ERCIM Technical Reference Digital Library
by Stefania Biagioni
New technologies, especially the Internet and WWW, are radically
changing the roles of content providers and content consumers with respect
to multimedia on-line services. For this reason, ERCIM has decided to set
up an experimental system to link collections of technical reports and
other types of grey literature of the ERCIM member research centres and
labs on-line. The aim of this service is to assist ERCIM scientists to
make their research results immediately available world-wide and provide
them with appropriate on-line facilities to access the technical documentation
of others working in the same field. Public access to this reference service
will be provided through Internet.
Within the context of the DELOS Working Group, eight ERCIM institutions
(CNR, CWI, GMD, INRIA, INESC, SICS, SZTAKI, and FORTH) are currently collaborating
on the installation of an ERCIM Technical Reference Digital Library. The
aim is to design, implement and test a prototype infrastructure for networked
access to a distributed multi-format collection of technical documents
contained in the research libraries of ERCIM. The collection will be managed
by a set of interoperating servers, based on the DIENST system developed
by a US consortium led by Cornell University and adopted by NCSTRL (Networked
Computer Science Technical Reference Library). So far, pilot server sites
have been set up at nearly half of the ERCIM national labs. Servers are
expected to be installed at the other centres in the near future.
A meeting to discuss the installation of the ERCIM DL service was held
on 23 January 1998, at IEI-CNR in Pisa. Representatives from CNR, GMD,
INRIA, SICS, SZTAKI, and FORTH were present. At the meeting, a series of
short and medium term objectives for the service were defined.
Short Term Objectives
As most of the interested ERCIM organisations have already installed
the DIENST system, the main activities necessary to make the ERCIM virtual
library operational are the integration of DIENST with the existing local
systems, implementation of a classification scheme, and preparation and
conversion of the technical documents into the appropriate electronic format.
The points discussed at the meeting included:
- the implementation of common interfaces for end users (both information
providers and seekers) and local administrators
- the definition of the naming and regional scheme
- the adoption of a common classification scheme to allow easy access
to the scientific production of the institutes involved by enabling users
to query the distributed archives as a single virtual collection.
It was felt that the collection should not be restricted only to technical
reports but that other types of grey literature could be usefully included.
For certain documents, only restricted access will be permitted.
Medium Term Objectives
It was agreed that the ERCIM virtual library should provide a testbed
for DL research activities. The main issues discussed were the adoption
of the Dublin Core Standards, the integration of the Z39.50 protocol, the
implementation of additional retrieval functionalities and of a multilingual
interface:
- There was general consensus among the group as to the advisability
of adopting the Dublin Core element set. A group was set up with the mandate
to decide on the appropriate subset that is meaningful for the ERCIM collection.
Any decision should be compatible with the direction taken by NCSTRL.
- There was discussion concerning the integration of DIENST with OPACs
through the protocol Z39.50. The EC Librarians Programme has officially
adopted Z39.50 to access library information which thus becomes the official
protocol for search & retrieval in European Libraries.
- The group intends to explore the possibility of inserting additional
retrieval functionalities in the ERCIM DL; in particular, the STARTS protocol
for Internet meta-searching developed by Stanford University will be evaluated.
The strategic importance for ERCIM of the inclusion of multilinguality
in the Technical Reference Library was recognized. However, the common
areas of scientific and technical interest for the ERCIM Institutes - Computer
Science and Applied Mathematics - are not the most indicated for an activity
of this kind as, especially in Computer Science, English tends to be the
predominant language. A survey of the participants (representing institutions
in France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, and Sweden), revealed that
only INRIA (France) and GMD (Germany) had technical report collections
of reasonable size in the Computer Science domain in their native language
as well as English. CNR, FORTH, SICS and SZTAKI all reported that the majority
of their documentation was in English. It was thus agreed that the activity
should be limited to (i) the implementation of an interface capable of
handling multiple languages and (ii) providing very basic functionalities
for querying over all documents in whatever languages they are stored.
Please contact:
Stefania Biagioni - IEI-CNR
Tel: +39 50 593481
E-mail: biagioni@iei.pi.cnr.it