Hello Everyone!
Got 3D data and image files? How are you sharing, storing, and
managing these media information resources and metadata? Wondering
what others are doing to make media, and 3D in particular, more
accessible? From the scientific collections perspective, please
join us for our upcoming Darwin Core Hour Webinar: Audubon Core
and 3D Biodiversity Data: Metadata, Practice, and Unification of
Efforts
We encourage people to bring or submit questions for discussion
section of webinar. https://bit.ly/dwchour-input
Date: Tuesday 21 November 2017
Time: 3pm EST, 12pm PST, 5pm ART, 9pm CET, 20:00 UTC
Where: http://idigbio.adobeconnect.com/room
Abstract: A growing mode of digitization of natural history
collection objects is 3D digitization, which includes three main
acquisition techniques: surface scanning (structured light or
laser scanners), volumetric scanning (microCT or MRI), and
photogrammetry (structure from motion). There is now burgeoning
interest in and tremendous need for describing 3D data files with
standard vocabularies in the interest of promoting broad
accessibility and long-term digital preservation. Audubon Core is
an existing vocabulary and extension to Darwin Core that is used
to describe digital media files representing natural history
objects. It is not an entirely new vocabulary with many terms
borrowed from Dublin Core, Darwin Core and more. It also intended
to describe different kinds of digital data representing different
creation methods and file formats. We overview several different
3D data collection modalities specifying the details needed for
understanding how 3D data was generated and processed. We
investigate the utility of Audubon Core for describing these 3D
modalities. Questions we ask are which existing terms can be used
for describing new 3D modalities, whether new terms are needed,
whether certain 3D modalities need specific terms not applicable
to other modalities, what 3D data formats should be emphasized for
preservation and access, and how to pursue formally acquiring new
terms either through creation of new vocabularies or extending
existing ones.
Presenters
Gary Motz - Chief Information Officer and Assistant Director for
Information Services, Indiana Geological and Water Survery
Doug Boyer - Assistant Professor, Department of Evolutionary
Anthropology, Duke University; MorphoSource
Moderator - Holly Little, Informatics Manager, Paleobiology
Collections, Smithsonian
Relevant links
https://terms.tdwg.org/wiki/Audubon_Core_Term_List
http://morphosource.org/
Darwin Core Hour Series Abstract:
Darwin Core has become a broadly-used standard for biodiversity
data sharing since its inception as a standard by the organization
Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) in 2009. Despite, or
because of, its popularity, people trying to use the standard
continue to have questions about how to use Darwin Core and
associated extensions. This webinar series looks at open questions
related to Darwin Core. Though the topic is broad, individual
chapters in the series will focus on specific topics to any
adequate level of depth. We encourage people to bring or submit
questions and to have open discussions in each webinar
(https://bit.ly/dwchour-input). See
https://github.com/tdwg/dwc-qa/wiki/Webinars for our webinar
resources.
See you soon!
Deborah Paul from iDigBio, and the DwC Hour Team
Link to how to get the most out of Adobe Connect
https://www.idigbio.org/wiki/index.php/Web_Conferencing
Please use headsets for best experience.t
-- -- Upcoming iDigBio Events https://www.idigbio.org/calendar -- Deborah Paul, iDigBio Digitization and Workforce Training Specialist iDigBio -- Steering Committee Member, SPNHC Liaison and Member-At-Large, SYNTHESYS3 Representative Institute for Digital Information, 234 LSB Florida State University Tallahassee, Florida 32306 850-644-6366