A new grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation will help Cornell University Library develop new tools and methods to better describe libraries' scholarly information resources and share those descriptions among different institutions.
In collaboration with the libraries of Harvard and Stanford universities and library researchers at the University of Iowa, Cornell has been awarded a $1.5 million, two-year grant to help libraries use linked data to improve the exchange and understanding of information about scholarly resources. The project team aims to have tools, services and solutions available that research libraries could use at their own institutions within the next three to five years.
The new tools will improve descriptions of everything in the library's catalogue, including books, journals and research datasets, as well as special collections such as hip-hop, maps, and works of art.
Cornell is also participating in a companion project based at Stanford University Libraries, which seeks to transition the functions of library technical services to linked data, so libraries can use these new tools to produce information communally. While the two projects are separate, each is expected to advance the goals of the other.
Linked Data is a way of expressing data in large networks of related information on the Internet so that computers can make connections among different collections with a minimum of prior agreement.
The new grant is a follow-up to a 2014 Mellon grant, which helped the partner libraries to create systems and gather information from each other. The upcoming project will build on that work, developing practical tools that will allow scholars to take advantage of the shared information for better, more efficient research.
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