Work Reports & Minutes
-
This summary from the SIG CIDOC CRM meeting which took place as part of the CIDOC Conference in Gothenburg, Sweden, was presented at the general assembly of CIDOC on September 13, 2006.
Available: ppt file (74 kb)
- The 13th joined meeting of the CIDOC
CRM SIG and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9 took place in Nuremberg, Germany,
November 14-18, 2005. Also the 5th FRBR - CIDOC CRM Harmonization meeting took place,
with representatives of the CIDOC CRM SIG and the IFLA FRBR Review
Group on November 16-18, 2005.
Minutes available: word file (247 Kb), pdf file (67 Kb).
- The third FRBR - CIDOC CRM Harmonization
meeting took place, with representatives of the CIDOC CRM SIG
and the IFLA FRBR Review Group, in Imperial
College in Kensington, London, February 14-16 2005.
Minutes available:
word
file (117 Kb), pdf
file (136 Kb).
- This document is the full report
of the tenth joined
meeting of the CIDOC CRM SIG and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9 and took place at the Germanisches
Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg, Germany, December 7-10, 2004.
Minutes available:word
file (117 Kb), pdf
file (136 Kb).
- This document is the full report
of the ninth joint meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest Group
and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9
which was held in Heraklion, Greece, April 20-22 2004.
Matthew Stiff, Report of the 9th joined meeting of the CIDOC Special
Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9. Available: word
file, (111 Kb), pdf
file (226 Kb).
- The first FRBR - CIDOC CRM Harmonization
meeting was held with representatives of the CIDOC CRM SIG and
the IFLA FRBR Review Group in Paris, November 12 - 14 2004.
Minutes available: word
file (25 kb), pdf
file (90 kb)
- This document is the full report
of the eighth joint meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest Group
and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9
which was held in Oxford, UK, October 6-9, 2003
Matthew Stiff, Report of the 8th joined meeting of the CIDOC Special
Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9. Available: word
file, (80 Kb), pdf
file (123 Kb).
- This document is the full report of the
seventh joint meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest Group and
ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9 which
was held at the Marble Palace, St. Petersburg, Russia, September
2 and 6, 2003
Matthew Stiff, Report of the 7th joined meeting of the CIDOC Special
Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9. Available: word
file, (23 Kb), pdf
file (92 Kb).
- This document is the full report of the
sixth joint meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9
which was held at the Smithsonian Institutions, NMAI, Washington
DC, March 25 and 28, 2003.
Matthew Stiff, Report of the 6th joined meeting of the CIDOC Special
Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9. Available: word
file, (46 Kb), pdf
file (89 Kb).
- This document is the full report of the
fifth joint meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9
which was held in Rethymnon, Institute of Mediterranean Studies,
FORTH, October 22-25, 2002.
Matthew Stiff, Report of the 5th joined meeting of the CIDOC Special
Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9. Available: word
file, (109 Kb), pdf
file (140 Kb).
- This document is the full report of
the fourth joint meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest Group
and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9 which
was held in Copenhagen, National Museum of Denmark, July 2-5,
2002:
Matthew Stiff, Report of the 4rd joined meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest
Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9. Available: word
File (58 kb), pdf
file (106 Kb).
- This document is the full report of
the third joint meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9 which
was held in Monterey, February 19-22, 2002:
Matthew Stiff, Report of the 3rd joined meeting of the CIDOC Special Interest
Group and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9. Available: word
file (113 Kb), pdf
file (154 Kb).
-
This document is the full report of
the second joined meeting of the CIDOC CRM SIG and ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9 in
Paris, October 15-18, 2001:
Siegfried Krause,Report of the Second Joined Meeting of ISO/TC46/SC4/WG9 and CIDOC CRM SIG, Nuremberg, Nov 12, 2001. Available: word
file (160 Kb), pdf
file (181 Kb).
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This document is the full report of
the decisions taken in the 1st CHIOS Meeting, Plaza Hotel,
Barcelona, 6-7 July 2001: 1st CHIOS Meeting, Plaza Hotel, Barcelona.
6-7 July 2001 , Heraklion, July 9, 2001. Available: word
file (51 Kb), pdf
file (137 Kb).
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This document is the full report of
the CIDOC CRM SIG first meeting in Barcelona, July 5, 2001:
Martin Doerr, CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group, Full report from the first
meeting in Barcelona, July 5, 2001 , Heraklion, July 9, 2001. Available: word
file (61 Kb), pdf
file (165 Kb).
