similarities between Strauss & Corbin’s open/axial coding process and ontology development.  As I mentioned in my last post, I’ve backed away from developing an ontology for its own sake and the revisions to the poster reflect my current thinking about how ontologies could inform traditional QDA approaches.  Along these lines, the poster also explores the possibility of  using the CIDOC-CRM (or any existing ontology) as start-list of qualitative coding concepts.

Stay tuned for Twitter updates!

The URI Gap

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Two weeks ago I attended the 2008 International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications. Dr. Allen Renear, Karen Wickett and I were there presenting our paper (well, Allen did all the presenting) Collection/Item Metadata Relationships.



A Semantic Web Layer Cake. Modified from the original at http://semtext.org/2004-02/slides/img4.gif (thanks to Karen for pointing this out!)

There was a fair amount of Twitter activity during the conference and during Ed Summer’s talk about “LCSH, SKOS and Linked Data” I started an exchange about URIs and their role in the Semantic Web. Actually the increasing “semaniticness” of the Dublin Core specifications has been on my mind for a while. When I first started encountering it several years ago it was impenetrable to me as someone who’s technical skills were mostly acquired one the job. I’d mastered relational databases and was becoming proficient in XML, but the emergence of the Abstract Model presented more of a challenge. My mind would drift back to the days where I’d be standing in front of thirty or so librarians, archivists and museum professionals at a CDP workshop – how would I explain the Abstract Model to them? And more importantly how would they actually participate in a “semanticaly” enabled CDP?

At one point Ed quotes Andy Powell:

…by treating values as non-literal resources and assigning URIs to
them we give ourselves (and others) the hooks on which to hang further descriptions.

(I’m not going to rehash existing discussions about 1) what is a URI and 2) what are literals and non-literals. Also see Pete Johnston’s “Dublin Core Key Concepts” tutorial slides).

This idea of replacing literals with non-literals in our metadata is certainly attractive, especially in a robust networked environment. What I haven’t yet heard is what happens when the network is brittle and things start breaking. It seems possible that the neat web of relationships that we’ve identified could quickly start unraveling itself. This seems especially true in an environment where metadata gets aggregated away from its original creator. Sure, in your shop you may know that you’ve “minted” URIs for new properties or replaced old URIs with new ones, but the metadata that you’ve released into the wild may not know about these changes. In these discussions about replacing literals with non-literals there always seem to be some assumption that the non-literals will a) be globally unique and b) be persistent. As Andy Powell suggested via Twitter the scenarios where this isn’t true are not a technical failure of the semantic web, but a social/political/commitment failure on people implementing systems. No doubt this is true, but in my book the people problems are always harder to solve than the technical ones.

Take the CDP’s aggregation of Dublin Core metadata as an example. When I was there I’d made a private commitment to keep the percentage of bad URLs below 10%. You might think this was easy, but in fact was quite a lot of work – largely because many of our partners (and their partners) hadn’t bought into the belief that URLs needed to be persistent. Sometimes a simple change on their end that was automatic didn’t make it way to us and required manually updating every record. This problem cascades beyond CDP to the IMLS DCC item-level repository which also now contains records with bad URLs. Even though the DCC repository could potentially revise its records through OAI-PMH, CDP’s OAI data provider disappeared about a year ago when a server was replaced. We now have several layers of social/political/commitment between us and the resource that we are describing or wanting to retrieve.

Several studies have been conducted that show various rates for “linkrot” in URLs, but I have yet to find any references to the expectations/reality of “URI rot.” With millions upon billions of URIs being “minted” (they are the coin of the semantic realm after all), having even a small portion of them fail seems like it could wreak havoc on the neat and tidy graphs that are the basis of the semantic web. This also would seem to be a concern for long-term digital preservation in the case where the services, etc. that your relied on today may have long since disappeared. Recommendations like “coolURIs” help address the technical issues but they don’t seem to address the “people” problem.

And what of the resource-strapped (as in cash, manpower, etc. not as in “things” being described) cultural heritage institutions? Will they really be able to mint robust and long-lived URIs? Or will they be relegated to the backwaters of the un-semantic web? Just as there has been a gap between institutions that are able to get their collections online, we now could have a growing divide between those who are able to provide semantically enhanced metadata. Again, a political/social problem as much as its a technical one.

