Advanced data management & sharing
Presentation by Edeltraud Aspöck
Austrian Academy of Sciences (OAW), Institute for Oriental and European Archaeology (OREA), Austria
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
Bulgaria: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
Enhanced Archaeological Map of Bulgaria
Presentation by Nadezhda Kecheva
National Institute of Archaeology with Museum of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
Integrating archaeological data: The ARIADNE Infrastructure, Achille Felicett...ariadnenetwork
This presentation by Achille Felicetti of PIN (Università degli Studi di Firenze, Prato) on the work by the ARIADNE infrastructure to integrating archaeological data was given as part of a workshop organised by Digital Humanities Austria. The workshop focussed on the pressing question of long-term preservation of digital data from various angles, central being user needs specific to the different fields of the Humanities. Felicetti introduced the ARIADNE research infrastructure, which has been funded by the EC's FP7 programme, to integrate archaeological research datasets from across Europe and support their uses by researchers.
The Effect of ARIADNE: A Success Story Why ARIADNE Counts ariadnenetwork
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
These slides are also complimented by a series of short slides. "ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research community"
Ariadne Booklet 2016: Building a research infrastructure for Digital Archaeol...ariadnenetwork
Authors:
Kate Fernie (PIN and 2Culture Associates Ltd)
Franco Niccolucci (PIN)
Julian Richards (University of York)
Contributors:
Achille Felicetti, Ilenia Galluccio and Paola Ronzino (PIN),
Bruno Fanini (ITABC CNR)
Carlo Meghini, Matteo Dellepiane and Roberto Scopigno (ISTI CNR)
Dimitris Gavrilis (Athena Research Centre)
Douglas Tudhope (University of South Wales)
Elizabeth Fentress (AIAC)
Guntram Geser (Salzburg Research)
Holly Wright (University of York)
Johan Fihn (SND)
Maria Theodoridou (ICS Forth)
Germany: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
iDAI.vocab: a multilingual thesaurus
Presentation by Philipp Gerth
German Archaeological Institute (DAI), Germany
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
Bulgaria: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
Enhanced Archaeological Map of Bulgaria
Presentation by Nadezhda Kecheva
National Institute of Archaeology with Museum of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
Integrating archaeological data: The ARIADNE Infrastructure, Achille Felicett...ariadnenetwork
This presentation by Achille Felicetti of PIN (Università degli Studi di Firenze, Prato) on the work by the ARIADNE infrastructure to integrating archaeological data was given as part of a workshop organised by Digital Humanities Austria. The workshop focussed on the pressing question of long-term preservation of digital data from various angles, central being user needs specific to the different fields of the Humanities. Felicetti introduced the ARIADNE research infrastructure, which has been funded by the EC's FP7 programme, to integrate archaeological research datasets from across Europe and support their uses by researchers.
The Effect of ARIADNE: A Success Story Why ARIADNE Counts ariadnenetwork
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
These slides are also complimented by a series of short slides. "ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research community"
Ariadne Booklet 2016: Building a research infrastructure for Digital Archaeol...ariadnenetwork
Authors:
Kate Fernie (PIN and 2Culture Associates Ltd)
Franco Niccolucci (PIN)
Julian Richards (University of York)
Contributors:
Achille Felicetti, Ilenia Galluccio and Paola Ronzino (PIN),
Bruno Fanini (ITABC CNR)
Carlo Meghini, Matteo Dellepiane and Roberto Scopigno (ISTI CNR)
Dimitris Gavrilis (Athena Research Centre)
Douglas Tudhope (University of South Wales)
Elizabeth Fentress (AIAC)
Guntram Geser (Salzburg Research)
Holly Wright (University of York)
Johan Fihn (SND)
Maria Theodoridou (ICS Forth)
Germany: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
iDAI.vocab: a multilingual thesaurus
Presentation by Philipp Gerth
German Archaeological Institute (DAI), Germany
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
France: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
Inrap: a path toward open and shared data
Presentation by Kai Salas Rossenbach
Institut National des Recherches Archéologiques Préventive, France
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
How the ARIADNE Infrastructure will bring together and integrate the existing archaeological research data infrastructures so that researchers can use the various distributed datasets and new and powerful technologies as an integral component of the archaeological research methodology.
Italy: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
Expanding Fasti Online
Presentation by Elizabeth Fentress
Associazione Internazionale di Archeologia Classica (AIAC), Italy
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
Dimitris Gavrilis and Eleni Afiontzi
Digital Curation Unit – IMIS, Athena Research Center
Johan Fihn and Olof Olsson
Swedish National Data Service
Achille Felicetti and Franco Nicollucci
PIN, Italy
Sebastian Cuy
German Archaeological Institute
EAA 2016, Vilnius, Lithuania
Session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology -
Following the ARIADNE Thread
Deploy of CENIEH’s new institutional repositoryariadnenetwork
Presentation given by María José De Miguel Del Barrio and Javier Valladolid Aguinaga of CENIEH at the ARIADNE winter school about the deployment of CENIEH’s new institutional repository. The presentation introduces the research carried out by CENIEH and the collections that are held, and the work to develop an institutional repository to integrate diverse datasets.
