Orchestrating musical (meta)data to better address the real-world search queries of musicologists
Orchestrating musical (meta)data to better address the real-world search queries of musicologists
The dispersal of musicology’s diverse array of primary and secondary sources across countless libraries and archives was once an enormous obstacle to conducting research, but this has largely been overcome by the digitisation and online publication of resources in recent years. Yet, while the research process has undoubtedly been revolutionised, the current situation is far from perfect, as the digitisation of resources has often been accompanied by their segregation—according to media type, date of publication, subject, language, copyright holder, etc.—into a myriad of discrete online repositories, often with little thought having been given to interoperability. Given that musicological research typically cuts across such artificial divisions, this segregation of data means that accessing basic factual information or running multi-part search queries remains endlessly complicated, needlessly time consuming, and sometimes impossible. This barrier to tractability is only exacerbated by the limited capabilities of currently deployed search interfaces.
There is one seemingly obvious solution to this query dilemma: enable integrated real-time querying over all the available metadata from as many sources as possible, and allow users to use that metadata to guide their queries. This solution implies that all data that could feasibly be construed as useful, but which is buried in the records, is extracted in some way, and that there is an interaction approach that enables metadata to be explored effectively and allows for the formulation of rich compound queries.
The musicSpace project has taken a dual approach towards realising this solution. At the back-end we are developing services to integrate and, where necessary, surface (meta)data from many of musicology’s most important online resources, including the British Library Music Collections catalogue, the British Library Sound Archive catalogue, Cecilia, Copac, Grove Music Online, Naxos Music Library, Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale (RILM), and Répertoire International des Sources Musicale (RISM) UK and Ireland. While at the front-end, in order to optimise the exploration of this integrated dataset, we are developing a modern web-based faceted browsing interface that utilises Semantic Web and Web2.0 technologies such as RDF and AJAX, and which is based on the existing ‘mSpace’ codebase.
Our poster outlines the approach we have taken to importing, enriching and integrating the metadata provided by our data partners, and gives examples of the real-world musicological research questions that musicSpace has enabled.
e-science, musicology, data, fusion, integration
Bretherton, David
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Smith, Daniel Alexander
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schraefel (PI), mc
ac304659-1692-47f6-b892-15113b8c929f
Polfreman, Richard
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Everist, Mark
54ab6966-73b4-4c0e-b218-80b2927eaeb0
Brooks, Jeanice
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Lambert, Joe
b992c5c4-8291-47f6-83f5-e76f61b695b4
December 2009
Bretherton, David
5d675429-1285-4ab3-9e59-3907afc60390
Smith, Daniel Alexander
8d05522d-e91e-4aa7-8972-e362e73f005c
schraefel (PI), mc
ac304659-1692-47f6-b892-15113b8c929f
Polfreman, Richard
26424c3d-b750-4868-bf6e-2bbb3990df84
Everist, Mark
54ab6966-73b4-4c0e-b218-80b2927eaeb0
Brooks, Jeanice
4b254837-1e36-4869-9695-17000b6c5ff9
Lambert, Joe
b992c5c4-8291-47f6-83f5-e76f61b695b4
Bretherton, David, Smith, Daniel Alexander, schraefel (PI), mc, Polfreman, Richard, Everist, Mark, Brooks, Jeanice and Lambert, Joe
(2009)
Orchestrating musical (meta)data to better address the real-world search queries of musicologists.
5th IEEE International Conference on e-Science (e-science 2009), Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
09 - 11 Dec 2009.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Poster)
Abstract
The dispersal of musicology’s diverse array of primary and secondary sources across countless libraries and archives was once an enormous obstacle to conducting research, but this has largely been overcome by the digitisation and online publication of resources in recent years. Yet, while the research process has undoubtedly been revolutionised, the current situation is far from perfect, as the digitisation of resources has often been accompanied by their segregation—according to media type, date of publication, subject, language, copyright holder, etc.—into a myriad of discrete online repositories, often with little thought having been given to interoperability. Given that musicological research typically cuts across such artificial divisions, this segregation of data means that accessing basic factual information or running multi-part search queries remains endlessly complicated, needlessly time consuming, and sometimes impossible. This barrier to tractability is only exacerbated by the limited capabilities of currently deployed search interfaces.
There is one seemingly obvious solution to this query dilemma: enable integrated real-time querying over all the available metadata from as many sources as possible, and allow users to use that metadata to guide their queries. This solution implies that all data that could feasibly be construed as useful, but which is buried in the records, is extracted in some way, and that there is an interaction approach that enables metadata to be explored effectively and allows for the formulation of rich compound queries.
The musicSpace project has taken a dual approach towards realising this solution. At the back-end we are developing services to integrate and, where necessary, surface (meta)data from many of musicology’s most important online resources, including the British Library Music Collections catalogue, the British Library Sound Archive catalogue, Cecilia, Copac, Grove Music Online, Naxos Music Library, Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale (RILM), and Répertoire International des Sources Musicale (RISM) UK and Ireland. While at the front-end, in order to optimise the exploration of this integrated dataset, we are developing a modern web-based faceted browsing interface that utilises Semantic Web and Web2.0 technologies such as RDF and AJAX, and which is based on the existing ‘mSpace’ codebase.
Our poster outlines the approach we have taken to importing, enriching and integrating the metadata provided by our data partners, and gives examples of the real-world musicological research questions that musicSpace has enabled.
Text
IEEE-musicSpace-poster.pdf
- Other
More information
Published date: December 2009
Venue - Dates:
5th IEEE International Conference on e-Science (e-science 2009), Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2009-12-09 - 2009-12-11
Keywords:
e-science, musicology, data, fusion, integration
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 69620
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/69620
PURE UUID: b7063336-8ec9-4571-8c19-8a4b1988e359
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 20 Nov 2009
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:48
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Contributors
Author:
Daniel Alexander Smith
Author:
mc schraefel (PI)
Author:
Joe Lambert
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