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Resumes of Invited Foreign
Experts on Digital Preservation
Hilde van
Wijngaarden (Dutch) Hilde van Wijngaarden
studied history at the University of Amsterdam and
wrote her Ph.D as a research assistant at the University of
Groningen (2000). In 1999, she started working as an
information consultant for an IT-company. Since 2002
she is working at the Koninklijke Bibliotheek, first
as a project leader for digitization projects and as
of January 2003 as a Digital Preservation Officer.
She is responsible for new Research and Development in the area
of digital preservation, among other things leading a
project to develop the Universal Virtual Computer in
co-operation with IBM, and conducting research into
permanent access strategies. She is a member of the
OCLC/RLG Working Group on Preservation Metadata.
Ren¨¦ van
Horik (Dutch) Ren¨¦ van Horik works as a
researcher and project leader at the Department of
History of the Netherlands Institute for Scientific
Information Services (NIWI-KNAW), one of the research institutes
of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. The
Department of History of NIWI-KNAW focuses on the
application of information and communication
technology for the Humanities and keeps the national
data archive on scientific historical data: the Netherlands
Historical Data Archive (NHDA). Durability of digital
data and digital preservation is an important issue
for the institute. Ren¨¦ van Horik received his
M.A. degree in History at the University of Nijmegen.
He is involved in several projects in which ICT is
applied in the Humanities. He is working on his dissertation
on the longevity of digital images at Delft University of
Technology.
Max Kaiser
(Austrian) Max Kaiser studied German
Literature and Philosophy at the University of
Vienna (Austria) where he worked as a researcher from
1997-2001. He joined the Austrian
National Library in 2000 and has been involved in several
national and European projects and initiatives in the field of
digital libraries. Max Kaiser is
co-ordinator of research and development projects at
the Austrian National Library and a member of the digital
preservation team.
Heike
Neuroth, (German) Heike Neuroth holds a Ph.D
in Geology. Since 1997 she is working at the
Goettingen State and University Library (SUB, Germany) and
is the head of the department Research and Development. She is
enganged in several national and international
initiatives, projects and working groups dealing with
digital libraries. She is an expert in the field of
metadata, digital preservation, subject gateways.
She is also the secretary of DINI (German Initiative for Network
Information) which was originated from the Coalition of
Network Information (CNI) in the USA.
Andreas
Aschenbrenner (Swiss) Andreas Aschenbrenner
was a driving force in designing and establishing the
Austrian On-Line Archive (AOLA). AOLA was a pilot project by
the Austrian National Library and the Vienna University of
Technology on collecting and preserving cultural
heritage from the Internet. After graduating in
Computer Science from the Vienna University of
Technology, Andreas Aschenbrenner joined the ERPANET project
as a Content Editor. ERPANET works to enhance the preservation
of digital resources through raising awareness and
disseminating expertise.
Thomas
Severiens (German) Born in 1970
Diploma in Physics in 1999 Worked in several research projects
on the field of digital library implementation and
metadata object description (visit
http://www.severiens.de/proj.html for a list of
projects of interest) Currently:Writing several surveys about
the international implementation of preservation policies and
how they could be implemented in Germany. Also on the
status of scientific raw data (primary data) in
european research institutions and how good they are
prepared for long term preservation. Giving lectures
on information engineering at the university of osnabrueck.
Neil
Beagrie (British) Neil is responsible for
developing and managing partnership activities between
the UK Joint Information Systems Committee and the British
Library, a post he took up in early January 2004. Prior to this
he was a Programme Director in JISC developing policy,
guidance to institutions, and collaborative
programmes, for digital preservation and/or electronic
records and digital collection management on behalf of
the Higher and Further Education Councils and institutions in
the UK. He was research director and co-author of the study
Preservation Management of Digital Materials: A
Handbook published by the British Library in November
2001. He has co-ordinated the development of a Digital
Preservation Coalition in the UK and became its first
Company Secretary. He was previously Assistant Director of the Arts
and Humanities Data Service. At the AHDS he developed
digital collections policy and standards and published
extensively on digital preservation issues. He was
joint author with Daniel Greenstein of the study A
Strategic Policy Framework for Creating and Preserving Digital
Collections. Prior to joining the AHDS in 1997, he was Head
of Archaeological Archives and Library at the Royal
Commission on the Historical Monuments of England and
was active there in developing national data standards
and collection management for archaeological and architectural
records.