Presentation given by Franco Niccolucci in Berlin at the "Facing the Future" conference, 21-22 Nov 2013.
ARIADNE's activities in the first 9 months have included networking, setting up special interest groups, planning summer schools, research and developing the first services. The paper introduces the ARIADNE interoperability framework and the ARIADNE Catalogue Model (which underpin the project's registry) and the research and services that are under development
http://www.ariadne-infrastructure.eu
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated or made more visible many known inequalities across borders and societies. This includes access to archaeological resources, both physical and digital. As both the creators and users of archaeological data adapted to working from their homes, cut off from artefact collections and research data siloed within organisations and institutions, the importance of making data freely and openly
available internationally became even more pronounced. The ARIADNE infrastructure (ariadne-infrastructure.eu) for archaeological data, and the SEADDA COST Action
(seadda.eu) are working to secure the sustainable future of archaeological data across Europe and beyond, in ways that are Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Re-usable (FAIR). Experience within the ARIADNE partnership during the pandemic was largely positive, with many partners able to carry on as usual with accessing their digital resources, emphasising what is possible, while also emphasising what is not achievable
across archaeology, due to lack of capacity. ARIADNE and SEADDA invite papers discussing the challenges, opportunities and lessons learned across all aspects of archaeological data management during the pandemic, and how it may change and
inform our best practice going forward. We particularly invite papers from outside of Western Europe on how the COVID-19 pandemic created barriers or opportunities for accessing archaeological resources, so that we may better understand capacity building during a post-COVID era.
An overview of the online archaeological data services that will be available through ARIADNE. These include several services provided by ADS, University of York, FASTI Online and ARACHNE.
Pieterjan Deckers - Medea an online platform for recording metal-detected findsariadnenetwork
Presentation given by Pieterjan Deckers of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel at the ARIADNE winter school about MEDEA, an online platform for recording metal-detected finds. The presentation describes the background to the project and its approach.
We’re All Prosumers Now? Sociality and Open Access Archaeologyariadnenetwork
Presentation by Sarah Colley
Honorary Research Fellow University of Leicester, UK
EAA 2014 session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology
Istanbul, Turkey
13 September 2013
Eaa2021 476 izeta cattaneo idacordig and suquiaariadnenetwork
The COVID-19 pandemic unleashed during 2020 implied a change in the way of doing archaeology on a global scale. In Argentina, in particular, activities had to move to the
domestic sphere and, most times, the possibility of carrying out fieldwork, material analysis and collection management in the usual workplaces was lost. This practice showed the need for repositories, libraries and online databases that would allow access to archaeological information. Suquía, the institutional repository of IDACOR, has been compiling and disseminating archaeological information since 2016, although it had not
yet developed its capacity to include databases that would allow meta-analysis of the information hosted. So, the needs raised by the lockdown led to implementing an action aimed at incorporating data from 1938 archaeological sites in the Province of Córdoba (Argentina) together with IDACORDIG (an implementation of the Arches software) which links this set to a spatial database, creating a gazetteer of archaeological sites for the region. This integration is the first of its kind in Argentina, and fosters an increase in primary information and grey literature visibility, together with publications preprints and
prints that allow continuity in the study of archaeology on a regional scale. In this presentation we will characterize this process and its technical aspects to aware on the potential of this type of platform for its integration into digital infrastructures of global impact.
Abstracts for the ten presentations at EAA 2021 Session 476: Understanding and expanding capacity in archaeological data management beyond western Europe organised by ARIADNEplus and SEADDA under Theme 3: The new normality of heritage management and museums in post-Covid times on 8th September 2021.
Eaa2021 476 preserving historic building documentation pakistanariadnenetwork
Like many countries around the world, Pakistan was forced to go into a COVID-19 national lockdown in March 2020. While this confined most people to their homes, it also had the unintended consequence of catapulting many institutions into embracing going digital. At the National College of Arts (NCA), Pakistan’s oldest art school, this meant embracing online tools and digital resources that had previously been resisted or under utilized in the teaching of art, design, and architecture. The experiences of
lockdown have highlighted inadequacies and inequities within our systems, and as Pakistan returns to normal there is a renewed will to maintain the momentum gained during the pandemic, and an increased realization of the need for developing and sustaining digital infrastructures. The National College of Arts Archives collect and preserve the records, manuscripts, and other artefacts of historical and archaeological
significance at the National College of Arts. From March 2021, the NCA Archives are initiating a project to collect, preserve, and digitize historic building documentation created at the NCA over the past 145 years. This paper will follow this process and
document the NCA Archive’s attempt at creating a Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR) database of historic building documentation in Pakistan. It will summarize the experiences of the six-month pilot project, including opportunities that have arisen in the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic, and in light of the Government of Pakistan’s ongoing Digital Pakistan initiative. The paper will also document and analyze the difficulties and hurdles that might emerge during the course of the project as the NCA Archive’s digital infrastructure is built from the ground up in a post-colonial setting and a post-COVID world.
