98 resultados para Open Archives Initiative
Resumo:
A conseqüència de la creixent utilització del format digital en tots els àmbits és imprescindible replantejar-se les estratègies per gestionar la informació electrònica. Fins ara, les tasques essencials que la biblioteconomia associa amb la documentació són: l’edició, la preservació i la difusió. Aquestes tasques han estat acomplertes pel CESCA i pel CBUC en diversos dipòsits de contingut digital, cadascun especialitzat en un tipus d’informació concreta. D’altra banda, ampliant les ambicions d’aquests dipòsits i amb la voluntat de difondre contingut digital d’una manera més eficaç, ha aparegut la necessitat d’utilitzar noves eines per compartir i disseminar continguts. Aquest estudi aprofundeix en el coneixement sobre l’Open Archives Initiative (OAI), una iniciativa destinada a desenvolupar i promoure estàndards d’interoperativitat que facilitin la difusió eficient de continguts digitals. També s’inclouen les eines que permeten utilitzar el marc de treball que l’OAI proposa per gestionar l’intercanvi de dades entre els dipòsits, i com aquestes s’adapten a les necessitats i recursos existents.
Resumo:
L'any 1999, el Centre de Supercomputació de Catalunya (CESCA) va crear, conjuntament amb el Consorci de Biblioteques Universitàries de Catalunya (CBUC), un dipòsit cooperatiu anomenat Tesis Doctorals en Xarxa o TDX per emmagatzemar, en format digital, el text complet de les tesis doctorals llegides a les universitats catalanes i difondre-les arreu del món, en accés obert, tot preservant els drets de propietat intel·lectual dels autors. Aquest servei va iniciar-se l'any 2001 i avui dia està plenament consolidat, no només entre les universitats catalanes sinó també entre algunes universitats espanyoles. Des d'aleshores, s'han creat quatre dipòsits cooperatius més: el Dipòsit de la Recerca de Catalunya o RECERCAT, per a la cerca de publicacions d’investigació; Revistes Catalanes amb Accés Obert o RACO, per a revistes científiques, culturals i erudites catalanes; Patrimoni Digital de Catalunya o PADICAT, per emmagatzemar pàgines web catalanes; i Memòria Digital de Catalunya o MDC, per a col·leccions digitals catalanes de pintures, mapes, pòsters i revistes antigues, entre d'altres. Tots cinc dipòsits cooperatius comparteixen algunes característiques: són d'accés obert, és a dir, s'hi pot accedir gratuïtament des de la Xarxa; la majoria fan servir el protocol d'interoperabilitat Open Archives Initiative Protocol, que facilita la difusió eficaç dels continguts; s'han creat de manera cooperativa per tal que sigui més senzill adoptar procediments comuns i poder compartir els costos de desenvolupament i gestió del dipòsit; permeten donar més visibilitat als documents indexats gràcies als motors de cerca; i afavoreixen les condicions per preservar la informació a llarg termini. En aquest document es presenta la política comuna establerta per als dipòsits cooperatius catalans, es descriuen breument els cinc dipòsits, i es comenten els resultats obtinguts dels sis anys d'experiència des que el primer dipòsit va omençar a funcionar.
Resumo:
Aquest informe ha estat elaborat per encàrrec del Consorci de Biblioteques Universitàries de Catalunya (CBUC). El seu objectiu és comprovar si des del punt de vista tècnic, els repositoris cooperatius que el CBUC coordina juntament amb el Centre de Supercomputació de Catalunya (CESCA), es poden integrar dins la infrastructura DRIVER.
Resumo:
Cooperation between libraries is a universal language spoken in different dialects. In 1996 the libraries of the state-funded universities and the National Library of Catalonia (Spain) formed the Consortium of Academic Libraries of Catalonia (CBUC) to act as a channel for cooperation. The organization and activities of CBUC are an example of how this universal language has been adapted to the specific characteristics of the Libraries of Catalonia. Catalonia is an autonomous region of Spain with 7 million inhabitants with its own language, history and traditions and with a strong feeling of own identity that facilitates the cooperation. Thanks to this (and also to the hard work of the member libraries), since then, CBUC has created a union catalogue, an interlibrary lending program, the Digital Library of Catalonia, a cooperative store, different cooperatives repositories and other cooperation programs. One of these cooperatives repositories is RACO (Catalan Journals in Open Access, www.raco.cat) where can be consulted, in open access, the full-text articles of scientific, cultural and scholar Catalan journals. The main purpose of RACO is to increase the visibility and searches of the journals included and to spread the scientific and academic production published in Catalonia. This purpose makes specific in three aims: encourage the electronic edition of Catalan journals; be the interface that allows the whole search of all the journals and provide the instruments for its preservation. There are currently 244 journals in RACO, that includes more than 85.000 articles (80% in OA) from 50 publishing institutions. Since it got into operation it has had more than 4 millions of queries. These 244 journals offer the full-text of all the published issues. Nevertheless, some journal can have a delay between the introduction of the table of contents and the full-text for the recent issues. From 2005 we have a plan of retrospective digitization that has allowed to digitize more than 350.000 pages of back issues. The RACO repository works with the open source program OJS (Open Journal Systems, http://pkp.sfu.ca/ojs/) and uses Dublin Core Metadata and the interoperability protocol created by Open Archives Initiative (OAI) which allows to increase the visibility of the articles published in journals offering oneself together with other international repositories.
