|
Multi-federal agency collaboration will also make computer
libraries more secure and usable
WASHINGTON, July 15 – Internet users will be able to hear music
from Civil War songs, view medieval manuscripts and visit ancient
Egypt as part of the next phase of a technology project partially
funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), along with the
National Science Foundation and four other federal agencies, will
support creation of the wide-ranging databases in what is known as
the Digital Libraries Initiative-Phase Two (DLI-2), NEH Chairman
William R. Ferris said today.
“This initiative will use the latest technology in new ways so
that we can preserve and make available the wide range of knowledge
which is so crucial to understanding our cultural and historical
development,” NEH Chairman Ferris said. “The National Endowment
for the Humanities is very proud to be a part of this interagency
collaboration to bring books, music and voices from the past to
today’s computer users.”
The $10 million humanities component will devise new ways to
computerize a wide variety of materials at six university research
libraries, and develop new approaches to ensure the preservation of
digital documents. The six libraries are at Cornell University,
Johns Hopkins University, Michigan State University, Tufts
University, the University of California-Davis and the University
of Kentucky.
When the projects are complete, computer users will be able to:
- listen to the notes and view sheet music of American popular
songs from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries;
- search a vast database of oral histories and recorded voices to
locate such phrases as John F. Kennedy’s “ask not what your country
can do for you” or Ronald Reagan’s “tear down this wall;”
view the recovered missing pieces of the Beowulf saga that have
hitherto been unreadable;
- visit the tomb of the Erotes and Assos from ancient Egypt or
walk around the spectacular statue of King Mycerinus and his wife
from 2500 B.C.; and
- explore the rich and intricate folklore of Sephardic Jews from
Europe, North Africa and the Middle East.
The sixth project will develop ways to ensure the security,
reliability and preservation of digital documents as well as
address the effective use of digitized resources in the future.
“We are especially concerned that history is literally disappearing
before our eyes – many historical documents, including founding
fathers’ papers, newspapers, photographs and other documents are
disintegrating,” NEH Chairman Ferris said. “Many of these
documents were transferred to digital formats in the belief that
would preserve them forever. But now, we’re learning that digital
formats are very fragile. Currently, there are no agreed-upon
processes for preserving digital collections. The Cornell project
will address this critical concern by developing a digital
preservation strategy that can be applied nationwide.”
The new project is the sequel to the first phase of the Digital
Libraries Initiative, which was launched by the National Science
Foundation (NSF) in 1993. DLI-2 is co-sponsored by NSF, NEH,
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Defense
Research Projects Agency (DARPA), National Library of Medicine,
Library of Congress and Federal Bureau of Investigation. The first
phase of the initiative supported research in areas of computer
science focusing on ways to organize and retrieve large amounts of
scientific data.
In this second phase, projects will address problems over the
entire life cycle of digital information: its creation,
accessibility and preservation. This focus extends the scope of
the initiative beyond the first phase’s emphasis on organization
and retrieval, by focusing on how to sustain digital collections
over time. Another round of projects will be announced early next
year.
More information about the multi-agency effort may be found at
the DLI-2 Web site:
http://www.dli2.nsf.gov/index.html .
National Endowment for the Humanities/National Science Foundation
Grants awarded under Digital Libraries Initiative – Phase 2 (July
1999)
CALIFORNIA
Davis, University of California-Davis $497,000
PROJECT TITLE: Folk Literature of the Sephardic (Spanish) Jews
DESCRIPTION: Development of technical means for searching an audio
archive of one of the world’s largest and most important
collections of Judeo-Spanish oral tradition, including lyric
poetry, proverbs, folktales, riddles, and 1,500 narrative ballads.
Over a period of 42 years the project directors gathered this
material, much of which has been handed down orally since the time
of the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, by seeking out and
tape-recording informants from Bosnia, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece,
Turkey, Morocco, Israel, Spain, and the United States. The
collection is an invaluable resource for the study of Sephardic,
Hispanic, and European balladry.
KENTUCKY
Lexington, University of Kentucky $500,000
PROJECT TITLE: The Digital Athenaeum: New Techniques for
Restoring, Searching, and Editing Humanities Collections
DESCRIPTION: Development of a new digital library from aging and
damaged portions of the British Library’s Cottonian Collection,
which includes manuscripts dating back 1200 years. The project
will develop state-of-the-art technical approaches and tools for
recovering manuscript markings and information that would otherwise
be invisible, and novel techniques for digitally restoring,
enhancing, and searching manuscripts that have been damaged by
fire, water, and aging. The partnership with the British Library
provides privileged access to high-quality collections, manuscript
and curator expertise, and digitization facilities.
MARYLAND
Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University $530,000
PROJECT TITLE: Digital Workflow Management: The Lester S. Levy
Collection of Sheet Music
DESCRIPTION: Enhanced usability of the Eisenhower Library’s Levy
Collection of Sheet Music, which contains 29,000 pieces of American
popular sheet music spanning the years 1780 to 1960. This
collection provides a social commentary on American life and a
distinctive record of the time. The project will create fully
searchable audio and lyric files, and software will be developed
that will play the notes of the digitized sheet music over the
Internet. The project will result in a tested process and tools
that can be applied to other large-scale digitization projects.
MASSACHUSETTS
Medford, Tufts University $2,758,000
PROJECT TITLE: A Digital Library for the Humanities
DESCRIPTION: Creation of a broad digital library for the
humanities, which will contain literary, historical, and
archaeological materials on topics ranging from ancient Egypt
through 19th-century London. The project, intended for use by high
school and college students as well as humanities scholars, will
enable users to visualize data in new ways, including the use of
multimedia presentation techniques for reconstructing
archaeological sites and mapping. Tufts’ Perseus project has
already created such a digital library for the Greco-Roman world;
the new project will significantly expand the concept to cover the
history of civilization.
MICHIGAN
East Lansing, Michigan State University $3,600,000
PROJECT TITLE: Founding a National Gallery of the Spoken Word
DESCRIPTION: Creation of a fully searchable, online database of
historically significant voice recordings that span the 20th
century, including Thomas Edison’s first cylinder recordings, the
voices of Babe Ruth and Florence Nightingale, and Studs Terkel’s
interviews. The project will address unsolved technical problems
regarding the digital preservation of sound and delivery via the
World Wide Web. It will also develop an acoustical engineering
procedure for indexing digitized recorded sound, enabling a user
who knows only a short phrase from a speech, for example, to locate
the full text in a large recorded-sound database. The project will
test the feasibility of creating online repositories of recorded
voice materials.
NEW YORK
Ithaca, Cornell University $2,267,000
PROJECT TITLE: Project Prism: Information Integrity in Digital
Libraries
DESCRIPTION: Design of a model system for ensuring the information
integrity of digitized collections, including 1) reliability
(ensuring that information is available where and when people want
it), 2) security (protecting the privacy rights of information
users and the intellectual-property rights of content creators),
and 3) preservation (ensuring the longevity of intellectual content
for use by future generations). The project will develop a working
prototype for addressing these critical areas, using a diverse
testbed of real-world collections. One aspect of the preservation
research will be the design of a built-in monitoring system to
search digital collections, identify materials that are vulnerable
to deterioration, and initiate alerts or corrective actions. For
more information, see http://www.prism.cornell.edu.
|