Welcome and introduction to the ARIADNE projectariadnenetwork
Introduction to Ariadne and to the Ariadne training workshop given by Julian Richards of ADS
Ariadne Workshop held prior to EAA 2013.
Pilsen, Czech Republic
4 September 2013
Developing common European archaeological concepts through extending the CIDO...ariadnenetwork
Presentation by Martin Doerr
Center for Cultural Informatics, Institute of Computer Science
Foundation for Research and Technology – Hellas
and
Gerald Hiebel
Center for Cultural Informatics, Institute of Computer Science
Foundation for Research and Technology – Hellas,
University of Innsbruck, AB Vermessung und Geoinformation
Full-day session on archaeological infrastructures and services at the 18th Cultural Heritage and New Technologies (CHNT) conference
Vienna, Austria
11th -13th November 2013
Czech Republic: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research comm...ariadnenetwork
Aerial Archaeology Archive – Prague
Presentation by Martin Kuna
Institute of Archaeology of the Academy of Sciences (ARUP-CAS), Czech Republic
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
France: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
Inrap: a path toward open and shared data
Presentation by Kai Salas Rossenbach
Institut National des Recherches Archéologiques Préventive, France
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
How the ARIADNE Infrastructure will bring together and integrate the existing archaeological research data infrastructures so that researchers can use the various distributed datasets and new and powerful technologies as an integral component of the archaeological research methodology.
Italy: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research communityariadnenetwork
Expanding Fasti Online
Presentation by Elizabeth Fentress
Associazione Internazionale di Archeologia Classica (AIAC), Italy
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
Dimitris Gavrilis and Eleni Afiontzi
Digital Curation Unit – IMIS, Athena Research Center
Johan Fihn and Olof Olsson
Swedish National Data Service
Achille Felicetti and Franco Nicollucci
PIN, Italy
Sebastian Cuy
German Archaeological Institute
EAA 2016, Vilnius, Lithuania
Session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology -
Following the ARIADNE Thread
Deploy of CENIEH’s new institutional repositoryariadnenetwork
Presentation given by María José De Miguel Del Barrio and Javier Valladolid Aguinaga of CENIEH at the ARIADNE winter school about the deployment of CENIEH’s new institutional repository. The presentation introduces the research carried out by CENIEH and the collections that are held, and the work to develop an institutional repository to integrate diverse datasets.
Presentation given by Franco Niccolucci in Berlin at the "Facing the Future" conference, 21-22 Nov 2013.
ARIADNE's activities in the first 9 months have included networking, setting up special interest groups, planning summer schools, research and developing the first services. The paper introduces the ARIADNE interoperability framework and the ARIADNE Catalogue Model (which underpin the project's registry) and the research and services that are under development
http://www.ariadne-infrastructure.eu
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated or made more visible many known inequalities across borders and societies. This includes access to archaeological resources, both physical and digital. As both the creators and users of archaeological data adapted to working from their homes, cut off from artefact collections and research data siloed within organisations and institutions, the importance of making data freely and openly
available internationally became even more pronounced. The ARIADNE infrastructure (ariadne-infrastructure.eu) for archaeological data, and the SEADDA COST Action
(seadda.eu) are working to secure the sustainable future of archaeological data across Europe and beyond, in ways that are Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Re-usable (FAIR). Experience within the ARIADNE partnership during the pandemic was largely positive, with many partners able to carry on as usual with accessing their digital resources, emphasising what is possible, while also emphasising what is not achievable
across archaeology, due to lack of capacity. ARIADNE and SEADDA invite papers discussing the challenges, opportunities and lessons learned across all aspects of archaeological data management during the pandemic, and how it may change and
inform our best practice going forward. We particularly invite papers from outside of Western Europe on how the COVID-19 pandemic created barriers or opportunities for accessing archaeological resources, so that we may better understand capacity building during a post-COVID era.
An overview of the online archaeological data services that will be available through ARIADNE. These include several services provided by ADS, University of York, FASTI Online and ARACHNE.
Pieterjan Deckers - Medea an online platform for recording metal-detected findsariadnenetwork
Presentation given by Pieterjan Deckers of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel at the ARIADNE winter school about MEDEA, an online platform for recording metal-detected finds. The presentation describes the background to the project and its approach.
