Biodiversity Information Science and Standards :
Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Tom Dijkema (dijkematom@gmail.com), Sam Leeflang (sam.leeflang@naturalis.nl)
Received: 26 Jul 2024 | Published: 07 Aug 2024
© 2024 Tom Dijkema, Sam Leeflang
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Dijkema T, Leeflang S (2024) DiSSCover the Potential of FAIR Digital Object Annotations and How You Can Use Them! Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 8: e133172. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.8.133172
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The infrastructure for the Distributed System of Scientific Collections (DiSSCo) is in full development. Work within the DiSSCo Transition Project has been focused on building infrastructure, creating data models, and setting up Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) (
DiSSCover is the graphical user interface through which users can interact with Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) Digital Objects (FDOs), facilitating the curation and enhancement of specimen data (
Through the concept of annotations, we connect expert and machine-generated information, to create extended digital specimens (
At the heart of DiSSCover lies the Open Digital Specimen data specification (
The W3C Web annotation data model contains two main components: the target and body. The target specifies which data attribute the annotation is made on, for example, the term: ‘ods:specimenName’. This is a local term within the open Digital Specimen namespace (ods), which holds the accepted name of the digital specimen. The annotation body holds the value(s) that are appended to the digital specimen, and differ based upon the annotation motivation. DiSSCo recognises five different annotation motivations: addition, modification, comment, assessment and deletion, each of which has its own unique function. This creates a flexible structure that should be able to handle any information the user wants to add to the object. The challenge of DiSSCover is to preserve the complex structure of annotations, whilst making it convenient for users to work with.
The session will provide a look at the different kinds of annotations and their use from a practical perspective. A demonstration of DiSSCover will show how users can create annotations, providing knowledge about the process that will give shape to DiSSCo’s main goal of enriching natural history data.
user interface, data curation, digital specimen, Digtial Extended Specimen, Open Digital Specimen, DiSSCo, DiSSCo Transition Project, software demonstration
Tom Dijkema
SPNHC-TDWG 2024
Work on DiSSCover has been funded by DiSSCo Prepare, Grant agreement ID: 871043 (https://doi.org/10.3030/871043); and DiSSCo Transition: Grant agreement ID: 101130121.
Naturalis Biodiversity Center