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Biodiversity Heritage Library © 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org Scientific Disciplines From Discovery to Delivery Cathy Norton Deputy Director BHL BIOONE April 18, 2008
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Page 1: BioOne Keynote

Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Scientific DisciplinesFrom Discovery to Delivery

Cathy NortonDeputy Director BHLBIOONEApril 18, 2008

Page 2: BioOne Keynote

Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

“The launch of the Encyclopedia of Life will have a profound and creative effect in science… this effort will lay out new directions for research in Every branch of biology”– E.O. Wilson

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Collaborative Tree of Life distributed semantic Biodiversity Heritage Library ever evolving TED all information Synthesis Center Oh wow! SpeciesBase ClassificationBank Education and Outreach ANTS index MacArthur Foundation taxonomic intelligence modular software communal ownership user defined AvenueA | Razorfish OBIS MBL free visualization images WorkBench sounds phylogeny web 2.0 names-based infrastructure Atlas of Living Australia February 2008 Google Marine Biological Laboratory all species Smithsonian FISHBASE Harvard Field Museum Tree of Life E. O. Wilson aggregation / mashup EDIT ScratchPad widgets MOBOT NHM AMNH NYBotancial Sloan Foundation GBIF llison l NameBank videos National Geographic any classification TDWG/BIS

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

EOL Hierarchy

• The EOL Steering Committee is comprised of senior authorities from

Harvard University, Smithsonian Institution, the Field Museum of

Chicago, the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, the

Biodiversity Heritage Library consortium, Missouri Botanical Garden,

and the Macarthur and Sloan Foundations.

• The EOL Institutional Council contains more than 25 institutions from

around the world and provides EOL with global perspectives and

outreach capabilities. The Distinguished Advisory Board consists of

13 global leaders from the scientific and policy communities.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Con’t

• The Species Sites Group works with contributors and data providers and IP issues

• Biodiversity Informatics Group is responsible for the software development of tools and open access delivery of species information through a single portal

• Education and Outreach Group works to insure widespread awareness of the EOL

• Biodiversity Synthesis Group will facilitate cross disciplinary involvement and will explore integrative topics, including taxonomy, evolution, biogeography, phylogenetics and biodiversity informatics.

• Scanning and Digitization Group led by the Biodiversity Heritage Library, is a consortium of 10 natural history, botanical and research libraries that will scan for the public commons out of copyright and permissioned works.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Con’t

• FishBase (www.fishbase.org), a global information system with data on practically every fish species known to science. FishBase is serving information on more than 30,000 fish species through the EOL.

• The Catalogue of Life Partnership (CoLp) (www.catalogueoflife.org), an informal partnership dedicated to creating an index of the world’s organisms.. They contain substantial contributions of taxonomic expertise from more than fifty organizations around the world, integrated into a single work by the ongoing work of the CoLp partners. The EOL currently uses CoLp as its taxonomic backbone.

• Tree of Life web project (ToL) (www.tolweb.org), a collaborative effort of biologists from around the world. On more than 9,000 Web pages, the project provides information about the diversity of organisms on Earth, their evolutionary history (phylogeny), and characteristics. ToL project illustrates the genetic connections between all living things.

• The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) (www.gbif.org), the world’s premiere source for information on biological specimen and observational data, providing on-line access to more than 135 million data records from around the world. GBIF is providing range maps for the EOL species pages.

• AmphibiaWeb (http://amphibiaweb.org), an online system enabling anyone with a Web browser to search and retrieve information relating to amphibian biology and conservation.

• The Solanaceae Source Web site (www.nhm.ac.uk/research-curation/projects/solanaceaesource), The aim of the project is to produce a worldwide taxonomic monograph of the species occurring within the plant genus Solanum (the potato and tomato family), with principal investigators from four research institutions in England and the United States.

Data Partners

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

“It is exciting to anticipate the scientific chords we might hear once 1.8

million notes are brought together through this instrument. Potential

EOL users are professional and citizen scientists, teachers, students,

media, environmental managers, families and artists. The site will link

the public and scientific community in a collaborative way that’s

without precedent in scale.”