We’re All Prosumers Now? Sociality and Open Access Archaeologyariadnenetwork
Presentation by Sarah Colley
Honorary Research Fellow University of Leicester, UK
EAA 2014 session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology
Istanbul, Turkey
13 September 2013
Eaa2021 476 izeta cattaneo idacordig and suquiaariadnenetwork
The COVID-19 pandemic unleashed during 2020 implied a change in the way of doing archaeology on a global scale. In Argentina, in particular, activities had to move to the
domestic sphere and, most times, the possibility of carrying out fieldwork, material analysis and collection management in the usual workplaces was lost. This practice showed the need for repositories, libraries and online databases that would allow access to archaeological information. Suquía, the institutional repository of IDACOR, has been compiling and disseminating archaeological information since 2016, although it had not
yet developed its capacity to include databases that would allow meta-analysis of the information hosted. So, the needs raised by the lockdown led to implementing an action aimed at incorporating data from 1938 archaeological sites in the Province of Córdoba (Argentina) together with IDACORDIG (an implementation of the Arches software) which links this set to a spatial database, creating a gazetteer of archaeological sites for the region. This integration is the first of its kind in Argentina, and fosters an increase in primary information and grey literature visibility, together with publications preprints and
prints that allow continuity in the study of archaeology on a regional scale. In this presentation we will characterize this process and its technical aspects to aware on the potential of this type of platform for its integration into digital infrastructures of global impact.
Abstracts for the ten presentations at EAA 2021 Session 476: Understanding and expanding capacity in archaeological data management beyond western Europe organised by ARIADNEplus and SEADDA under Theme 3: The new normality of heritage management and museums in post-Covid times on 8th September 2021.
Eaa2021 476 preserving historic building documentation pakistanariadnenetwork
Like many countries around the world, Pakistan was forced to go into a COVID-19 national lockdown in March 2020. While this confined most people to their homes, it also had the unintended consequence of catapulting many institutions into embracing going digital. At the National College of Arts (NCA), Pakistan’s oldest art school, this meant embracing online tools and digital resources that had previously been resisted or under utilized in the teaching of art, design, and architecture. The experiences of
lockdown have highlighted inadequacies and inequities within our systems, and as Pakistan returns to normal there is a renewed will to maintain the momentum gained during the pandemic, and an increased realization of the need for developing and sustaining digital infrastructures. The National College of Arts Archives collect and preserve the records, manuscripts, and other artefacts of historical and archaeological
significance at the National College of Arts. From March 2021, the NCA Archives are initiating a project to collect, preserve, and digitize historic building documentation created at the NCA over the past 145 years. This paper will follow this process and
document the NCA Archive’s attempt at creating a Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR) database of historic building documentation in Pakistan. It will summarize the experiences of the six-month pilot project, including opportunities that have arisen in the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic, and in light of the Government of Pakistan’s ongoing Digital Pakistan initiative. The paper will also document and analyze the difficulties and hurdles that might emerge during the course of the project as the NCA Archive’s digital infrastructure is built from the ground up in a post-colonial setting and a post-COVID world.
Welcome and introduction to the ARIADNE projectariadnenetwork
Introduction to Ariadne and to the Ariadne training workshop given by Julian Richards of ADS
Ariadne Workshop held prior to EAA 2013.
Pilsen, Czech Republic
4 September 2013
Developing common European archaeological concepts through extending the CIDO...ariadnenetwork
Presentation by Martin Doerr
Center for Cultural Informatics, Institute of Computer Science
Foundation for Research and Technology – Hellas
and
Gerald Hiebel
Center for Cultural Informatics, Institute of Computer Science
Foundation for Research and Technology – Hellas,
University of Innsbruck, AB Vermessung und Geoinformation
Full-day session on archaeological infrastructures and services at the 18th Cultural Heritage and New Technologies (CHNT) conference
Vienna, Austria
11th -13th November 2013
Czech Republic: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research comm...ariadnenetwork
Aerial Archaeology Archive – Prague
Presentation by Martin Kuna
Institute of Archaeology of the Academy of Sciences (ARUP-CAS), Czech Republic
ARIADNE Final Event, Florence, 16 December 2016
Legacy data and archaeological archives in Europe and North Africaariadnenetwork
Dr. Elizabeth Fentress
Associazione Internazionale di Archeologia Classica/International Association for Classical Archaeology (AIAC), Italy
EAA 2016, Vilnius, Lithuania
Session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology -
Following the ARIADNE Thread
Beyond the Pale: grey literature as a method of publicationariadnenetwork
Dr. Evans, Tim
Archaeology Data Service (ADS), UK
EAA 2016, Vilnius, Lithuania
Session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology -
Following the ARIADNE Thread
Antiquarians in the 21st Century: Opening up our dataariadnenetwork
Emma Jane O’Riordan and Erin Osborne-Martin
Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Great Britain
EAA 2016, Vilnius, Lithuania
Session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology -
Following the ARIADNE Thread
Linked Open Data Approaches within the ARIADNE Projectariadnenetwork
Holly Wright
Archaeology Data Service (ADS), UK
EAA 2016, Vilnius, Lithuania
Session: Open Access and Open Data in Archaeology -
Following the ARIADNE Thread
Béatrice Markhoff - Semantic mediation ArSol and CIDOC CRMariadnenetwork
Presentation given by Béatrice Markhoff of the University of Tours at the ARIADNE winter school on work that has been carried out to integrate data and to implement ArSol (Archives du Sol). The presentation describes the mapping to the CIDOC CRM and how its been implemented to provide a web based application.
