Participant Related Projects
Projects of Various Participants with Relevance to the Hackathon
Tolkin
Hackathon participant Chris Dell is associated with the Tolkin Project. Another Tolkin Informatics staff member, Elvis Wu attended the AOCR Working Group meeting in October of 2012 to help us plan the February 2013 hackathon. Reed Beaman, iDigBio Senior Personnel, is one of the Principal Investigators on this project. From the website:
TOLKIN is an information management and analytical web application to provide informatics support for phylodiversity and biodiversity research projects. As a web-based application, TOLKIN is able to support collaborative projects by providing shared access to a variety of data on voucher specimens, taxonomy, bibliography, morphology, DNA samples and sequences.
SALIX
AOCR working group member and hackathon participant Daryl Lafferty is the developer on this project, Semi-Automated Label Information Extraction System (SALIX).
- SALIX software and overview of features and function
- SALIX, the Semi-automatic Label Information Extraction system. Online pdf describing the software.
Symbiota
AOCR working group member and hackathon participant Edward Gilbert Edward Gilbert is lead developer of Symbiota. From the introduction on the website:
In this quickly changing world, there has developed a great necessity to learn about our world-wide biota at an increased rate. Scientists are predicting that future species declines will approach historical mass extinction levels within this century. We need to develop better tools to aid taxonomists, field biologists, and environmental educators. It is imperative that we increase our rate of conducting biological inventories, especially within the tropics, as well as steering youth toward becoming our future scientists. Symbiota web tools strive to integrate biological community knowledge and data in order to synthesize a network of databases and tools that will aid in increasing our overall environmental comprehension.
BiSciCol
AOCR working group chair and hackaton participant Bryan Heidorn and iDigBio staff member Reed Beaman are part of the Biological Science Collections Tracker project. Read more about this endeavor at http://biscicol.blogspot.com/ From their website:
BiSciCol (Biological Science Collections) Tracker is a funded NSF collaborative project with the goal of building an infrastructure designed to tag and track scientific collections and all of their derivatives.
From the Page
Hackathon participant, Ben Brumfield's consulting organization is From The Page. Check out the blog at FromThePage.com for more about Ben's experience with developing user interfaces for transcription, and OCR, and,... From the website:
FromThePage is free software that allows volunteers to transcribe handwritten documents on-line. It's easy to index and annotate subjects within a text using a simple, wiki-like mark-up. Users can discuss difficult writing or obscure words within a page to refine their transcription. The resulting text is hosted on the web, making documents easy to read and search.
DarwinCore Parser
The DarwinCore Parser comes to us from Hackathon participant, Michael Giddens, and is a new tool written in Node.js. It represents a very very new tool that SilverBiology is developing for the OCR meeting and some internal projects. See: https://github.com/silverbiology/dwc-parser
- Will be used to send OCR as text and:
- Get Dates from blob of text with ratings
- Get Lat/Lng in various formats
- Wrapper for GlobalNames and GBIF Checklist Bank for Name Recognition
- Higher Taxa lookup from GBIF Checklist Bank
- Wrapper for Python Lat/Lng format converter
- Type status detection
- Experimental: Using geos and GDAM for higher geography lookup and potential any shapefile lookup like Ecological data.
- more stuff.... looking for help...
The Apiary Project
Jason Best is AOCR working group member, hackathon participant, host for the hackathon at BRIT and Co-PI on the Apiary Project. Find out more about Apiary at http://www.apiaryproject.org From the website:
Our study addresses this research problem: What workflow provides for a combination of machine-assisted and human-assisted procedures to most effectively and efficiently convert textual data on specimen labels into machine-processable parsed data to ingest in a database and associate with the digitized specimen? The goal of this project is to answer this question.
- The project goal will be accomplished through the following objectives:
- Identify and test machine processes for initial transformation of label data
- Identify human processes that act on the machine-transformed data to correct and enhance label data
- Develop, test, and assess user interfaces to support human processes
- Develop and test a workflow that incorporates both human- and machine-assisted procedures for effectiveness and efficiency in label data transformation and enhancement
- Assess quality of metadata resulting from machine and human processes
Biodiversity Heritage Library
AOCR working group members and hackathon participants, William Ulate and John Mignault, both work on the Biodiversity Heritage Library Project. For an introduction to this project see: http://biodiversitylibrary.org
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