| Literature DB >> 28781551 |
Jorick Vissers1, Frederik Van den Bosch1, Ann Bogaerts2, Christine Cocquyt2, Jérôme Degreef2,3, Denis Diagre2,3,4, Myriam de Haan2, Sofie De Smedt2, Damien Ertz2,3, Régine Fabri2,3, Sandrine Godefroid2,3, Patricia Mergen2,5, Anne Ronse2, Marc Sosef2, Tariq Stévart2,4,6, Piet Stoffelen2, Sonia Vanderhoeven7, Quentin Groom2.
Abstract
The digitization of herbaria and their online access will greatly facilitate access to plant collections around the world. This will improve the efficiency of taxonomy and help reduce inequalities between scientists. The Botanic Garden Meise, Belgium, is currently digitizing 1.2 million specimens including label data. In this paper we describe the user requirements analysis conducted for a new herbarium web portal. The aim was to identify the required functionality, but also to assist in the prioritization of software development and data acquisition. The Garden conducted the analysis in cooperation with Clockwork, the digital engagement agency of Ordina. Using a series of interactive interviews, potential users were consulted from universities, research institutions, science-policy initiatives and the Botanic Garden Meise. Although digital herbarium data have many potential stakeholders, we focused on the needs of taxonomists, ecologists and historians, who are currently the primary users of the Meise herbarium data portal. The three categories of user have similar needs, all wanted as much specimen data as possible, and for those data, to be interlinked with other digital resources within and outside the Garden. Many users wanted an interactive system that they could comment on, or correct online, particularly if such corrections and annotations could be used to rank the reliability of data. Many requirements depend on the quality of the digitized data associated with each specimen. The essential data fields are the taxonomic name; geographic location; country; collection date; collector name and collection number. Also all researchers valued linkage between biodiversity literature and specimens. Nevertheless, to verify digitized data the researchers still want access to high quality images, even if fully transcribed label information is provided. The only major point of disagreement is the level of access users should have and what they should be allowed to do with the data and images. Not all of the user requirements are feasible given the current technical and regulatory landscape, however, the potential of these suggestions is discussed. Currently, there is no off-the-shelf solution to satisfy all these user requirements, but the intention of this paper is to guide other herbaria who are prioritising their investment in digitization and online web functionality.Entities:
Keywords: Botanic garden; collections; data sharing; database; digitization; science infrastructure
Year: 2017 PMID: 28781551 PMCID: PMC5543274 DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.78.10936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PhytoKeys ISSN: 1314-2003 Impact factor: 1.635
Figure 1.Stakeholders interacting with the Botanic Garden Meise and potentially using its data portal. The stakeholders prefixed by the words ‘internal’ refer to those that work at the Botanic Garden, whereas those referred to as ‘external’ refer to researchers in other institutions.
Task scenarios presented to participants in the user requirements interviews.
| Historical based scientists: |
| Ecological based scientists: |
| Taxonomic based scientists: |
Figure 2.A user experience researcher using affinity diagramming to cluster user requirements from the results of the interviews.
Common data elements identified across the different researcher categories as being important to their work.
| Key data elements | ‘nice to have’ |
|---|---|
| Current name and classification of the specimen | Abiotic factors related to the specimen |
| The location where it was collected (ideally coordinates) | Information about the habitat of the collected specimen |
| Country | Ecological information on the location where it was collected |
| Date of collecting | Information on meteorology |
| Name of the collector | Description of characteristics on both macro- and micro level |
| Collection number given by collector | Being able to measure the length of leafs, flowers, … on the high resolution image via an intuitive tool that makes it able to draw lines |
| High resolution photo of the physical specimen (to get access to the metadata on the label that was not digitized in the database) |
Figure 3.A summary of the data elements mentioned by the different researcher types, showing which data elements researchers had in common and which were unique. This does not mean that any particular data element is not of interest to another group, only that it did not arise in the series of interviews. Details of these data elements can be found in the supplementary information. The full list of common data elements is listed in Table 2.