Resumo:
[eng] The article describes the background and current state of the open access (OA) movement. Its objectives --with roots in scientists' traditional desire to disseminate their works, in librarians' concerns about the serials crisis, and in technological advances-- were formally articulated in the Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI) declaration of 2002. This statement established two strategies for providing access to scientific information without any economic, technical, or legal obstacles: 1) publication of articles in OA journals or 2) deposit by authors of their works in stable institutional or subject-based repositories. The article suggests that this second "route" appears to offer greater possibilities of attaining open access in the short term. However, there still is a lot of work to be done in disseminating the concepts of OA and in training authors regarding procedures for depositing their works: in other words what is needed is a series of promotional activities for overcoming one of today's greatest challenges: author inertia.
Resumo:
The Centre de Supercomputació de Catalunya (CESCA) together with the Consorci de Biblioteques Universitàries de Catalunya (CBUC) started in 1999 a cooperative repository, named TDR, to file in digital format the full-text of the read thesis at the universities of our country to spread them worldwide in open access preserving the intellectual copyright of the authors. This became operational in 2001 and today it is a service fully consolidated not only among the Catalan universities, but also used by other Spanish universities. Since then, there are four additional cooperative repositories which have been created: RECERCAT, for research papers; RACO, for scientific, cultural and erudite Catalan magazines; PADICAT, for archiving Catalan web sites; and MDC, for Catalan digital collections of pictures, maps, posters, old magazines... These five repositories have some common characteristics: they are open access, that is, they are accessible on the internet for free; they mostly comply with the Open Archive Initiative interoperability protocol for facilitating the efficient dissemination of content; and they have been built in a cooperative manner so that it is easy to adopt common procedures and to share the repository developing and managing costs, it permits more visibility of the indexed documents throughout the search engines, and a better provision for long-term preservation can be made. In this paper we present the common policy established for the Catalan cooperative repositories, we describe the five of them briefly, and we comment on the results obtained of our 6-year experience since the first one became operational.
Resumo:
PADICAT is the web archive created in 2005 in Catalonia (Spain ) by the Library of Catalonia (BC ) , the National Library of Catalonia , with the aim of collecting , processing and providing permanent access to the digital heritage of Catalonia . Its harvesting strategy is based on the hybrid model ( of massive harvesting . SPA top level domain ; selective compilation of the web site output of Catalan organizations; focused harvesting of public events) . The system provides open access to the whole collection , on the Internet . We consider necessary to complement the current search for new and visualization software with open source software tool, CAT ( Curator Archiving Tool) , composed by three modules aimed to effectively managing the processes of human cataloguing ; to publish directories where the digital resources and special collections ; and to offer statistical information of added value to end users. Within the framework of the International Internet Preservation Consortium meeting ( Vienna 2010) , the progress in the development of this new tool, and the philosophy that has motivated his design, are presented to the international community.
Resumo:
This paper presents practical experiences using Open educational Resources (OER) for basic and elementary education (K12), educational research and research training on two inter-institutional projects with the collaboration of thirteen higher education institutions and with the support of the Corporación de Universidades para el Desarrollo del Internet (CUDI) and by the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT) of Mexico and hosted by the Tecnológico de Monterrey. The first initiative is titled "Knowledge Hub for K-12 Education" with the main goal of enrich a catalog of Open Educational Resources for basic and elementary education (K-12) for Mexico and Spanish speaking countries in Latin-America. The main goal of the second initiative is to build a collection of Open Educational Resources for Mobile Learning to address the issue of educational research and research training.
Resumo:
A new initiative has sprung on the path created by the Open Access (OA) movement: Open Education (OE). The initiative's aim is to open up all educational resources at all learning levels. In order to achieve this goal, several international institutions, like UNESCO and the OECD, have published reports, surveys and documents to help educational institutions in this endeavor. This global initiative needs a legal framework; as a result, efforts thus far have usually resorted to Open Licensing (OL), especially Creative Commons (CC) licensing. In fact, as a response to this new movement, Creative Commons launched a new program, ccLearn , which recognizes open licensing's impact on education and directly supports the idea of open educational resources (OER). However, there still remain a good amount of open questions: What is happening locally with OL in higher education? How are educational institutions receiving the initiative? How is it that the OL initiative relates to educational resources? Are there local examples of open educational resources (OER)? How do these local instances incorporate CC into their educational frameworks?. To this effect, this analysis aims to focus on the legal approach and specifically on the way the educational sector is using open licenses outside the English speaking world. It will do so by looking at the current situation in two specific scenarios, the Colombian and the Catalan experiences with open educational projects at the higher education level.
Resumo:
Organizations across the globe are creating and distributing products that include open source software. To ensure compliance with the open source licenses, each company needs to evaluate exactly what open source licenses and copyrights are included - resulting in duplicated effort and redundancy. This talk will provide an overview of a new Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) specification. This specification will provide a common format to share information about the open source licenses and copyrights that are included in any software package, with the goal of saving time and improving data accuracy. This talk will review the progress of the initiative; discuss the benefits to organizations using open source and share information on how you can contribute.
Resumo:
Two claims pervade the literature on the political economy of market reforms: that economic crises cause reforms; and that crises matter because they bring into question the validity of the economic model held to be responsible for them. Economic crises are said to spur a process of learning that is conducive to the abandonment of failing models and to the adoption of successful models. But although these claims have become the conventional wisdom, they have been hardly tested empirically due to the lack of agreement on what constitutes a crisis and to difficulties in measuring learning from them. I propose a model of rational learning from experience and apply it to the decision to open the economy. Using data from 1964 through 1990, I show that learning from the 1982 debt crisis was relevant to the first wave of adoption of an export promotion strategy, but learning was conditional on the high variability of economic outcomes in countries that opened up to trade. Learning was also symbolic in that the sheer number of other countries that liberalized was a more important driver of others’ decisions to follow suit.