Rauber
Andreas (Austria) Andreas Rauber is
Associate Professor at the Department of Software
Technology and Interactive Systems at the Vienna University of
Technology. He received his MSc and PhD in Computer
Science from the Vienna University of Technology in
1997 and 2000, respectively. In 2001 he joined the
National Research Council of Italy (CNR) in Pisa as an
ERCIM Research Fellow, followed by an ERCIM Research position
at the French National Institute for Research in Computer
Science and Control (INRIA), at Rocquencourt, France,
in 2002. In 1998 he received the öGAI Award of the
Austrian Society for Artificial Intelligence (öGAI),
and the Cor-Baayen Award of the European Research
Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics (ERCIM ) in
2002. He has published numerous papers in refereed journals and
international conferences and served as PC member and
reviewer for several major journals, conferences and
workshops. He is a member of the Association for
Computing Machinery (ACM), The Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the Austrian Society
for Artificial Intelligence (OeGAI), and serves on the board of
the IEEE Technical Committee on Digital Libraries (TCDL).
His research interests cover the broad scope of
exploring information spaces, including specifically
text and music information retrieval and organization,
information visualization, as well as data analysis
and neural computation. He is actively involved in several research
projects in the field of digital libraries, focusing on
the organization and exploration of large information
spaces, as well as Web archiving and digital
preservation.
Reinhard
Altenhoener(Germany) Born in 1963 in
Detmold, Germany. Married, 5 children. Studies in the
humanities and ICT, postgraduate studies in library sciences.
1993 - 1994. Assistant to the library group of the German
Research Foundation (DFG).1994 - 2000. Head of the
library system of the Muenster University of Applied
Sciences. Range of tasks: Establishment of an
integrated library system, developing parts of the digital
library of North-Rhine-Westphalia. 2000 - 2002. Head librarian
of the library system in Mainz:. Range of tasks:
Reorganisation of the system (quality management),
integration and development of digital services (Web,
databases, projects). 2002 - now. Head of the
IT-department in Die Deutsche Bibliothek,
Frankfurt.Range of tasks: Responsibility for the IT-structure and
-services at the locations Frankfurt/Main, Leipzig and
Berlin, national and European projects, cooperation
with national/international committees for standards
for technical and general approaches
Michael
DAY Michael Day is a Research Officer at
UKOLN, based at the University of
Bath (United Kingdom). Since joining UKOLN in 1996, he has worked
on a range of metadata-related research
projects, which have mostly concerned the
development of Internet subject gateways, interoperability,
and digital preservation. His most recent
projects include ePrints UK, which is
concerned with the development of services that will give access
to the content of institutional
repositories, and a feasibility study on
web-archiving in the UK. He is also involved with the new UK
Digital Curation Centre (DCC), a national focus for
research and expertise relating to digital
preservation issues, funded by the Joint Information
Systems Committee and the Research Councils' eScience Core
Programme.
Monika
Segbert Monika Segbert provides technical
advice, management expertise and international
dissemination and scientific exchange activities to
multi-national programmes in the cultural sector. She is involved
in several international projects in the cultural
heritage sector: with the Soros Foundation's Open
Society Institute in Budapest to create a
multi-country consortium of library consortia in 50 countries
to harness their buying power for affordable access to
electronic journals, and to make accessible content
produced in those countries; with the EU TACIS
programme in developing a portal to the bibliographic
and full text digital resources of the 5 biggest Russian libraries;
with the Mellon Foundation in carrying out the
retroconversion of the serials catalogue of the
Russian State Library; with the Conference of European
National Libraries CENL in surveying the structure and
activities of this association. Recently she worked with DG
Information Society of the European Commission in the
TRIS project, to co-ordinate 25 new projects trialling
the application of new ICT's in libraries, museums and
archives in the EU and the new accession states of Central
and Eastern Europe, in the CULTIVATE Russia project to transfer
research results in the digital cultural heritage
sector to the Russian Federation and with the Mellon
Foundation on introducing library automation in the
Russian State Library, Moscow. Monika Segbert also
regularly reviews projects and evaluates proposal for
the European Commission Cultural Heritage programme.
From 1998 - 2000 she was based in Moscow as the
team leader of the EU TACIS project for the Creation of
an Information System for the Russian State Library.
From 1995 -1998 she worked with the European
Commission DGXIII Telematics for Libraries programme,
with primary responsibility for developing research cooperation
for the sector with the new accession countries. Prior to
that Monika Segbert served in the British Council in
Germany as Head, Libraries, Information and
Books.
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