| DSpace at York University Libraries
= YorkSpace
The York University Libraries are in the
process of testing the new DSpace open source software
from MIT. DSpace is a repository for research in digital
form, which was developed as a joint project between
the MIT Libraries and Hewlett Packard (HP). The original
concept for the software was to provide a place for
an institution's digital research output to be stored
and accessed - a collective repository to store digital
research which often only existed on faculty websites
or personal computers. With DSpace, faculty and researchers
have the ability to submit their own work to be preserved
and made accessible over the Internet.
DSpace is not simply another database
and website combination; it includes many features necessary
for long term storage and increased access to scholarly
research, such as open source software components and
common web standards These features help to make the
DSpace information more widely accessible and portable
to future platforms.
DSpace gives libraries the capability of storing and
providing access to research which is available only
in digital from and which may not lend itself well to
print formats. In addition to text, other formats such
as video, audio or large datasets can be accommodated
in the system.
A single search interface is provided
for all of the information contained in the DSpace repository,
and items are described using a standard set of data
elements. A new standard, the Open Archives Initiative
(OAI) Protocol, allows the records of items within DSpace
to be made more readily available to users via metadata
harvesting projects such as OAIster
at the University of Michigan. Projects like OAIster
are collecting records from as many OAI sources as possible
to create one large database of scholarly resources.
The structure of DSpace means that searchers will not
be retrieving merely information about resources (metadata),
but the information itself. Researchers and others will
be able to browse the information directly by titles,
authors, dates, or "communities" and collections,
without the need for an intermediary interface.
One of the important features of DSpace
is its method of organizing information into "communities"
which can represent faculties, departments, or virtually
any other organizational entity within an institution.
Access permissions and workflow can be defined and controlled
separately for each community.
YorkSpace, the Libraries' installation
of DSpace, is a major component in building a digital
library and fulfils the Libraries' traditional role
as caretakers of information. The Libraries are initially
focusing on published and completed research including
journal publications, technical reports and working
papers. Large datasets and non-print media accompanying
research are also of interest to store in YorkSpace.
Future content for consideration includes pre-prints
and e-theses. Several York University research communities
are currently considering placing their publications
in YorkSpace.
For an example close to home, see the
University of Toronto's "T-Space": https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/index.jsp
For more information on the DSpace software
and other institutions using it see: http://www.library.yorku.ca/Home/eResources/yorkspace.jsp
, which will have a link to YorkSpace when it goes live.
Contact Merle Steeves at msteeves@yorku.ca
if you would like to find out more about the YorkSpace
project.
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