This presentation describes work carried out to complete a schema mapping between www.archaeo.dk and the CIDOC CRM extension, ArchaeoInfo. It was given by Peter Jensen of Aarhus University during the ARIADNE winter school on legacy datasets and their inclusion in the ARIADNE registry.
Claudia Marinica - Supporting Semantic Interoperability in Conservation-Resto...ariadnenetwork
Presentation given by Claudia Marinica of theUniversity of Cergy-Pontoise at the ARIADNE winter school about work on supporting Semantic Interoperability in the Conservation-Restoration Domain in the PARCOURS project. The presentation discusses the challenges of achieving interoperability between the various databases existing within the domain and the work that is being carried out to build an ontology based system for data integration.
Gísli Pálsson, The Icelandic archaeo-historical databaseariadnenetwork
Presentation given by Gísli Pálsson at the ARIADNE winterschool about the Icelandic archaeo-historical database. The dataset covers events (excavation and survey trips) and historical sources (archives and documents) and is based on Iceland's lögbýli structure, a remarkably stable feudal system of farms that persisted with very little change from the 12th to the 19th century.
Between history and technology between past and presentSherin El-Rashied
Documentation is the science of controlling information.
A result of the discoveries of archaeological on going and the resulting waste material from buildings and works of art and ancient artefacts and remnants of historical and cultural, there is an urgent need to arrange this huge number of pieces and works of art, and in the search continued for the conservation of these residues is seeking specialists to create a system for documenting this information, which may require research by long periods of time have been found between the folds of books, folders, and specialized research or do not find.
The most important projects have been implemented to document the cultural history and natural use of information technology.
Documentation is the science of controlling information.
A result of the discoveries of archaeological on going and the resulting waste material from buildings and works of art and ancient artefacts and remnants of historical and cultural, there is an urgent need to arrange this huge number of pieces and works of art, and in the search continued for the conservation of these residues is seeking specialists to create a system for documenting this information, which may require research by long periods of time have been found between the folds of books, folders, and specialized research or do not find.
Digital Cultural Heritage and the new EU Framework Programmelocloud
2nd LoCloud CY Awareness Event at the Ministry of Education and Culture.
Presentation delivered by Marinos Ioannides, Cyprus University of Technology
Cyprus
5 March 2014
Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
A talk given at 'Taking the Long View: International Perspectives on E-Journal Archiving', a conference hosted by EDINA and ISSN IC at the University of Edinburgh, September 7th 2015.
CAA2014 Community Archaeology and Technology: The ACCORD project: Archaeology...Nicole Beale
Stuart Jeffrey and Sian Jones
Paper presented at Computer Applications in Archaeology Conference 2014, 22nd - 25th April 2014, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Paris as part of Session 12: Community Archaeology and Technology. Session organisers: Nicole Beale and Eleonora Gandolfi. Session blog: http://blog.soton.ac.uk/comarch/
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Europeana 2019 - Connect Communities - Pitch your projectEuropeana
Slides 3 - 10: The GIFT Box: Helping museums make richer digital experiences for their visitors by Anders Sundnes Lovlie
Slides 11 - 18: Between people and things - Transfer of knowledge at SHMH by Elisabeth Böhm
Slides 19 - 30: Automated recognition of historical image content by Tino Mager
Slides 31 - 51: 50s in Europe: Kaleidoscope by Sofie Taes
Slides 52 - 63: CrowdHeritage: Crowdsourcing Platform for Enriching Europeana Metadata by Vassilis Tzouvaras
Slides 64 - 73: One by One: developing digital literacy in museums by Anra Kennedy
Slides 74 - 85: HeritageMaps.ie - Ireland's One-Stop Heritage Portal by Patrick Reid
Slides 86 - 90: Open GLAM now! - Sharing knowledge openly online by Larissa Borck
Slides 91 - 103: Endangered Archives Programme the world's most diverse online archive by Tristan Roddis
Slides 104 - 109: We transform the world with culture - Our impact on climate change by Barbara Fischer, Killian Downing and Peter Soemers
First workshop of the REFIT project (refitproject.com) - Bibracte, March 2016
Exploring integrated approaches to cultural landscapes
Current strategies, problems and potential
Iron Age oppida as a case study
Digital Cultural Heritage and the new EU Framework Programmelocloud
2nd LoCloud Awareness Event at the Ministry of Education and Culture, Cyprus 5 March 2014. Presentation delivered by Marinos Ioannides, Cyprus University of Technology
The Library as a Digital Research infrastructure: Digital Initiatives and Dig...lorna_hughes
Memory institutions have built up expertise and taken the lead in all aspects of digital humanities, especially the development and implementation of digital methods for the capture, analysis and dissemination of archives and special collections, including manuscripts. In recent years, these initiatives have become embedded into Digital Humanities Initiatives, Centres and Programmes within research libraries, adding value to the existing relationships between libraries and scholarly iniatiatives. These activities have fostered the development of new projects that bring into collaboration the skills and expertise of academics, librarians, and digital humanists, making the Library increasingly a “digital research infrastructure”. This presentation will discuss these developments based on the experience of the Research Programme in Digital Collections at the National Library of Wales, specifically discussing some recent experimentation with new methods for manuscript digitization and dissemination, including hyperspectral digitization of the Library’s Chaucer manuscripts. The presentation will also discuss the wider embedding of this work within the European Digital Humanities Context, through collaborations with the ESF Research Network Programe NeDiMAH (Network for Digital Methods in the Arts and Humanities).
