Stanford Digital Library Repository in the Digital Library Ecosystem, Katherine Kott, Stanford Digital Repository; Policy-based Data Management; RDAP11 Summit
The 2nd Research Data Access and Preservation (RDAP) Summit
An ASIS&T Summit
March 31-April 1, 2011 Denver, CO
In cooperation with the Coalition for Networked Information
http://asist.org/Conferences/RDAP11/index.html
RDAP 16: Building Without a Plan: How do you assess structural strength? (Pan...
Kott RDAP11 Institutional Repository Case Studies
1. The Stanford Digital Repository in the Digital Library Ecosystem Katherine Kott, Stanford University RDAP Institutional Repository Panel Denver, CO March 31, 2011
2. Framing the IR Discussion Ed Summers (LoC) adapted Ranganathan’s five laws Repository objects are for use Every reader his/her repository object Every repository object its reader Save the time of the reader [service?] The repository is a growing organism
3. First Generation Repository Development Violated several laws Heavyweight requirements for depositors did not scale (time intensive) Difficult to return objects to depositors in “native” state (difficult to enable use, reuse) Monolithic design prohibited adjustment without total redesign (no capacity for organic growth)
4. SDR 2.0 Infrastructure Support a “growing organism” (scalable) Lower barrier to deposit Save the time of the [depositor] Base development path/priorities on use cases Repository objects are for use Every reader his or her repository object Every repository object its reader
7. Actual Use Cases/Diverse Content IR content ETDs Science data Conference proceedings Archival collections (including digital forensics lab output) Library content (curated collections) Google books EEMs