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This document gives a comprehensive
summary of the ISO standardization process and its relevance
and applicability for the CIDOC CRM. It has been presented
to the DSWG meeting in Ottawa August 2000. In the meanwhile,
the CIDOC CRM has been accepted by ISO in stage 2:
Nick Crofts, ISO Structure and procedures , Geneva, August 10, 2000. Available: word
file (35 Kb), pdf
file (127 Kb).
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This document consists of notes on
a draft specification for the CIDOC OO reference model. This
draft was compiled by an ad hoc group (Nick Crofts, Costis
Dallas, Ifigenia Dionissiadou, Martin Doerr) at a meeting in
Crete in July 1997 on behalf of the CIDOC documentation standards
working group:
Notes on the data modelling meeting in Crete July 1997 , July 1997. Available: word
file (77 Kb), pdf
file (192 Kb).
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The present document is a relatively
informal collection of remarks and comments arising from work
on the conversion of the CIDOC relational data model at ICS
FORTH in July 1996:
Notes on the transformation of the CIDOC relational data model, July 1996.
Available: rtf file (50 Kb), pdf
file (131 Kb).
-
The summary of the CRM meeting in
Agios Pavlos, Crete, June 2000, which has proposed the above
extensions:
Nick Crofts (editor),CRM Agios Pavlos meeting:Report , July 2000. Available: rtf
file (13 Kb), pdf
file (91 Kb).
- The CIDOC Documentation
Standards Working Group meeting in Ottawa, August 2000
- The CIDOC Documentation
Standards Group meeting in London, 1999
- Documentation
Standards Group Report, Nuremberg 1997
- Documentation
Standards Working Group Interim Report, April 1996
Reports
Minutes & Reports
Documents
The reference documents about CIDOC CRM produced by Documentation Standards
Working Group betwwen 1996 and August 2000 can be found under Previous releases of CIDOC CRM for reasons of uniformity.
The
CIDOC Documentation Standards Working Group
Minutes from the Meeting August 22, 2000 , CIDOC Conference Ottawa
Acting Chair: Martin Doerr
- The election of a new chair for the
Group was postponed to the end of the meeting, until all technical
implications have been clarified.
- Pat Young informed the Group about the
CIDOC Board decision to initiate an open "CRM Special Interest
Group", in the following "CRM SIG".
- This open Group of stakeholders aims
at further promoting the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (CRM)
into an international standard by collaborating with the ISO
Ad-hoc Working Group for the CRM expected to be formed end
of September 2000, and at fostering a wide consensus in the
community about the contents of the envisaged standard.
- For that purpose the CIDOC Board will
invite relevant organizations or initiatives of the wider cultural
community to delegate representatives for this group. Further
expressions of interest in participation are welcome. Members
are in general thought to actively participate in the work
program the group will set up.
- The Group will inform the CIDOC Board
about its activities.
- Martin Doerr presented to the Group
the report from Nick Crofts about the CRM submission to ISO and
related ISO procedures. Major points:
- The CIDOC CRM, product of years of
engagement of this Group, has now been submitted for ballot
at ISO TC46, SC4, following the proposal of the Group and decision
of the Board August 1999.
- SC4 is expected to vote for the CRM
as Draft International Standard (DIS) until September 26. It
is expected to enter the ISO procedures in Stage 4, "Enquiry" under
the "fast track".
- The fast track procedure will take
at least two years to complete, and leaves enough space for
corrections and amendments in order to properly reflect the
communities requirement and consensus for the CRM. The promoters
of the CRM are expected to collaborate actively with ISO.
- Axel Ermert pointed out that the respective
national interest groups of the museum and wider cultural community
must confirm their interest in the CRM to the respective voting
members of SC4 before September 26. SC4 voting members may not
be aware whom to contact, and should be sought actively by CIDOC
members for that purpose.
- The Group asks Nick Crofts to distribute
a list with the addresses of those SC4 voting members to the
Group participants for the above purpose (actually it is on
the TC46 Website).
- The Group expresses the need for a
compact "layman text" to promote awareness of the CRM to non-experts.
