| Literature DB >> 36196222 |
Alex R Hardisty1, Elizabeth R Ellwood2, Gil Nelson2, Breda Zimkus3, Jutta Buschbom4, Wouter Addink5, Richard K Rabeler6, John Bates7, Andrew Bentley8, José A B Fortes9, Sara Hansen10, James A Macklin11, Austin R Mast12, Joseph T Miller13, Anna K Monfils10, Deborah L Paul14, Elycia Wallis15, Michael Webster16.
Abstract
The early twenty-first century has witnessed massive expansions in availability and accessibility of digital data in virtually all domains of the biodiversity sciences. Led by an array of asynchronous digitization activities spanning ecological, environmental, climatological, and biological collections data, these initiatives have resulted in a plethora of mostly disconnected and siloed data, leaving to researchers the tedious and time-consuming manual task of finding and connecting them in usable ways, integrating them into coherent data sets, and making them interoperable. The focus to date has been on elevating analog and physical records to digital replicas in local databases prior to elevating them to ever-growing aggregations of essentially disconnected discipline-specific information. In the present article, we propose a new interconnected network of digital objects on the Internet-the Digital Extended Specimen (DES) network-that transcends existing aggregator technology, augments the DES with third-party data through machine algorithms, and provides a platform for more efficient research and robust interdisciplinary discovery.Entities:
Keywords: Digital Extended Specimen; biodiversity collections; digital specimen; extended specimen; natural history
Year: 2022 PMID: 36196222 PMCID: PMC9525127 DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biac060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioscience ISSN: 0006-3568 Impact factor: 11.566
Figure 1.The Digital Extended Specimen (DES) as an enclosure for digital information about a physical specimen. Data about a specimen and pointers to data derived from a specimen, to data associated with a specimen, and to images or other media of the specimen and related objects are collated together as a DES digital object. A persistent identifier (PID) is assigned to uniquely identify the DES. A PID and metadata (the dashed or dotted lines) allow the DES to be indexed in searchable catalogs such that the specimen can be found, accessed, and used in line with relevant terms and conditions. This digital specimen on the Internet is tightly bound to the physical specimen it represents through institution, collection, and specimen identifiers included as part of the authoritative information about the specimen. A DES can be the focus for different kinds of transactions (e.g., annotations, citations, exchanges, loans, visits) and can have an associated long-lasting record of provenance (what was done, when, and by whom). Omitted from the figure for clarity, operations can be invoked against the DES to fetch data from it, to modify or update data, and to perform processing using the data. Also not shown, access control lists determine who has what permissions in relation to the DES content.
Figure 2.Layers of digital data representation beyond physical specimens and the data flows between them.