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| University of Michigan Digital Library Initiatives |
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| History |
Launched in 1993 by the Information Technology Division, the School of
Information, and the University Library. Organizational model based on
complementary expertise, with capability for research activity to transition
to production environment.
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| Focus |
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Organizational Structure |
Jointly funded by University Library, School of Information, and
Information Technology Division; additional support from the Media
Union, OVPR, Academic Outreach, University Press, and external
funding agencies. Three dean/directors of partner units serve
as advisory council.
Digital Library Production Service (http://www.umdl.umich.edu/) created in 1996, an organization with staff drawn from partner organizations. DLPS has been designed as an organization to move the University of Michigan from a "project model" to "production." It offers capabilities for development of new applications and programs, management of digital collections, and contract services for the conversion and management of digital collections.
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| Capabilities |
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| Additional background information can be found at: <http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/DLI/> |
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SELECTED PROJECTS AND PROGRAMS
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| Humanities Text Initiative |
The Humanities Text Initiative (HTI) is an umbrella organization for the acquisition,
creation, and maintenance of electronic texts, as well as a mechanism for furthering
the University's capabilities in the area of online text. Centered primarily around
the development and maintenance of text resources in SGML (Standard Generalized Markup
Language), the HTI provides access to a variety of reference and humanities resources.
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| Image Services |
The University of Michigan Digital Library Production Services (DLPS) is committed
to providing image services to the UM community. DLPS Image Services provides to
faculty, staff, and departments a standardized, base level, extensible architecture
for putting images online.
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| Making of America |
Making of America (MOA) is a digital library of primary sources in American
social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. The
collection is particularly strong in the subject areas of education,
psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and
technology. The collection contains approximately 5,000 books and
journal volumes with imprints between 1850 and 1877. The project
represents a major collaborative endeavor in preservation and
electronic access to texts. The infrastructure created for MOA
is now being used to support the Library's preservation efforts,
making it possible for a selector to choose this online mechanism
of the digital as an alternative to microfilm or other replacement
formats.
http://www.umdl.umich.edu/moa/
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| Middle English Compendium |
The Middle English Compendium has been designed to offer easy access to and
interconnectivity between three major Middle English electronic resources:
an electronic version of the Middle English Dictionary; a HyperBibliography
of Middle English prose and verse, based on the MED bibliographies; and an
associated network electronic resources, including a large collection of
Middle English texts. Hypertext links offer quick connections between,
e.g., an e-MED citation, bibliographical information about its source,
and an electronic version of the source.
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| PEAK (Pricing Electronic Access to Knowledge) |
The PEAK Information Service provides access to the 1100+ journals published
by Elsevier Science. These journals include much of the leading research in
the physical, life and social sciences.
The PEAK project provides an opportunity for universities and other research to have electronic access to a large number of journals, access that allows for fast sophisticated searching, nearly instantaneous document delivery, and new possibilities for subscriptions. http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/peak/
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| SGML Server Program |
A program of support for widely used encoded text collections is provided
by the UM Digital Library Production Service. In addition to host
services for a number of commercial humanities collections, the
program offers middleware for local implementations and training
workshops.
http://www.hti.umich.edu/misc/ssp/
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| Contact Services |
Services to develop access systems and host publisher content have been
provided to several publishers, notably the Human Relations Area Files
and the Association of Asian Studies'
Bibliography of Asian Studies.
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For additional information, contact Wendy P. Lougee
<wlougee@umich.edu>
or John Price-Wilkin <jpwilkin@umich.edu> |
webmgr@cni.org