- Martin Doerr presented to the Group
the current understanding of the functional role of the CRM,
its basic structure and reported the latest progress of the CRM
work:
- Presentation of the CRM as a means
to explain data and metadata structures for the purpose of
semantically correct data transfer, data merging and query
mediation between heterogeneous sources.
- Report on the progress of the CRM
Correlation Test Project. So far, the AMICO data model, the
Dublin Core Element Set with all its qualifiers, the EAD archival
standard and some 90% of the SPECTRUM data fields and have
been mapped successfully to the CRM. The "Agios Pavlos Extensions".
The full report of the Dublin Core mapping is on the Web-site
of ICS-FORTH (http://www.ics.forth.gr/proj/isst).
- Report on the Agios Pavlos meeting
(based on report by Nick Crofts). The Informal meeting of stakeholders
and CIDOC members within the framework of the CRM Correlation
Test Project in Agios Pavlos, Crete, June 26-30 2000, approved
a proposal for a set of extensions to the current CRM, the "Agios
Pavlos Extensions". They render the mappings of DC, AMICO,
EAD to 100% within the scope of the CRM. It was agreed that
complete mappings of the Archeological Core Data Standard (CDS),
Spectrum, the CIMI Access Points and Profile will be achieved
by a future extension. The process of elaborating the Agios
Pavlos extensions effectively confirmed the validity of the
methodology and reinforced the participant's confidence in
the potential of the CRM. The full report is on the Web-site
of ICS-FORTH.
- Presentation of the core concepts
of the CRM for all newcomers and as a memory refreshment for
all others.
- Introduction to the Agios Pavlos Extensions.
The full report is on the Web-site of ICS-FORTH.
- The Group discussed the scope of the
CRM.
- The CRM is thought to be primarily
a tool for the museum community, that intellectually originates
in the museum community, but enables an effective communication
with the libraries and archives world. As such it should contain
the necessary concepts to communicate, but is not required
to cover those areas.
- The CRM is thought primarily to support
the data interchange of documentation. Planning events e.g.
is explicitly excluded for the time being, as well as completely
museum internal data handling. This does not pose however any
restrictions to the wide extensibility of the CRM.
- Rather than defining intellectual
rules what should be or not be in the CRM, it seems to be more
effective to define the scope of the CRM on a set of current
data and metadata formats, as those already express the outcome
of extensive scope discussions of the respective experts.
- The need for a clear definition of
the scope of the CRM was expressed.
- The Group discussed application aspects
of the CRM.
- There is a need for extensive documentation.
- Usage scenarios in simple terms and
in particular data examples are regarded to be particularly
valuable to render the concepts. Participants are invited to
create data examples, and to let them validate by the current
CRM experts.
- The benefits of the CRM for implementers
should be made clear. As the CRM is a reference rather than
a prescription, it is reasonable to define a variety of different
compatibility predicates. They should not create obstacles
to the necessary diversity in the domain.
- The need for recommendations for implementation,
machine readable formats of the CRM etc. was expressed, and
it was discussed how to relate those to the standard to come.
- The Group agreed, that the Documentation
Standards Group Web-site is transferred from Geneva to ICS-FORTH
in Crete, as Nick Crofts is no longer working at that site in
Geneva.
- The Group agreed with the formation
of the CRM SIG in the following manner:
- Martin Doerr, from ICS-FORTH, acts
as one co-chair of the SIG with a focus on technical issues.
- A representative of CIMI is invited
to be the other co-chair.
- Proposed organizations so far:
- CEMAC
- CIDOC-ISO Liaison
- CIMI
- CHIN
- EMII
- Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nuernberg
- ICS-FORTH
- Museum Benaki
- MDA
- National Museum of Denmark
- Research Library Group California
- Other organizations will be invited
as members or may express their interest in active participation.
Members are expected to have the technical possibility to participate
in the respective meetings.
- ICS-FORTH can support the SIG with
the equivalent of 50% of the workload of a technician over
the next two years out of its own means. The SIG members are
thought to seek financial support for their work from appropriate
bodies like the European Community, US Government, Canadian
Government and others..
- The Group discussed its future objectives.
All participants expressed their opinion and interests. Major
points were:
- The delegation of the direct CRM work
to the CRM SIG is seen as a chance for reorientation, in particular
to take up important activities that could not be done in the
past due to the Group's exclusive occupation with the CRM.
The Group seeks to define its objectives independent from the
CRM.
