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This blog has been archived
Linking Lives explored ways to present Linked Data. We aimed to show that archives can benefit from being presented as a part of the diverse data sources on the Web to create full biographical pictures, enabling researchers to make connections between people and events.
Linking Lives built upon the Locah project. Locah was a JISC-funded project to expose the Archives Hub descriptions as Linked Data.
Archives Hub Linked Data now available at http://data.archiveshub.ac.uk/
Categories
- archival context (4)
- archival description (3)
- barriers (5)
- benefits (2)
- biographical history (1)
- branding (1)
- cross-domain (1)
- data cleaning (1)
- data processing (2)
- evaluation (1)
- events (1)
- identifiers (4)
- interface (4)
- licensing (2)
- linked data (8)
- open data (2)
- researchers (1)
- Uncategorized (1)
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Recent Posts
Locah Project Resources
- Data modelling for archival Linked Data
- Finding, using and creating vocabularies
- Designing URI patterns
- Transforming archival data into RDF/XML and other formats (e.g. using XSLT)
- Thoughts on architecture and workflows for exposing archival data as Linked Data.
- Creating Linked Data views (e.g. using the Paget Framework)
- Querying Linked Data using Sparql
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Category Archives: researchers
Linking Lives Evaluation Report
This blog is based upon a report written by colleagues at Mimas* presenting the results of the evaluation of our innovative Linked Data interface, Linking Lives. The evaluation consisted of a survey and a focus group, with 10 participants including … Continue reading →