Vincent Smith, Helen Hardy, Laurence Livermore, Lisa French, Tara Wainwright, Josh Humphries
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Building on the UK Natural History Museum’s (NHM) digitisation programme and in partnership with more than 90 collection-holding institutions across the length and breadth of the UK, DiSSCo UK seeks to unlock the full scientific, economic and social benefits of the UK’s natural science collections, which are presently constrained by the limits of physical access. With just 8% of the UK’s 137 million specimens currently available digitally, their role in the emerging biodiversity data revolution is diminished. Through nationally coordinated action, DiSSCo UK seeks to massively accelerate the digitisation of these collections and the impact of these data. \n Five options to digitise UK collections are presently under consideration. These options iterate across the collection groups, number and type of institution, technical infrastructure level and \"catalysis\" to capitalise on the benefits of unlocking data and accelerating data production. Subject to UKRI approval, the full business cases for a preferred option will go through an 18–24 month approval process starting November 2023, unlocking tens to hundreds of millions of pounds of investment in UK collections. 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While the physical integration of such a collection would be almost inconceivable, its digital integration is within reach. Building on the UK Natural History Museum’s (NHM) digitisation programme and in partnership with more than 90 collection-holding institutions across the length and breadth of the UK, DiSSCo UK seeks to unlock the full scientific, economic and social benefits of the UK’s natural science collections, which are presently constrained by the limits of physical access. With just 8% of the UK’s 137 million specimens currently available digitally, their role in the emerging biodiversity data revolution is diminished. Through nationally coordinated action, DiSSCo UK seeks to massively accelerate the digitisation of these collections and the impact of these data. \\n Five options to digitise UK collections are presently under consideration. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
英国科学收藏分布式系统(DiSSCo UK, Smith et al. 2022)是英国研究与创新(UKRI)基础设施计划的一项提案,旨在彻底改变我们如何管理,共享和使用英国的自然科学收藏,创建一个分布式网络,为英国的研究基础设施提供一个步骤变化。虽然这样的藏品的实体整合几乎是不可想象的,但它的数字整合是可以实现的。disco UK以英国自然历史博物馆(NHM)的数字化计划为基础,与英国各地的90多家收藏机构合作,寻求释放英国自然科学收藏的全部科学、经济和社会效益,这些收藏目前受到物理访问的限制。目前,英国1.37亿标本中只有8%是数字化的,它们在新兴的生物多样性数据革命中的作用正在减弱。通过国家协调行动,disco UK寻求大规模加速这些收藏的数字化和这些数据的影响。目前正在考虑将英国馆藏数字化的五种方案。这些选择在收集组、机构的数量和类型、技术基础设施水平和“催化”方面进行迭代,以充分利用解锁数据和加速数据生产的好处。在UKRI批准的情况下,从2023年11月开始,优先选择的完整商业案例将经历18-24个月的审批过程,解锁数千万至数亿英镑的英国收藏品投资。我们将概述DISSCo英国的战略案例、选择和运营模式,更新我们的协调、数字化和催化活动。
The Impossible Museum: A national infrastructure to digitise the UK’s natural science collections
The Distributed System of Scientific Collections UK (DiSSCo United Kingdom, Smith et al. 2022) is a proposal to the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Infrastructure Programme to revolutionise how we manage, share and use the UK’s natural science collections, creating a distributed network that provides a step change in research infrastructure for the UK. While the physical integration of such a collection would be almost inconceivable, its digital integration is within reach. Building on the UK Natural History Museum’s (NHM) digitisation programme and in partnership with more than 90 collection-holding institutions across the length and breadth of the UK, DiSSCo UK seeks to unlock the full scientific, economic and social benefits of the UK’s natural science collections, which are presently constrained by the limits of physical access. With just 8% of the UK’s 137 million specimens currently available digitally, their role in the emerging biodiversity data revolution is diminished. Through nationally coordinated action, DiSSCo UK seeks to massively accelerate the digitisation of these collections and the impact of these data.
Five options to digitise UK collections are presently under consideration. These options iterate across the collection groups, number and type of institution, technical infrastructure level and "catalysis" to capitalise on the benefits of unlocking data and accelerating data production. Subject to UKRI approval, the full business cases for a preferred option will go through an 18–24 month approval process starting November 2023, unlocking tens to hundreds of millions of pounds of investment in UK collections. We will outline the strategic case, options and operational model for DISSCo UK, updating on our coordination, digitisation and catalysis activities.