• Jim Edwards, Executive Director, EOL

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Encyclopedia of Life• Major project to create a single Web page for every

known species (1.8 million!)• Total funding will reach at least $50M• EOL needs the literature underpinning in the BHL

project• BHL now key partner in EOL project• Launched on 9th May, 2007

– First 30,000 pages launched at TED Feb 27th, 2008

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Data Sharing

Plant Names

Specimens

Plant Names

Plant NamesSpecimensDescriptionsPlant Names

Plant Names

Citations

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Data Sharing• Standards • Services

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Cache

A data point is a collection of Data sources

EOL Treehttp://www.eol.org

auto-updatesClientapplication

Update

ontologies can be used to describe and relate the contents

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Using ontologies, unique identifiers, an editable views by semantic lenses

An Enterprise Semantic Information Fabric

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Serine Molecule

BiodiversityHeritage Library

Synthesis CenterField Museum

InformaticsMarine BiologicalLaboratory & MOBOT

Education & OutreachSmithsonian/Harvard

SecretariatSmithsonian

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

This library serves the MBL, WHOI, USGS, NMFS, SEA, WHRC,

and other scientific groups in the area.

Facing a new dynamic phase

NMFS - 1871

MBL - 1888

WHOI - 1930

USGS - 1960

SEA - 1971

WHRC - 1985

Woods Hole Scientific Community

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Biodiversity Heritage Library

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

•Museums–Field Museum–Natural History Museum (London)–Smithsonian Institution–American Museum of Natural History

•Botanical Gardens–Missouri Botanical Garden–New York Botanical Garden–Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

•University Libraries–Botany Libraries, Harvard University–Ernst Meyer Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard

University•Research Institute Library

–Marine Biological Laboratory / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Library (MBL/WHOI)

All signed MOU’s

Page 18: BioOne Keynote

Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Mission:Provide Open Access to Biodiversity Literature

Goals:Digitize the core published literature on biodiversity and put on the Web

Agree on approaches with the global taxonomic community, rights holders and others

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

How big is the Biodiversity domain?

• Over 5.4 million books dating back to 1469

• 800,000 monographs

• 40,000 journal titles (12,5000 current)

• 50% pre-1923

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Why now?• Cost low – 10-19 cents a page• Other projects funded recently – BL/Microsoft

/Google big ten• Tractable, well-defined scientific domain• Taxonomic information has exceptionally

longevity • Supports GBIF and other international initiatives

– including CBD, ABS, Darwin Declaration

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• Taxonomists and other scientists will have access to biodiversity literature - globally

• Will provide the developing world with access to the historical literature

• Scientists working in many biological domains – and other areas like meteorology, geology, ecology, genomics, etc – will get access

• Advance objectives of the Convention on Biological Diversity

Benefits

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• Less space needed for Library collections In Lillie – space freed for other uses

• % material can be stored off-site in ‘dark storage. FTP

• Our scientists will get access at their desk or in the field

• Library focus will shift to informatics• Virtual web library will increase public

access• Library staff will change –

Benefits to the MBLWHOI Library

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• Key partner of Encyclopedia of Life• Working Groups have agreed technical

plan, metadata standards and image standards

• Internet Archive to be technical partner – scanning and hosting

• ‘Scribe’ scanners now installed in NHM NYC and in Boston

• 2.5 million pages already available

Where are we now?

Page 24: BioOne Keynote

Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• Legal issues - BHL organisational structure, content licensing, contracts being developed by EFF

• BHL will take responsibility for long-term sustainability of the scanned material

• Blackwells Publishing/Wiley back-files possibly available through the BHL

• Zoological Record will provide their index as route to BHL articles

• OCR and name recognition tools identified and linked to project - Taxonomic Intelligence

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• BHL is US/UK focused. • Plans to engage European partners – through projects such

as EDIT and SYNTHESYS – in a similar attempt to capture the non-English language publications

• G8+5 Environment Ministers identified need for ‘Global Species Information System’ – first EU meeting to address response endorsed the BHL as the way forward

• Positive discussions have already taken place with the Chinese Academy of Sciences

• Australian Government likely to fund scanning as part of Atlas of Australian Life

Where are we now? Europe, Rest of the World

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Classes of texts

Public Domain – pre-1923Non-profit society journalsPost-1923 monographs

some with copyright renewalssome without copyright renewals

Commercial journals

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

BHL Seeks Permissions

BHL will digitize learned society backfiles and mount them through the BHL Portal at no cost.