- Nevertheless the whole Group is understood
as an observer of the CRM activities, and the SIG will take
care to keep the Group appropriately informed. Participants
gave their e-mail addresses for that purpose.
- Thesauri were regarded by many participants
as a major topic, details to be defined. Besides others the
relation of thesauri to other data standards and to the CRM.
The need for a thesaurus of event types was mentioned, as many
data formats and the CRM use explicit representations of events.
- The Group as an information forum
about practice and needs of data standards was mentioned, rather
than as a standards producing organization. The Group seeks
contact with the EMII initiative and expresses its interest
that such work is carried further on.
- Finally an interest in identifying
the potential relations of the CRM to other activities in the
community was expressed, in particular the contacts and overlaps
with the archive and library community.
- Finally the Group sought a new chair.
During the session, no participant declared candidacy. Matthew
Stiff was proposed by the participants to be elected if he agrees.
Richard Light declared his interest in the final session.. In
this situation, we are looking forward to new initiatives from
Richard Light, until a new chair can be elected again. Matthew
and Ifigenia Dionissiadou continue to be co-chairs for terminology
and data modeling respectively.
Edited by Martin Doerr, Ottawa, August
23, 2000
Presented in the Annual Business Meeting Ottawa August 26, 2000.
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The
CIDOC Documentation Standards Group meeting in London, 1999
The meeting was attended by more than
thirty people. Many of them new members. Topics under discussion
included:
- Presentation of work done on the object-oriented
Conceptual Reference Model (CRM) and current state of affairs
re submission to ISO TC46
- Role and organisation of the group
- Discussion of future plans and
projects, including:
- -CRM correlation testbed project
- -Update of terminology resources
- -Incorporation of the International
Terminology Working Group
- Nomination of people responsible for
running new projects
Presentation of the Conceptual Reference
Model
Nick Crofts explained the current status
of the model and the implications of its submission to ISO. Martin
Doerr explained some of the theoretical background to the model,
its role and uses as a domain ontology.
A number of proposed modifications to the model were approved by the group.
After further discussion, mostly concerning distribution rights and CIDOC's continued
participation in developing the model, the group unanimously approved submission
of the model to ISO. This has since taken place and the model is currently in
the initial stages of evaluation under ISO's 'fast track' procedure.
Role and organisation of the group
As its name indicates, the group is concerned
with all aspects of documentation standards relating to museums.
However, partly for the benefit of members attending the meeting
for the first time, the group reiterated and discussed its role
and mode of operation. Four key points are worth underlining
- The group aims to provide a forum for
discussion to promote the exchange of ideas and information about
museum documentation standards.
- The group aims to identify and, where
possible, provide access to sources of reference material.
- The group aims to participate in and
when necessary undertake the development of new standards relevant
to the field.
- Productive projects are generally handled
by motivated sub groups who report back to the main group.
Future plans and projects
The group decided to set up a mailing
list, cidoc-docustrd, which will be hosted by ICS FORTH. Although
primarily intended for members of the group, the list will also
be open to interested outsiders who may not be members of CIDOC.
Martin Doerr is leading a testbed project to look at correlation of the
CRM with existing database applications and standards such as Spectrum. The anticipated
benefits of this project are better comprehension of the model and enhanced interoperability
and integration. Several group members are now committed to working on this project.
The group is intending to work on an updated list of terminology resources,
based on the CHIN terminology resource guide This will be based on an online
registry, providing users with references to documents, as well as the possibility
of submitting and updating references, and writing comments.
CHIN and MDA have offered to co-host the resource, though overall responsibility
will remain with CIDOC. A sub group will manage the registry and deal with editorial
tasks. As befits a terminology project, the editorial group is currently engaged
in defining basic meta terminology to help ensure consistent use of the registry.
Other plans
Integration of the International Terminology
Working Group as part of the Documentation Standards Group was
discussed and finally rejected after an impassioned defence of
the need for the group's autonomy from Matthew Stiff. The ITWG
will most likely become a new CIDOC group and meet during CIDOC
conferences.
Plans for a volume of essays on terminology and for the development of
terminology for sub collections and groups of objects were brought up but not
sufficiently discussed.
