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Author:
Paul Conway
University of Michigan School of Information
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| Description: |
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Digital imaging technologies are replacing the microfilm camera and photocopier as the primary mechanisms for reproducing print and graphic resources. Digitization practices do not necessarily accomplish preservation goals; only a portion of digitization programs in cultural heritage institutions produce preservation-quality results. In 2004, the Association of Research Libraries issued a position paper that supported the creation of preservation-quality digital images, citing the abundance of available standards and best practices. This course concentrates on the state-of-the-art of standards, techniques, metadata, and project requirements for the production of preservation-quality digital images. The course will consider such standards and practices within the larger context of the representation of information through technological remediation.
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| Keywords: |
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image conversion, preservation, digitization, metadata
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| More information about this material: |
Primary Audience:
College General Ed,
College Lower Division,
College Upper Division,
Graduate School,
Professional
Mobile Compatibility:
Not specified at this time
Language:
English
Material Version: 0
Cost Involved:
unsure
Source Code Available:
no
Accessiblity Information Available:
no
Copyright:
yes
Creative Commons:
This work is licensed under a
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States
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About this material:
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Peer Reviews (not reviewed)
Workflow status (Not triaged)
Comments (none)
Learning Exercises (none)
Personal Collections (1)
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