Will provide a set of files to the learned society for reuse as they see fit.

Will index the issues using Taxonomic Intelligence increasing their usability.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Benefits

Use of the articles will increase as evidenced by citation upsurge.

Long-term management of the digital assets is provided by the BHL at no cost so it’s contributors

Content will be integrated into EOL project through TI nomenclatural linking.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Levinus Vincent, Elenchus tabularum, pinacothecarum, 1719

The cited half-life of publications intaxonomy is longer than in any other scientific discipline.

The decay rate is longer than in most scientific disciplines.

-Macro-economic case for open accessTom Moritz

Current taxonomic literature often relies on texts and specimens >100 years old.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Georges Louis Leclerc, comte de BuffonHistoire naturelle : générale et particulière (Oiseaux), 1799-1808

Convention on Biological Diversity: Article 17

Institutions that are creating the BHL exist to persist through time.

–The future is uncertain, the technology landscape changes, people pass on. So create consortial structures that are low-overhead, flexible, and can respond quickly. –Interoperability is the key.. Repository islands will sink

The Long NOW Strategy

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Biologia Centrali-American

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

US & Canada Europe Mexico & C.America

SouthAmerica

Physical Distribution…

Now… you can

Parse data, harvest out data, Wealth of information locked on the pages are now liberated!

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Henry Walter BatesThe Naturalist on the River Amazons, 1863

Most literature is in the developed worldthe Northern Hemisphere

Most Biodiversity is in the developing worldthe Southern Hemisphere

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Progne subis- Purple Martin Illustrations of the nest and eggs of birds of Ohio, 1879-1886

Library and Laboratory: the Marriage of Research, Data and Taxonomic LiteratureLondon, February 2005Eighty participants from 22 countries gathered to discuss the status and future of access to the taxonomic literature and to propose an agenda for actions that would improve the research environment for taxonomy. The participants were taxonomists; librarians; publishers; representatives of learned and professional societies, private foundations and government agencies; and specialists in information and communications technology.

Scalable Mass ScanningContractsFirewallsSecurityLoading DocksTrucks180 mile round trip!

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Ernest Ingersoll Hand-book to the National Museum … Smithsonian Institution, 1886

Mass Scanning WorkflowBid ListsPick ListsPacking ListsSerials ManagementMonographic ManagementStickers for Media and cartsRare Books-vaults

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

It began and begat

Reptilia and Batrachia. (1885-1902) by Albert C.L.G.  Günther

Open Access: all content can be reused, repurposed, reformatted, sliced, diced, scraped, harvested, integrated.

2003 Telluride . Encyclopedia of Life Meeting2005 London. Library and laboratory: the

Marriage of Research, Data, and Taxonomic Literature.June 2006 Washington. Organization and Technical MeetingOctober 2006 St Louis/San Francisco Technical Meeting

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Reptilia and Batrachia. (1885-1902) by Albert C.L.G.  Günther

February 2007 MCZ Harvard Organizational MeetingMay 2007 Encyclopedia of Life Launch. Washington DCSept 2007 Missouri Botanical Garden Technical MeetingMarch 2008 MCZ Harvard Organizational Technical Meeting

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Collaborators

Sanborn TenneyNatural History of Animals . . .1868. Internet Archive

Set up scanning centers in London, New York, Washington, Boston, etc.High-quality, non-destructiveScanning.Image files and text derived from OCR.

Internet ArchiveInternational Commission on

Zoological NomenclatureOpen Content AllianceEuropean Distributed Institute

of TaxonomyGlobal Biodiversity Information

Facility (GBIF)Many more under negotiation

Sanborn TenneyNatural History of Animals . . .1868.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Jacob Christian SchäfferElementa entomologica . . . 1766.