Similar to Austria: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research community (20)
The Visual Media Service (VMS) provided by the ARIADNEplus Project enables large datasets to be processed and displayed seamlessly and quickly, enabling end users to view and explore in detail:
3D objects ranging from size from a few mm to tens m, e.g. from beads up to statues and friezes.
Large, high resolution images (that can’t usually be easily displayed online), e.g. gigapixel photographs of frescoes, paintings, or any other planar artwork.
Relightable images (RTI and PTM) commonly used on artefacts such as coins.
Sets of images such as a time series or sequence of pages relating to the same item.
The VMS technology provides a full set of interactive tools for the displayed object(s) and can be accessed for free through the ARIADNE Portal. As such, this service provides a valuable tool for the publication, exploration and dissemination of various aspects of Cultural Heritage.
DANS Data Trail Data Management Tools for Archaeologistsariadnenetwork
With the arrival of ARIADNEplus there is a searchable catalogue of datasets that helps archaeological researchers navigate the “maze” of data and archives. Especially for archaeological researchers, support staff and data managers, a set of tools has now been developed that helps in making your data management plan. Hella Holander, Peter Doorn and Paola Ronzino introduced the tools to the participants during the workshop.
The ARIADNEplus online toolset for data management consists of three parts:
a protocol for archaeological data management,
a template for researchers to create a data management plan with archaeological data,
a manual containing all guidelines, recommendations and practical examples of data management.
In just six steps, the protocol takes you through the entire process of making a Data Management Plan (DMP) for archaeological research. By using the templates and the accompanying manual with a clear set of guidelines and advice, it becomes much easier to meet the requirements of organisations that fund research. The DMP is then also in line with standards in the archaeological domain, which ultimately makes the data more findable, accessible, reusable and interoperable (FAIR).
Eaa2021 476 natália botica - from 2_archis to datarepositorium2ariadnenetwork
To promote open science and data reuse, it is necessary to have data available in open repositories that guarantee their accessibility and permanence, while facilitating their reuse.
Data classified as FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) must follow guidelines that ensure the use of an appropriate metadata scheme, persistent identifiers, well-defined vocabularies, procedures to standardize and improve data quality and sustainable file formats. We will present the methodology used for recording the coin findings from an archaeological excavation carried out by the Archaeology Unit of the University of Minho (UAUM) in the intervention of Casa da Bica, starting with the recording of data in the UAUM's 2ArchIS information system and ending with its availability in the scientific repository "DataRepositóriUM". We will also present some works of visualization and research as examples of the reuse of these data sets, which can be wider when they are integrated in structures of greater visibility like ARIADNE.
On one hand, COVID-19 world pandemic showed the people vulnerability and inability of face-to-face communication and ideas sharing. Through this point of view digital data that is Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Re-usable (FAIR) showed its added value in even higher extent. On other hand, online communication became a daily routine enabling easier access of all interested parties regardless of their location. The latter helped focusing on particular tasks difficult to accomplish otherwise. The situation in Bulgaria concerning improving state-of-the-art of site and monument dataset “Archaeological Map of Bulgaria” is still in a work process based on online communication with interested participants. Scientists from the National Archaeological Institute with Museum at Bulgarian Academy of Sciences are responsible for all that. Legacy data available beyond local repositories using FAIR principles is a main focus in the development and up-to-date improvement. Sharing the most informative fields metadata and available digital data in ARIADNE portal enabled cleaning other issues in the information system.
