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About this document: This wiki is intended to support the normative definitions by providing further information on the terms and concepts represented in the Latimer Core (LtC) standard, and guidance on how the standard may be used in practice. The wiki content is non-normative and may be modified, improved and extended over time.
The Latimer Core (LtC) schema, named after Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, is a standard designed to support the representation and discovery of natural science collections by structuring data about the groups of objects that those collections and their subcomponents encompass. The classes and properties (collectively terms) aim to represent information that describes these groupings in enough detail to inform deeper discovery of the resources contained within them.
The LtC standard has significant overlap with existing data standards that represent, for example, individual objects and occurrences (Darwin Core, ABCD, and organisations, people and activities (W3C ORG Ontology, W3C PROV Ontology, Schema.org). Where possible, LtC has either borrowed terms directly from these standards or less formally aligned with them. As far as possible, the terms included in the LtC standard should not preclude their use across domains.
Latimer Core is intended to be sufficiently flexible and scalable to apply to a wide range of collection description use cases, from describing the overall collections holdings of an institution to the contents of a single drawer of material. Various approaches are used to support this flexibility, including the use of generic classes to represent organisations, people, roles and identifiers, and enabling flexible relationships for constructing data models that meet different use cases. The collection description scheme concept is introduced to enable adopters to specify rules in the use of LtC within each specific implementation.
The central concept of the standard is the ObjectGroup class, which represents 'an intentionally grouped set of objects with one or more common characteristics'. Arranged around the ObjectGroup are a set of classes that are commonly used to describe and classify the objects within the ObjectGroup, classes covering aspects of the custodianship, management and tracking of the collections, a generic class (MeasurementOrFact) for storing qualitative or quantitative measures within the standard, and a set of classes that are used to describe the structure and description of the dataset. A summary of the classes within the standard is shown in Figure 1 below.
Figure 1: An overview and informal categorisation of Latimer Core classes for describing the object group’s characteristics (green), collections custody (purple), generic reusable information types (dark blue), metrics (red), and data structure and links (light blue).
Who uses Latimer Core?
Initial use cases for LtC were contributed from museum and biodiversity informatics communities, and are intended to be broadly useful beyond those communities for:
- data providers and users who need to share and aggregate structured collections information
- collections managers who need to inventory backlog and prioritize digitization efforts
- museum staff who need to generate collection metrics and summaries
- communities who need to track and share collection history and provenience
Where and How can Latimer Core be used?
[tbd]
Version | Date | Contributors | Status |
---|---|---|---|
1.x | TBD | Matt Woodburn, Jutta Buschbom, Sarah Vincent, Kate Webbink, Maarten Trekels, Janeen Jones, Sharon Grant | Expert Review - In progress |
1.0 | 2022-06-10 | Matt Woodburn, Jutta Buschbom, Sarah Vincent, Kate Webbink, Maarten Trekels, Janeen Jones, Sharon Grant | v1 - Archived |
0.1 | 2022-02-10 | Matt Woodburn, Jutta Buschbom, Sarah Vincent, Kate Webbink, Maarten Trekels, Janeen Jones, Sharon Grant | Draft |