Activities in the e-research domain

The Link Affiliates Team within ADFI at USQ is continuing to work on interoperability and standards in the e-research domain. Based on consultation with the sector and key stakeholders, the following activities are being undertaken.



Service Modelling

Work continues with the e-Framework as a means for promoting common, service-based understanding of system functionality including:

  • planning infrastructure support for systems
  • formulating descriptions of core infrastructure services (particularly in collections management), which can serve as common benchmarks in system description
  • describing existing and projected e-research systems such as TARDIS using the e-Framework, to clearly establish their infrastructure requirements
  • refining the formal model of the e-Framework, to guarantee a common understanding and vocabulary for its use in analysis and evaluation of systems

Contributing to Project Bamboo

Project Bamboo, being funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation, is a wide-ranging initiative to improve humanities research through the development of common services hosted on a shared services infrastructure. A recent joint effort has resulted in the University of Melbourne's e-Scholarship Research Centre (eSRC) and the Link Affiliates team documenting and contributing material relating to the Australian Women's Archive Project to Project Bamboo.

Collections Modelling

The collections standards ISO2146 and Encoded Archival Context (EAC) are being modelled and compared for identifying and describing the ontology of collections and repositories. This work is being undertaken:

  • to allow interoperability between different systems based on those standards; notably NLA People Australia and ANDS Register My Data
  • to be formulated capitalising on previous Link Affiliates experience in the repository domain
  • reinforced by the similar work Link Affiliates is undertaking for the DER in the e-learning context
  • paying particular attention to the modelling of e-research parties, who are involved in creating and managing data. Modelling parties has become a critical enabler in organising and discovering data, but has not yet reached the same level of consistency as data and registry services

The comparison has been published, and has been sent to ANDS as feedback in their review of their RIF-CS schema for encoding collection information. A series of blog posts on identity modelling were also written, to motivate the comparison and the considerations underlying it.

Persistent Identifiers

Link Affiliates is continuing to do work on persistent identifiers, following on the successes of the PILIN project.

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