Title (en)
A Biological Perspective on Digital Preservation
Subtitle (en)
Poster (Text) - iPRES 2014 - Melbourne
Language
English
Description (en)
Successful preservation of Digital Objects (DOs) ultimately demands a solid theoretical framework. Such a framework with a high degree of generality emerges by treating DOs as containers of functional genetic information, exactly as in the genomes of organisms. We observe that functionality links survival in organisms and utility in DOs. In both cases, functional information is identifiable in principle by the consequence of its ablation. In molecular biology, genetic ablations (mutations) and environmental ablations (experimental manipulations) are used to construct interaction maps fully representing organismic activity. The equivalent of such interaction maps are dependency networks for the use of DOs within their Digital Environment (DE). In the poster we will present early work on the application of the theoretical background. It includes first results from a case-study examining a software-based art preservation scenario (SBA) developed as part of the PERICLES FP7 project.
Keywords (en)
iPRES 2014, digital ecosystems, digital preservation, niche, interaction map, significant environment information, sheer curation
Author of the digital object
Michael Pocklington
Anna Eggers
Fabio Corubolo
Jens Ludwig
Mark Hedges
Sándor Darányi
20.01.2015
Format
application/pdf
Size
74.6 kB
Licence Selected
CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 AT
Type of publication
Conference Object
Name of Publication (en)
Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Digital Preservation
Series Title
iPRES
From Page
363
To Page
364
Publication Date
2014-12
Edition/ Print Run
Final