Perhaps “semantifying” metadata could be a new job for metadata aggregators like IMLS DCC. I could image a service provider adding a processes to their workflow that would append URIs for known controlled vocabulary terms to aggregated records or provide new URIs for things that didn’t have one already. This seems to point towards the top layer of the semantic layer cake – that of trust. Is it necessary to know who has the “authoritative” URI for a resource or property? What are the politics/social issues involved in taking responsibility for URIs for someone else’s “things?” If there are multiple URIs, how do I know that they point towards same “thing?” Should I mint a new URI for one that has failed?

At times I feel like the “Semantic Web” buzz is just swapping in a new technical platform without really addressing the social problems that prevented us from achieving similar goals with older technologies like XML. Jerry McDonough discusses his concerns with regards to XML in his recent Balisage article, “Structural Metadata and the Social Limitation of Interoperability: A Sociotechnical View of XML and Digital Library Standards Development.”:

Like a rope, [XML] is extraordinarily flexible; unfortunately, just as with rope, that flexibility makes it all too easy to hang yourself.

In the case of the semantic web, I may be less worried about hanging myself and more worried that the rope I’m hanging onto might be cut someone up above at any time – sending me and my metadata into the abyss. It also seems that addressing some of these concerns could encourage more uptake of semantic web technologies, especially where social/political/financial commitments are required to make it happen. Looking back to the lessons we’ve learned (or have yet to learn) from our experiences with XML, metadata interoperability, and shareability would make me feel more comfortable relying on the “cloud.”

Museum Metaverses at MCN

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

Second Life Community Convention 2007

Friday, August 24th, 2007


Aethalides

Originally uploaded by Musebrarian

I’m off this weekend to the Second Life Community Convention (http://slcc2007.wordpress.com)

Looking forward to the sessions lined up for the Education Track (http://slcc2007.wordpress.com/education-track/).

Sounds like there won’t be free wi-fi from the hotel, but I’ll try to blog what I can in the evenings.
Update: 

NMC has published all the papers for the track here.

Virtual Worlds in the Humanities Arts and Social Sciences

Monday, August 6th, 2007

(whoops, must have forgot to hit publish on this one…)

I’m spending the week at the San Diego Supercomputer Center, participating in the SC07 Summer Workshop Series.

I’ll be speaking tomorrow (Thurs, Aug. 2) at 10:30 PST. The sessions are being broadcast live archived online if you’d like to follow along (I’m certainly looking forward to listening to Tracey Fullerton before my talk). The presentation generally follows along others I’ve given about Second Life and museums, but this adds a little twist of what it might mean for the HASS community (I’ll also post a copy to Slideshare tomorrow morning).

Me (in the form of Aethalides Kukulcan) will be leading a group around in-world during our open lab session later in the day (provided the grid is up and working).

UK Museums on the Web – Second Life Museums

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Full summary by Seb Chan available here.

After [Seb Chan's] presentation Michael Twidale from the University of Illinois reprised the joint presentation about museums making tentative steps into SecondLife that his colleague and co-author Richard Urban had presented at MW07 in San Francisco. Michael (like Richard before) certainly peaked the interest of some in the room who I had the feeling had barely thought about Second Life before – although I notice that the extremely minimally staffed Design Museum in London has just been doing an architecture event and competition in Second Life (see Stephen Doesinger’s ‘Bastard Spaces’).

Also covered byJonSun and Electronic Museum.

Digital Humanities 2007: Second Life Museums and Archeological Modeling

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

Second Life Museums and Archeological Modeling

Just finished the Digital Humanities 2007 conference where I presented the poster above. You can read the full abstract over yonder.

Breaking News: SLNN Covers Museums in Second Life

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

We interrupt your habitual blogsurfing to bring you this breaking update:

Pont Mirabeau and my alter ego Aethalides Kukulcan were interviewed this week for the Second Life News Network (SLNN) and the article is now available.

“Scholars present paper on over 150 SL Museums” by Childs Writer


Note: The third author on the paper is Dr. Michael Twidale, Associate Professor at UIUC-GSLIS.

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