[Crm-sig] ISSUE 295 homework
Athanasios Velios
a.velios at gmail.com
Wed Jan 10 13:30:40 EET 2018
Shouldn't this:
§ The Digital Collections of the Munich DigitiZation Center (MDZ)
accessible via https://www.digitale-sammlungen.de/ at least in January 2018.
be instead:
§ The group of servers (hardware) holding the Digital Collections of
the Munich DigitiZation Center (MDZ) accessible via
https://www.digitale-sammlungen.de/ at least in January 2018.
The term "Digital Collections" will not necessarily mean a physical
thing for many readers.
All the best,
Thanasis
On 04/01/18 17:39, Martin Doerr wrote:
> Dear All,
>
> Here my proposals:
>
>
> "ISSUE 295
>
> Following Martin’s proposal to remove class E84 since it does not
> satisfy the requirements proposed on issue 340, the sig proposed the
> examples of material carrier of a digital object to be moved to E24 of
> an E25 digital feature and possibly to E78 οr put example for E78 of
> Server holding Digital Asset Management.
>
> Finally, the sig asked Martin to make an example. The issue will be
> complete with examples. It is decided to be created a new issue for
> covering the discussion aboutE84 staying or going"
>
> *I propose:
>
> Delete:*
>
>
> E84 Information Carrier
>
> Subclass of:E22 <#_E22_Man-Made_Object> Man-Made Object
>
> Scope note:This class comprises all instances of E22 Man-Made Object
> that are explicitly designed to act as persistent physical carriers for
> instances of E73 Information Object.
>
> An E84 Information Carrier may or may not contain information, e.g., a
> diskette. Note that any E18 Physical Thing may carry information, such
> as an E34 Inscription. However, unless it was specifically designed for
> this purpose, it is not an Information Carrier. Therefore the property
> /P128 carries (is carried by)/ applies to E18 Physical Thing in general.
>
> Examples:
>
> §the Rosetta Stone
>
> §my paperback copy of Crime & Punishment
>
> §the computer disk at ICS-FORTH that stores the canonical Definition of
> the CIDOC CRM
>
> In First Order Logic:
>
> E84(x) ⊃E22(x)
>
> *New examples in:*
>
> *E78 Curated Holding***
>
> Subclass of: E24 <#_E24_Physical_Man-Made_Thing> Physical Man-Made Thing
>
> Scope note:This class comprises aggregations of instances of E18
> Physical Thing that are assembled and maintained (“curated” and
> “preserved,” in museological terminology) by one or more instances of
> E39 Actor over time for a specific purpose and audience, and according
> to a particular collection development plan.Typical instances of curated
> holdings are museum collections, archives, library holdings and digital
> libraries. A digital library is regarded as an instance of E18 Physical
> Thing because it requires keeping physical carriers of the electronic
> content.
>
> Items may be added or removed from an E78 Curated Holding in pursuit of
> this plan. This class should not be confused with the E39 Actor
> maintaining the E78 Curated Holding often referred to with the name of
> the E78 Curated Holding (e.g. “The Wallace Collection decided…”).
>
> Collective objects in the general sense, like a tomb full of gifts, a
> folder with stamps or a set of chessmen, should be documented as
> instances of E19 Physical Object, and not as instances of E78 Curated
> Holding. This is because they form wholes either because they are
> physically bound together or because they are kept together for their
> functionality.
>
> Examples:
>
> §the John Clayton Herbarium
>
> §the Wallace Collection
>
> §Mikael Heggelund Foslie’s coralline red algae Herbarium at Museum of
> Natural History and Archaeology, Trondheim, Norway
>
> §The Digital Collections of the Munich DigitiZation Center (MDZ)
> accessible via https://www.digitale-sammlungen.de/ at least in January 2018.
>
> In First Order Logic:
>
> E78(x) ⊃E24(x)
>
> *E24 Physical Man-Made **Thing***
>
> Subclass of:E18 <#_E18_Physical_Thing> Physical Thing
>
> E71 <#_E71_Man-Made_Thing>Man-Made Thing
>
> Superclass of: E22 <#_E22_Man-Made_Object>Man-Made Object
>
> E25 <#_E25_Man-Made_Feature>Man-Made Feature
>
> E78 <#_E78_Collection>Collection
>
> Scope Note:This class comprises all persistent physical items that are
> purposely created by human activity.
>
> This class comprises man-made objects, such as a swords, and man-made
> features, such as rock art. No assumptions are made as to the extent of
> modification required to justify regarding an object as man-made. For
> example, a “cup and ring” carving on bedrock is regarded as instance of
> E24 Physical Man-Made Thing.
>
> Examples:
>
> §the Forth Railway Bridge (E22)
>
> §the Channel Tunnel (E25)
>
> §the Historical Collection of the Museum Benaki in Athens (E78)
>
> §the Rosetta Stone (E22)
>
> §my paperback copy of Crime & Punishment (E22)
>
> §the computer disk at ICS-FORTH that stores the canonical Definition of
> the CIDOC CRM (E22)
>
> §my empty DVD disk (E22)
>
> In First Order Logic:
>
> E24(x) ⊃E18(x)
>
> E24(x) ⊃E71(x)
>
> Properties:
>
> P62 <#_P62_depicts_%28is_depicted%20by%29> depicts (is depicted by): E1
> <#_E1_CRM_Entity> CRM Entity
>
> (P62.1 mode of depiction: E55 <#_E55_Type> Type)
>
> P65 <#_P65_shows_visual_item%20%28is%20shown%20by%29> shows visual item
> (is shown by): E36 <#_E36_Visual_Item> Visual Item
>
>
> *Scope Note extension:**
> *
>
> *E25 Man-Made Feature***
>
> Subclass of:E24 <#_E24_Physical_Man-Made_Thing> Physical Man-Made Thing
>
> E26 <#_E26_Physical_Feature>Physical Feature
>
> Scope Note:This class comprises physical features that are purposely
> created by human activity, such as scratches, artificial caves,
> artificial water channels, etc. In particular it includes the
> information encoding features on mechanical or digital carriers.
>
> No assumptions are made as to the extent of modification required to
> justify regarding a feature as man-made. For example, rock art or even
> “cup and ring” carvings on bedrock a regarded as types of E25 Man-Made
> Feature.
>
> Examples:
>
> §the Manchester Ship Canal
>
> §Michael Jackson’s nose following plastic surgery
>
> §The laser-readable “pits” engraved June 2014 in my CD-R, copying songs
> of Edith Piaf’s.
>
> §The carved letters on the Rosetta Stone
>
> In First Order Logic:
>
> E25(x) ⊃E26(x)
>
> E25(x) ⊃E24(x)
>
> --
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> Dr. Martin Doerr | Vox:+30(2810)391625 |
> Research Director | Fax:+30(2810)391638 |
> | Email:martin at ics.forth.gr |
> |
> Center for Cultural Informatics |
> Information Systems Laboratory |
> Institute of Computer Science |
> Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas (FORTH) |
> |
> N.Plastira 100, Vassilika Vouton, |
> GR70013 Heraklion,Crete,Greece |
> |
> Web-site:http://www.ics.forth.gr/isl |
> --------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
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