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Invite colleaguesIRENE audio preservation at the Northeast Document Conservation Center: Developing workflows and standards for preservation projects that use innovative technology
Abstract
In 2014, the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) began offering the IRENE audio preservation service to libraries, archives and museums. IRENE is an innovative optical scanning technology for digitising grooved audio carriers without using a stylus. Developed at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the Library of Congress, IRENE uses cameras and microscopes to image the grooves at high resolution, and customised software that mimics the motion of the stylus through the grooves in the images to produce an audio file. The multi-step process offers the operator a critical degree of control for addressing the unique characteristics of ‘irregular’ (ie not produced in a controlled, professional environment) grooved recordings often found in archival collections, but also complicates the task of properly documenting the digital provenance of the files it produces. The rapid development of this technology presents the challenge of continually updating workflows and methods, at a rate faster than audio preservation standards and best practices can dictate. This paper provides a case study in developing preservation workflows and standards for projects that use innovative technology, by working from a foundation of established standards and providing transparent documentation of the ways in which IRENE deviates from those standards.
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Author's Biography
Julia Hawkins is an IRENE audio engineer at the Northeast Document Conservation Center, where she manages digitisation projects, reformats historical audio formats using the IRENE imaging system and creates documentation of the IRENE technology. She previously worked as a special projects assistant at the University of New Hampshire’s Diamond Library and in various positions in the library and archives of Saint Anselm College, where she earned her BA. She earned her MLIS with a concentration in archives from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Bryce Roe is the Director of Audio Preservation Services at the Northeast Document Conservation Center, where she confers with collection-holding institutions to evaluate their audio collections and develop preservation proposals, and manages preservation projects that use traditional technologies for magnetic and digital tape media, and either traditional or optical-scanning methods for grooved media. Bryce earned an MLIS in archives management from Simmons College, and a bachelor of arts with a concentration in ethnomusicology from Oberlin College.