iDigBio Summit: Filtered Push

TitleiDigBio Summit: Filtered Push
Publication TypePresentation
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsMacklin, James
KeywordsiDigBio 2011 Summit
AbstractAfter three decades of standards development and computerization of natural history collections many millions of vouchered specimen records are available in global electronic networks. Vast numbers of specimen records remain only accessible on paper. Available records are highly variable in quality and rich in three decades worth of data capture and migration errors. Far more seriously, specimen data is being brought to the desktops of the researchers and specialists best able to correct and clean those data, without an easy means for the return of those researchers' corrections to those specimen collections. It is this very annotation by specialists that keeps natural history collections vital. Filtered Push connects remote sites where annotations can be generated with the authoritative databases of the collections holding the vouchers to which those annotations apply. The name reflects function; Push, as annotations can be pushed from remote corners of the network back to authoritative data sets, Filtered, as the curators of these data sets can filter and reject annotations of their data.
URLhttps://www.idigbio.org/videos/slides/18iDigBio_talk_xi_2011_final.ppt