BHL Portalhttp://www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Serve image and test files: create volume, Part, piece, metadata; ingest page level Metadata at scanning level; apply GloballyUnique Identifiers (GUIDs) for linking to Other taxonomic services.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Internet Archive Scribe: Boston

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Biodiversity Heritage LibraryCollaborators: Internet Archive

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Biodiversity Heritage Library

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Biodiversity Informatics

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Period of explosive growth• NCL Centre for Biodiversity Informatics (India)--2000• Speciation event: Biodiversity Informatics--2004• Ocean Biodiversity Informatics conferences--2004, 2007• Species-bases sites: FishBase, AntWeb, AmphibiaWeb, North American

Mammals, Swedish ArtDatabanken, Atlas of Living Australia, Netherlands species compendium …

• Specimen-based networks: HerpNet, MANIS, ORNIS, • Regional networks: IABIN, OBIS, …• Biogeomancer--2005• IdentifyLife--2005• JRS Biodiversity Foundation--2005• European Distributed Institute of Taxonomy (EDIT)--2006• BDI curricula

– University of Illinois Master of Science in Biological Informatics--2006• Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)--2007

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

An example: The Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)

• An online encyclopedia composed of 1.8 million web sites – One for each known species

• EOL is developing two aspects of the original GBIF work programme– SpeciesBank--assemblage of all kinds of

information about species– Digital library of biodiversity literature

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Web 2.0 components of the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)

• Each site consists of several components– Species page for the general public

• Draft pages assembled via mashup technology• Drafts authenticated by experts (“curators”) using controlled

wikis• Information protected from being changed by anyone except

the curators– But anyone can comment on the information and or suggest things

to add– Curators will examine these suggestions and may move some of

the information to the protected part

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• Each site consists of several components– Species page for the general public– Community-assembled spaces

• E.g. taxonomists, molecular biologists, horticulturists, birdwatchers, pollinator biologists, etc., etc.

• Each links in different databases and information• Can also be the focus of social networks

– Spider freaks, leech aficionados, polar bear lovers, gingko groupies, microbe mavens, whatever …

• Each group/network controls the information on its space

Web 2.0 components of the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Example of a science-based community-assembled space on the EOL

• Scientists working on ageing wanted access to longevity information on the EOL

• Proposed to organize their community to find this information and put it on the EOL species pages

• Will set up their own portal into this information and manage the changing of the information

• Received USD 2 million from private foundation to fund this activity

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Example of an education-based community-assembled space on the EOL

• A school wishes to catalogue the biodiversity of a site near their schoolyard

• EOL and GBIF supply a bioblitz tool for them to use– Use GPS-enabled phones to take pictures of organisms found on the

site– Assembly software combines these into a community inventory

• Students identify the organisms using EOL species pages• Prepare inventory of the site• Serve that information back to the EOL web pages (and

potentially even to GBIF)

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Web 2.0 components of the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)

• Each site consists of several components– Species page for the general public– Community-assembled spaces

• Digitized biodiversity literature– Biodiversity Heritage Library--consortium of 10 of the largest

natural history libraries– Scanning and marking up of 320,000,000 pages of literature

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

“All accumulated information of a species is tied to a scientific name, a name that serves as a link between what has been learned in the past and what we today add to the body of knowledge.”

~ Grimaldi & Engel, 2005, Evolution of the Insects

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Who knowth not the name, knoweth not the subjectLinnaeus, 1737, Critica Botanica n 210.

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• Information about named groups (taxa) of organisms (taxon-related information)

• Extends back at least 1000 years

• Books, journals, surveys• Museum specimens,

herbaria• In many languages and is

distributed

From T.E. Glover, The Fishes of Southwestern Japan, c.1870

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

The challenge for contemporary DIGITAL libraries

Goal:

Use one name to find the content for all names

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Names – the only universal metadata for Biology

Names offer a logical way to search for and index content

•Names annotate data objects•All names annotate all data objects•A compilation of all names ever used is the foundation of a universal index for biology or for a semantic web for biology

Page 55: BioOne Keynote

Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

LibrariesPublishers

MuseumsFederal Agencies

Who is affected by these problems?

