PCSS in Three New ECHOES Projects Within the ECCCH

PCSS in Three New ECHOES Projects Within the ECCCH

As part of the European Collaborative Cloud for Cultural Heritage (ECCCH) initiative, ten new projects from the 2024 call have been chosen for implementation in order to make a significant impact on the development of digital cultural heritage in Europe. These projects focus on digitisation, data analysis and enrichment, new user experiences, and the conservation of cultural heritage objects. PCSS is taking part in three of them: StratiGraph, INFINITY, and ECHOLOT.

StratiGraph (Knowledge Graphs for Stratigraphy) – is one of the six projects (from the ten mentioned above) that started in October this year. It falls under the category defined in last year’s call as “Innovative tools for documenting, interlinking, and organising data.” Accordingly, its goal is to develop a set of tools for documenting and analysing archaeological and palaeontological data, combining knowledge graphs, artificial intelligence, and 3D field documentation techniques.

The other two projects involving PCSS — INFINITY and ECHOLOT — will start in January 2026. Both belong to the category “Innovative tools for advanced data enrichment.”

INFINITY (Multidimensional knowledge-based annotation for ethical context-aware heritage data life cycles) aims to develop a comprehensive ecosystem of tools and methods that will improve the life cycle management of Cultural Heritage Digital Objects (CHDOs). The project will focus on creating enriched, multi-context descriptions of CHDOs through multidimensional knowledge graphs.

ECHOLOT (European Cultural Heritage Optimised Linked Open Tools) – will deliver all its solutions under open-source principles, allowing for free modification and reuse. The project’s goal is to support cultural institutions in creating, sharing, and utilising interoperable, semantically rich data, significantly facilitating their integration into the European Cultural Heritage Cloud. Thanks to ECHOLOT, new institutions will be able to join the European infrastructure more quickly and efficiently.

The remaining ECCCH projects focus on developing tools for digitisation and analysis of dynamic processes, objects and complex combined data, for the study, conservation and restoration of heritage objects and for high-value interactions with visitors and heritage objects.

A full list of these projects, along with detailed descriptions, is available on the ECHOES-ECCCH website. Each project will play a vital role in building the foundations of a shared digital space for institutions, researchers, and communities dedicated to the preservation and promotion of cultural heritage.

Photo: www.echoes-eccch.eu