This contribution will present digital assets and initiatives at the Museum of Cultural History (MCH), University of Oslo (UiO) and aims at sharing data. The COVID-19 restrictions have elevated the importance of digital assets. At the beginning of this period, metadata for the archaeological collections were, to a large
degree, already digitized and accessible online. This is the result of a national collaboration beginning in the 1990s and continue today in UniMus:Kultur. MCH had also published a map-based overview of all excavations in Eastern/Southern Norway, and
begun to release excavation reports through UiO’s science archive. Recently, focus has shifted towards 3D-documentation of exhibits and publication of existing 3D-models on 3DHOP—available through humgis.uiocloud.no MCH now concentrates on digitizing artefacts at the Viking Ship Museum. The 3D-models
from here will be included in the BItFROST project, which will address the active role of 3D-models in research and education. BItFROST will work on FAIRifcation of 3D-models and promote dialogue with researchers. The 3DHOP platform enables the creation of interactive user-interfaces for researchers and a public audience. Collaboration with DarkLab in Lund, Sweden will create common user-interfaces for Swedish and Norwegian
collections. The project will also utilize AR and VR in the presentation of data.
In addition, the infrastructure project ADED (Archaeological Digital Excavation Documentation) provides open-access to excavations in Norway. The five Norwegian university museums and the Directorate of Cultural Heritage take part in the project.
ADED’s map-based webpages will integrate excavation documentation and the museums’ artefact/photograph databases, making it possible to have an overview and
detailed information of excavations and finds. As part of migrating the data to a common repository, mapping it to CIDOC-CRMarcheo facilitates further mapping to ARIADNEplus and/or other datasets.
Eaa2021 476 ways and capacity in archaeological data management in serbiaariadnenetwork
Over the past year and due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the entire world has witnessed inequalities across borders and societies. They also include access to archaeological resources, both physical and digital. Both archaeological data creators and users spent a lot of time working from their homes, away from artefact collections and research data. However, this was the perfect moment to understand the importance of making data
freely and openly available, both nationally and internationally.
This is why the authors of this paper chose to make a selection of data bases from various institutions responsible for preservation and protection of cultural heritage, in
order to understand their policies regarding accessibility and usage of the data they keep. This will be done by simple visits to various web-sites or data bases. They intend to check on the volume and content, but also importance of the offered archaeological heritage. In addition, the authors will estimate whether the heritage has adequately been classified and described and also check whether data is available in foreign languages. It needs to be seen whether it is possible to access digital objects (documents and the accompanying metadata), whether access is opened for all users or it requires a certain
hierarchy access, what is the policy of usage, reusage and distribution etc. It remains to be seen whether there are public API or whether it is possible to collect data through API.
In case that there is a public API, one needs to check whether datasets are interoperable or messy, requiring data cleaning.
After having visited a certain number of web-sites, the authors expect to collect enough data to make a satisfactory conclusion about accessibility and usage of Serbian archaeological data web bases.
The Portable Antiquities of the Netherlands (PAN) portal and the data model behind the description of the findings are discussed in detail, and how this approach leads to publishing data that is FAIR .
The Innovation Strategy and Targeted activities report presents the ARIADNEplus innovation strategy, addressing its different dimensions and how each of these will approached.
The main dimensions of the strategy are:
Research policies: Alignment with the European research policies on FAIR data, Open Science practices, and the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) initiative.
Data integration: Increase of the ARIADNE data pool through incorporation of datasets from more archaeological research domains.
Data infrastructure: Implementation and operation of a Cloud-based platform for data aggregation, integration, discovery, access and use across across institutional and national, as well as disciplinary boundaries.
Service portfolio: Provision of enhanced and new services for digital archaeology on the Cloud-based platform.
Stakeholder and user base: Extension of the stakeholder and user base in Europe and beyond, taking account of user needs regarding data, technical services and training.
The report concludes with the methodology that is being used to evaluate the impact of ARIADNEplus on the wider archaeological community.
The objectives for the ARIADNEplus online survey were to collect information on needs of the ARIADNEplus user community regarding data sharing, access and (re)use, new services (as developed by the project), and related training needs. Results of the ARIADNEplus survey were to be compared, where possible, to those of the ARIADNE 2013 survey (ARIADNE 2014) and, particularly, to planned new technical and other services. Furthermore, the analysis of the results had to focus on the match between the perceived user needs and planned ARIADNEplus services, and suggestions to be provided on activities likely to enable an optimal match.
This presentation provides an insightful view in the process of digitising agenda in Czech archaeology. A cornerstone of this is the Archaeological Information System of the Czech Republic (AIS CR), a national solution for research management, data gathering, curation and presentation. A key component AIS CR is the Archaeological Map of the Czech Republic (AMCR), operational since 2017.
OpenArchaeo is an application to query archaeological data via CIDOC CRM developed by the MASA Consortium (Mémoire des archéologues et des sites archéologiques). This exciting tool allows to query both the MASA triplestore and other sources of archaeological data mapped with the CIDOC CRM and can be used by other interfaces such as the ARIADNE portal.
INRAP is one of the biggest European institutions in charge of unmovable archaeological heritage. Although centralised, INRAP is so big that a lot of diversity in terms of standards and tools existed. Therefore, ARIADNE was very helpful for Kai, Amala and their co-workers to apply some of the ARIADNE’s tools and approaches to INRAP. One of the top achievements of INRAP due to ARIADNE was ‘changing the culture of sharing’.