Nick Crofts
Chair, Documentation Standards Group
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Documentation
Standards Group Report, Nuremberg 1997
The documentation standards group is one
of the most active in CIDOC. Following last year's conference in
Nairobi, several interim meetings took place. One in London at
the V&A, (reported in the August issue of the CIDOC Newsletter)
and two other informal meetings in Washington and Crete. As a result
we were able to meet all the major objectives set in Nairobi.
Three meetings were held during the Nuremberg conference, each drawing
a massive response (nearly 50 people). Due to the size of the group, and the
number of new members, it was agreed that in future a distinction would be made
between 'voting' and 'non-voting' members, along the same lines as that used
by ICOM for committee membership. Voting members will be expected to participate
in the group's activities on a regular basis.
It was also agreed that constructive work could best be carried out by
assigning specific tasks to small 'project-groups', who would then submit the
results of their efforts for discussion and approval by the group as a whole.
The Group's mission, as defined during the Nuremberg conference, is "the
identification, creation, maintenance and diffusion of standards relating to
museum documentation". Most of the group's recent work has been devoted to developing
the Object-Oriented Reference Data Model. However, now that the end of this work
is in sight we aim to set up a number of other project groups to undertake work
on terminology, revising the current 'Guidelines for Information Categories',
and for compiling a resource document identifying existing standards relevant
to museum documentation. Work on the reference model will, of course, continue.
Several of the group's members have also expressed interest in setting up a testbed
project to evaluate the feasibility of using the reference model as a practical
basis for information exchange and interoperability.
To help co-ordinate the group's work and provide a convenient means for
communication between members, we shall be making extensive use of email and
a group web site. A turning point may have been reached since the vast majority
of the group's participants now have Internet access.
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Documentation
Standards Working Group Interim Report, April 1996
At the ICOM meeting in Stavanger, the
Data Model Working Group and the Data Terminology Working Group
merged and became the Documentation Standards Working Group. Each
of the former groups presented a product: the CIDOC
Relational Data Model of the Data Model Working Group, and
the International Guidelines for Museum Object Information of the
Data Terminology Working Group.
Project plans of the Working Group included mapping three data standards
to the CIDOC Relational Data Model: Archaeological Sites, Ethnology, and Information
Categories Guidelines. The working group plans also to conduct a workshop in
Nairobi, details for which are not complete at this time.
The Working Group held an interim meeting in Heraklion, Crete, Greece,
March 6 - 8 to discuss object-oriented (O-O) methods and techniques for extending
and enriching the CIDOC Relational Data Model. Following presentations, demonstrations,
and much discussion, the group agreed to the following:
1. Future CIDOC data models will be developed
using O-O methods, techniques, and formats. While this effort is
under way, the current CIDOC Relational Data Model will be available,
although it will not be modified or enhanced.
The O-O model will retain all the related information contained in the
existing relational model, and it will provide flexibility and extensibility
not ossible for a relational approach. Information that is implicit in the relational
model will be explicitly represented in the O-O model. Specifically, the O-O
model can provide variable levels of information, from a general overview to
precise detail, enabling the representation, use, and retrieval of information
from multiple points of view simultaneously.
The scope of the current relational model concentrates on the documentation
of museum objects and their provenance. The O-O model will enable more specific
collections management and research information to be included. Communication,
interchange of information, and public access to museum information will be enhanced.
2. The group intends the O-O model to
be a 'Conceptual Reference Model' (CRM), which can be enriched
by complementary, domain-specific models. The CRM is seen as a
key product which will provide the intellectual and conceptual
framework for defining and integrating formal compatible subsets
and extensions. The role of the group is to provide a forum for
the consolidation, validation, and integration of these CRM components.
3. A first draft of the CRM will be created
by a subgroup which will analyze the current relational model and
convert it to an O-O format. The subgroup will report to the larger
group on problems and exceptions encountered, identify the necessary
transformation rules, and make recommendations for enhancing the
CRM. This first version should be completed and distributed to
working group members in time for the September CIDOC meeting in
Nairobi.
Future work involves testing and extending the CRM by applying it to specific
applications, projects, and problem areas. This work will be entrusted to subgroups
with specific interests and expertise who will report to the full working group.
4. To complement the O-O model, the group
intends to provide support material to include presentation documents,
guides, transformation rules, and other information needed to understand
and use the new model. The O-O model requires a different mind-set
for looking at museum data: although it is more flexible and extensible,
it also is more complex. |