<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD JATS (Z39.96) Journal Archiving and Interchange DTD v1.0 20120330//EN" "JATS-archivearticle1.dtd">
<article xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">
  <front>
    <journal-meta />
    <article-meta>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>Adding Value to Biodiversity Images through Community Annotation in the Morphbank System</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>Greg Riccardi</string-name>
          <email>Riccardi@ci.fsu.edu</email>
          <email>riccardi@ci.fsu.edu</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff0">0</xref>
        </contrib>
        <aff id="aff0">
          <label>0</label>
          <institution>College of Information Florida State University Tallahassee</institution>
          ,
          <addr-line>FL 32306-2100 USA 01-850-644-2869</addr-line>
          ,
          <country country="US">USA</country>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <abstract>
        <p>Morphbank, an on-line collection of museum-quality biological images, is an NSF funded project designed to facilitate the on-line collaboration of biologists around the world. Our primary goal is to aid in the collection and management of images that are useful in phylogenetic research. Morphbank users are actively collaborating on the creation of information that represents the associations among images and related biodiversity data objects. This demo will explain the Morphbank annotation tool and data models and give examples of how users create structured information in the system. Schematized annotation provides biologists with a flexible framework to create semantically-rich annotations using their own data models. The demo will include access to the Morphbank image repository, image annotation tools and association mapping tools. We will demonstrate the scientific process that uses the annotation tools to create semantically rich associations. Users will be given access to the full capabilities of the working system.</p>
      </abstract>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <sec id="sec-1">
      <title>-</title>
      <p> Finding images and specimens associated with a specific
species and genus,
 Finding and recording information about that image and its
related objects, and
 The discovery and recording of ad-hoc associations among
the various objects.</p>
      <p>Discovering and recording ad-hoc data is the most problematic. It
is particularly difficult to find ways that users can record
associations among objects.</p>
      <p>As long as data is well formatted and constrained to the database
schema, finding and retrieving it is simple. However, as we’ve
discovered, there is no practical limit to the amount of information
a scientist may wish to store with a particular specimen. Most of
the knowledge is contained in the memory of these scientists or in
hand written notebooks. Although it is recognized that manual
annotation is expensive and time consuming it is nevertheless still
essential in documenting collaborative knowledge in biological
systems [2]. Translating and storing this knowledge in a
searchable form is the challenge.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-2">
      <title>1.1 Morphbank Objects</title>
      <p>Each object in the Morphbank system is uniquely identified and
includes a set of standard fields that assist us in cataloging its
location and type, the identification of the user who added the
object, the date and time of creation, an optional description of the
object, and the last time the object was modified. These attributes
allow anyone accessing Morphbank sufficient information to find
and catalog data and associate related objects. Each object is
externally identified by a Life Science Identifier (LSID) [13].</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-3">
      <title>1.2 Morphbank Object Relationships</title>
      <p>Since each Morphbank object is uniquely identified, any object
can be the target of a stored reference. A single column within a
Morphbank table holding a foreign key may refer to several an
object of any type. Thus a collection object can be heterogeneous.
For instance, an annotation object may define an association
among images, specimens, locations, users, or even other
annotations.</p>
      <p>This flexibility allows for the creation of complex collections of
objects that can be shared with other users of the Morphbank
system. Although there are a series of predefined relationships in
Morphbank, the use of unique identifiers allows users to define an
unrestricted set of complex relationships of objects within the
confines of the system.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-4">
      <title>2. Morphbank Object Annotation</title>
      <p>A variety of annotation technologies allow users to add value to
images by creating associations between those images, text and
other digital objects. Morphbank takes this one step further by
making the associations into first class objects that can themselves
be annotated and associated with other objects. Morphbank also
allows associations to take on specific semantic characteristics
that constrain their meaning and thereby improve searching and
understanding.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-5">
      <title>3. Biological Annotation Requirements</title>
      <p>A problem of biodiversity annotation is that biologists have
increased the number of specimens they can gather but have not
increased their ability to catalog, identify, and study them.
Collaborations still include the exchange of physical specimens
and the manual annotations of the images using indexed cards and
paper documents. At the functional level, many users have
developed their own specific but proprietary solution to this
problem. Through the use of Morphbank and a Web based
annotation tool, we can solve most if not all of these problems.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-6">
      <title>3.1 Morphbank Object Annotation</title>
      <p>A variety of annotation technologies allow users to add value to
images by creating associations between those images, text and
other digital objects. Morphbank takes this one step further by
making the associations into first class objects that can themselves
be annotated and associated with other objects. Morphbank also
allows associations to take on specific semantic characteristics
that constrain their meaning and thereby improve searching and
understanding.</p>
      <p>Image annotation is available in a variety of image management
Web sites. The simplest annotations are found in systems that
support attaching tags to images and other media. Flickr.com and
YouTube.com, e.g., allow users to add text attributes (tags) to
images and use those tags to support searching. FotoTagger.com,
among others, goes a step further and allows the tags to be
attached to specific locations on images.</p>
      <p>Blogging is another form of image annotation in which text
passages are linked to images, Web pages and other digital
objects. A blog entry creates an associate between its own text and
the linked objects.</p>
      <p>Annotea.org supports the creation of RDF attributes for image
tags. These attributes can be used to provide search inference
capabilities for users of image repositories.</p>
      <p>Another annotation strategy involves the development of
laboratory notebooks such as those under development at the
United States Department of Energy, National Collaboratories
under the guidance of Dr. Jim Myers [11]. These middle-ware
products present researchers, applications, problem-solving
environments (PSE), and software agents with a layered set of
application services that provide a finite set of capabilities for the
creation and management of meta-data, the definition of semantic
relationships between data objects, and the development of
electronic research records [10]. Users are able to record
associations between digital objects across and among projects.
Morphbank seeks to combine these ideas by allowing
incorporating an extensible annotation type system and by
systematically expanding the scope of associations by including
any objects referenced by globally unique IDs (GUID).
Morphbank was designed to allow users to take advantage of Web
service products to gain access to the data by conforming to
industry practices and standards but maintain the ontology of the
original data. Users will browse or search the Web site for
Morphbank objects using a variety of tools provided through the
Web site.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-7">
      <title>4. Demonstrations</title>
      <p>The demonstration of the Morphbank system will allow
participants to collaborate by adding annotations to a collection of
images of tropical fish in order to reach consensus on the
similarity and diversity of their markings and colorings. Each
participant will be able to identify the various features on the fish
images.</p>
      <p>Participants will use the Morphbank tools to compare the image
annotations. Each person will be able to record their evaluations
of these annotations.</p>
      <p>If all goes well, the participants will reach consensus on the
feature identification. Experts from outside of the workshop will
add their own evaluations.</p>
      <p>College of Information and College of Computational
Science</p>
    </sec>
  </body>
  <back>
    <ref-list />
  </back>
</article>