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Serious challenges in federated environments

One organism

4 scientific names

4 maps

We want one map

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Reconciliation – linking alternative names for the same organism

A query initiated with any name, can be expanded to all names and will unify data associated with each

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Reuse, don’t rebuild

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• All names & all Classifications ClassificationBank • Alternative names reconciled

• Similar names disambiguated

• Exploit hierarchies to browse and search, build a comprehensive classification

• Improve performance with federated systems

• Read documents, web sites, databases and taxonomically indexing the content

• Create a unified portal to information about organisms on the internet

Taxonomic intelligence is the inclusion of taxonomic practices, skills and knowledge within informatics services to manage information about organisms

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• data from various sources may be merged

• red dots on the maplink back to the website thatprovided the geographical co-ordinates

Specimen distribution data from remote sources

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Biodiversity Heritage Library

BHL Taxonomic Intelligence Tool

Georges Louis Leclerc, comte de BuffonHistoire naturelle : générale et particulière (Oiseaux), 1799-1808

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

uBio

• 10.7 Million+ Name Strings• Reconciliation Groups• http://www.ubio.org

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

FindIT - uBio’s Scientific Name Recognition Algorithm

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Training and Improving the Algorithm

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

uBioRSS Taxonomically Intelligent RSS Feed Aggregator

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

uBioRSS Taxonomically Intelligent RSS Feed Aggregator

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

MBL WHOI Library – Woods Hole authors’ publications

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

MBL WHOI Library – Woods Hole species publications

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Taxonomically intelligent scientific text parsing

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• Search• Browse

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Taxonomic Intelligence• Lexicon of Scientific Names• Reconciliation and Disambiguation• Hierarchical Inclusion• Integration into Information

Retrieval• Linkage to Other Data Types

(e.g., Molecular, Morphological, Phenotype)

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

BEYOND

AND

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

EMF Biology of Aging

Ellison Medical Foundation (EMF)“Enable the Study of Aging Across

the Spectrum of Life”Officially Began January 2008

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

FEDORA Commons

EMF Biology of AgingConditions

Locations

Organisms

Genes

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

EMF/EOL Key Resources

• Medline, BHL (Literature)• GenBank (Molecular)• EOL (Habitat & Location)

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

• All organisms are affected by aging• Not all aging is associated with disease

• The flip side: Understanding aging might give insights to regeneration

A constant

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Biomedical Focus

• Expand the scope of organisms beyond the “classic” models:

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Goals of EMF (years one & two)• What genes are associated with aging conditions?• What are the conditions associated with these

genes?• What organisms are associated with the aging genes

and conditions?• What other organisms might also have aging genes?• Where do the identified organisms live, and in what

types of habitats?• What are the demographic patterns associated with

organisms across the spectrum of life?• What are common phenotypes associated with

organisms that share common aging genes?

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

Status Update: Statistics 3,047 titles completed 7,669 volumes 2,945,143 pages in portal ~5.5 million pages scanned Three 10 station scribes

centers (Boston, WashingtonNew York)

Two 1-2 scribe stations(SI, Urbana, London)

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

© 2008 Biodiversity Heritage Library www.biodiversitylibrary.org

1) Proven the concept of mass scanning of general collections2) Proven concept of automated structured markup done in

collaboration with Penn State and the Internet Archive3) Built proof of concept portal on proprietary ( .Net) environment.4) High levels of OCR accuracy in late 19th and 20th century printing5) Applied taxonomic intelligence (species name finding) across million

of pages against nearly 11 million names in Name Bank.6) Data mining BHL for other bioinformatics projects (EOL)7) Obtained buy-in from a diverse group of learned societies for the

BHL opt-in copyright model8) Support and encouragement from our traditional bibliophile, and

scientific audiences9) Collaboration with an international group of competitive organizations

Status today

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Biodiversity Heritage Library

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1) Get equal cost efficiencies and speed for special collections2) Nail down automated structural markup to a high level of accuracy3) Port the portal from .Net to Fedora4) Improve OCR for publications in other languages with little human

intervention5) Broaden the use of taxonomic intelligence algorithm6) Data mining BHL for other bioinformatics projects (?????)7) Work with commercial publishers for fair and equitable use of their

publications8) Expand audiences through social networking and repurposing

content for new audiences9) Expand the consortium to bring in more partners, and more

partners in Europe, Asia, and the developing world

Status Tomorrow

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www.eol.org

www.ubio.org

www.biodiversitylibrary.org

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AcknowledgmentsPatrick LearyDavid Remsen

Diane RielingerDavid Patterson

Neil Sarkar

A.W. Mellon FoundationAlfred P. Sloan Foundation

John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur FoundationInternet Archive

Jim Edwards

Christopher FreelandTom Garnett

Martin KalfatovicGraham HigleyBHL & EOL Teams

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Gesner, 1576

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