DANS, the Dutch Data Archiving and Networked Services provides facilities for the deposit and archiving of archaeological data and provide a Trusted Digital Repository. Challenges involved mass ingestion of datasets and making use of thesauri, data mining and Linked Open-Data techniques.
The Swedish national Data Service (SND) were in the original ARIADNE project and learned how to organise and classify their data for both the Portal and their own web service. Able to display map, marker and polygon information now. Use Elasticsearch, AAT and Periodo.
Introduction to ARIADNEplus, the follow-on project from ARIADNE which will extend the scope of the archaeological datasets in the Portal by addition of more disciplines, countries and data types as well as working on best practices and data interoperability.
Ariadne: Report on E-Archaeology Frameworks and Experimentsariadnenetwork
In this study e-archaeology basically means the use of web-based digital data, tools and services for research purposes. E-archaeology may be subsumed under the so called digital humanities, however has its own disciplinary challenges and some different characteristics. The study includes an analysis of significant differences which should be taken account of when developing environments for e-research of humanities scholars or archaeologists.
The review and development work described in this report focuses on the aspects of semantic linking and annotation particularly relevant to ARIADNE. Semantic linking within ARIADNE is considered within the spatial, temporal and subject dimensions. The subject dimension is considered in depth, starting with a review of linking tools considered relevant to ARIADNE followed by a discussion of the ARIADNE approach and the vocabulary mapping tools used within ARIADNE. The Getty AAT proved an appropriate vocabulary mapping hub that afforded a multilingual search capability in the ARIADNE Portal via the semantic enrichment of partner subject metadata with derived AAT concepts.
A case study conducted an exploratory investigation of the semantic integration of extracts from archaeological datasets with information extracted via NLP across different languages. The
investigation followed a broad theme relating to wooden material including shipwrecks, with a focus on types of wooden material, samples taken, wooden objects with dating from dendrochronological analysis, etc. The Demonstrator is available for general use. The user is shielded from the complexity
of the underlying semantic framework (based on the CIDOC CRM and Getty AAT) by the Web application user interface. The Demonstrator highlights the potential for archaeological research that can interrogate grey literature reports in conjunction with datasets. Queries concern wooden objects (e.g. samples of beech wood keels), optionally from a given date range, with automatic expansion over hierarchies of wood types.
Authors:
Douglas Tudhope (USW)
Ceri Binding (USW)
D15.3. Ver:1 (Final)
This report is a deliverable (D2.5) of the project ARIADNE - Advanced Research Infrastructure for Archaeological Dataset Networking in Europe that has been funded under the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme. The document reports the final results of Task 2.5: Impact Evaluation.
The Executive Summary briefly addresses the project objectives and the framework of the impact evaluation, summarises the overall results, and gives recommendations for ARIADNE and other stakeholders with a focus on potential further advances.
Authors:
Guntram Geser (SRFG)
Hella Hollander (KNAW-DANS)
D2.5, Ver: 1 (Final)
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Our comprehensive report delves into these challenges, using a blend of open-source and proprietary data collection techniques. By monitoring activity on critical networks and analyzing attack patterns, our team provides a detailed overview of the threats facing German entities.
This report aims to equip stakeholders across public and private sectors with the knowledge to enhance their defensive strategies, reduce exposure to cyber risks, and reinforce Germany's resilience against cyber threats.
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Adjusting primitives for graph : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
Graph algorithms, like PageRank Compressed Sparse Row (CSR) is an adjacency-list based graph representation that is
Multiply with different modes (map)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector multiply.
2. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector multiply.
Sum with different storage types (reduce)
1. Performance of vector element sum using float vs bfloat16 as the storage type.
Sum with different modes (reduce)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector element sum.
2. Performance of memcpy vs in-place based CUDA based vector element sum.
3. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (memcpy).
4. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Sum with in-place strategies of CUDA mode (reduce)
1. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Austria: ARIADNE - Success stories from partners and the research community
1. Advanced data management & sharing
• Raising awareness for
need of preservation of
archaeological data
• Data management
workshops
• Publication of dataset
on Neolithic Greece
and Anatolia
• A Puzzle in 4D:
developing an
archaeological data
archive at OEAW
• Establishment of OREA
Digital Archaeology
Research Group
2. Impacts and recognition
• Impact
– Open access to information on archaeological evidence from
Neolithic Greece and Anatolia
– Good practice in data management
– Preservation & dissemination of archaeological data from Austria
– Contribute to research on data integration and preservation
• Also we…
– Co-organised a session & round table at Cultural Heritage and
New Technologies (CHNT) 18 & 21
• "ARIADNE sessions at the 21st International Conference on Cultural
Heritage and New Technologies Conference put the need of effective data
management and sharing high on the agenda of our international
community of heritage researchers and
managers" - Wolfgang Börner, Wien Museum, Urban Archaeology of
Vienna, CHNT conference organiser