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ALT-C 10 th September 2008 Dave Puplett

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Page 1: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C 10th September 2008

Dave Puplett

Page 2: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C, 10th September 2008www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

The VIF project• Funded by JISC’s Repositories and Preservation Programme from July

2007 to May 2008

• Expanded on previous work:• Versions, RIVER

• Structure:• Based a user requirements exercise – 2 surveys• Dissemination phase to promote the recommendations and guidance

and raise awareness of the issue of versioning

• Tasked with creating a web-based version identification framework for:• repository management• software development• creation of content• www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

Page 3: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C, 10th September 2008www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

What could VIF help to do?

• Bridge the divide of information rich and poor – institutions can support Open Access, but also individuals can now access a worldwide array of research, because OA provides access to work that was previously only available via expensive, institutional level, subscriptions

• Repositories uncover previously hidden research work, including data, that can now be used and re-used for a variety of uses

• Build reliable, trustable systems that will allow a wider audience than ever before to have access to the research outputs of academic institutions and use this material.

Page 4: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C, 10th September 2008www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

Survey results

• Only 5% of academics and 6.5% of Information Professionals surveyed found it easy to identify versions of digital objects within institutional repositories.

• There is strong feeling amongst academics that repositories should only include the ‘finished’ version of a work.

• Both information professionals and academics anticipate a substantial rise in the use of different types of digital objects deposited i.e. audio and video files etc.

• Approximately a third of Information Professionals involved with repositories stated that they either have no system currently in place or ‘don’t know’ how they deal with versioning at present

Page 5: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C, 10th September 2008www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

What are versions?

There are different sorts of versions:  • minor changes (a revision)• significant changes (a landmark version, e.g. peer reviewed,

published etc)• formatting or stylistic changes (e.g. typesetting or font)• change of file format (creating a digital variant)

• But one research project can generate many outputs describing the same idea or work…therefore:

• It is possible to call both different outputs and iterations ‘versions’

Page 6: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C, 10th September 2008www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

VIF’s definition:

• A 'version' is a digital object (in whatever format) that exists in time and place and has a context that can be described by the relationship it has to other objects

• A ‘version relationship’ is an understanding or expression of how two or more objects relate to each other

Page 7: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C, 10th September 2008www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

• VIF identified pieces of information that give clues about version status:• Dates• Identifiers• Version Numbers• Version Labels or Taxonomies• Text Description

Making information about version transparent

Page 8: VIF at ALT-C

ALT-C, 10th September 2008www.lse.ac.uk/library/vif

Overview of framework recommendationsRepository Management:• Formulate wider strategy; set and promote clear policies • Use object solutions and get version information at the point of ingest• Include version information in metadata

Software Development:• Make systems cope with and link more than one version• Support richer metadata

Recommendations for Content Creators:• State the author, title and date last changed• Keep track of which versions are available and where

Page 9: VIF at ALT-C

Project Director:Frances Shipsey, LSE Library, [email protected]

Project Manager:Jenny Brace, LSE Library, [email protected]

Project and Communications Officer:Dave Puplett, LSE Library, [email protected]

Project Officer:Paul Cave, University of Leeds, [email protected]

Project Officer: Catherine Jones, Science and Technology Facilities Council, [email protected]