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  • × theme_ss:"Formalerschließung"
  1. Martin, G.: Control of electronic resources in Australia (1996) 0.05
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    Abstract
    This article describes various ways that electronic resources on the Internet are being controlled in Australia, and in particular how various special networks and projects are linking users of information with documents, often using the World Wide Web. It also examines the implications for libraries and for cataloguers.
    Series
    Cataloging and classification quarterly; vol.22, nos.3/4
  2. Talmacs, K.: Cataloguing at the crossroads : or, rules were made to be broken (1996) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Cataloguers have excellent opportunities within the profession to assist in the facilitation of access to electronic resources and make order out of the chaotic Internet. Discusses tasks for cataloguers, outsourcing possibilities for copy cataloguing, structures and alliances, external networks and traditional cataloguing tools. Considers the role of cataloguers in the years 2000 warning of the threats and challenges and listing prerequisites for the cataloguer of the future
    Source
    Cataloguing Australia. 22(1996) nos.3/4, S.76-85
  3. Burrows, T.: ¬The virtual catalogue : bibliographic access for the virtual library (1993) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Proposes a new model for bibliographic access, the virtual catalogue, to serve the virtual library. Suggests the use of current software and networks to build links between bibliographic databases of all kinds, including full text, to enable the user to search a specified subset of databases. Suggests that local data be limited to holdings information linked to, but separate from, bibliographic databases both local and remote
    Date
    8.10.2000 14:47:22
  4. Münnich, M.: REUSE or rule harmonization : just a project? (2000) 0.03
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    Abstract
    German academic libraries acquire a large number of books from British and American publishers. The bibliographic records of the Library of Congress and the British National Bibliography are offered in most German library networks. Thus, projects REUSE and REUSE+ were undertaken when there was a demand for harmonization of Germany cataloging rules with AACR2 (Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules). Experts in the United States and Germany systematically analyzed bibliographic data and compared the codes on which the data were based. Major and minor differences in cataloging rules were identified. The REUSE group proposed German participation in international authority files and changes in RAK, the German cataloging rules. In REUSE+ the different types of hierarchical bibliographic structures in USMARC and MAB2 and other German formats were analyzed. The German project group made suggestions concerning both the German formats and the USMARC format. Steps toward rule alignment and harmonization of online requirements were made when the German Cataloging Rules Conference made decisions on resolutions prepared by the Working Groups on Descriptive Cataloging that dealt with titles, encoding of form titles and conference terms, prefixes in names, hierarchies, entries under persons and corporate bodies, and the conceptual basis of RAK2 in the context of harmonization. Although problems remain, German rule makers have made progress toward internationality.
    Date
    10. 9.2000 17:38:22
  5. RAK-NBM : Interpretationshilfe zu NBM 3b,3 (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 1.2000 19:22:27
  6. Smiraglia, R.P.: Authority control of works: cataloging's chimera? (2004) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Explicit authority control of works is essentially non-existent. Our catalogs are built on a principle of controlling headings, and primarily headings for names of authors. Our syndetic structure creates a spider's web of networked relationships among forms of headings, but it ends there, despite the potential richness of depth among bibliographic entities. Effective authority control of works could yield richness in the catalog that would enhance retrieval capabilities. Works are considered to constitute the intellectual content of informative artifacts that may be collected and ordered for retrieval. In a 1992 study the author examined a random sample of works drawn from the catalog of the Georgetown University Library. For each progenitor work, an instantiation network (also referred to as a bibliographic family) was constituted. A detailed analysis of the linkages that would be required for authority control of these networks is reviewed here. A new study is also presented, in which Library of Congress authority records for the works in this sample are sought and analyzed. Results demonstrate a near total lack of control, with only 5.6% of works for which authority records were found. From a sample of 410 works, of which nearly half have instantiation networks, only 23 works could be said to have implicit authority control. However, many instantiation networks are made up of successive derivations that can be implicitly linked through collocation. The difficult work of explicitly linking instantiations comes with title changes, translations, and containing relations. The empirical evidence in the present study suggests that explicit control of expressions will provide the best control over instantiation networks because it is instantiations such as translations, abridgments, and adaptations that require explicit linking.
  7. Carter, J.A.: PASSPORT/PRISM: authors and titles and MARC : oh my! (1993) 0.02
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    Source
    OCLC systems and services. 9(1993) no.3, S.20-22
  8. Madison, O.M:A.: ¬The role of the name main-entry heading in the online environment (1992) 0.02
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    Source
    Serials librarian. 22(1992), S.371-391
  9. Kim, J.; Diesner, J.: Distortive effects of initial-based name disambiguation on measurements of large-scale coauthorship networks (2016) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Scholars have often relied on name initials to resolve name ambiguities in large-scale coauthorship network research. This approach bears the risk of incorrectly merging or splitting author identities. The use of initial-based disambiguation has been justified by the assumption that such errors would not affect research findings too much. This paper tests that assumption by analyzing coauthorship networks from five academic fields-biology, computer science, nanoscience, neuroscience, and physics-and an interdisciplinary journal, PNAS. Name instances in data sets of this study were disambiguated based on heuristics gained from previous algorithmic disambiguation solutions. We use disambiguated data as a proxy of ground-truth to test the performance of three types of initial-based disambiguation. Our results show that initial-based disambiguation can misrepresent statistical properties of coauthorship networks: It deflates the number of unique authors, number of components, average shortest paths, clustering coefficient, and assortativity, while it inflates average productivity, density, average coauthor number per author, and largest component size. Also, on average, more than half of top 10 productive or collaborative authors drop off the lists. Asian names were found to account for the majority of misidentification by initial-based disambiguation due to their common surname and given name initials.
  10. Nicholson, D.: Cataloguing the Internet : CATRIONA feasibility study (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    The aim of the CATRIONA (Cataloguing and Retrieval of Information over Networks Applications) feasibility study was to investigate the technical, organizational and financial requirements for the development of applications software and procedures to enable the cataloguing, calssification and retrieval of documents and other resources over networks such as the Internet. The CATRIONA feasibility study demonstrated that the idea of a distributed catalogue of Internet resources integrated with standard Z39.50 library system OPAC interfaces is already a practical proposition at its most basic level. Proposes that the next step should be a distributed CATRIONA demonstrator project, based on the Scottish University and Research Libraries (SCURL) group of libraries cooperating to catalogue local electronic resources and selected areas of BUBL Subject Trees, but also sufficiently 'open' to encompass other sites, projects and approaches
  11. Buckle, D.: Academic networking and the bibliographic utility : a perspective in time (1993) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Traces the common genealogy and chronology of the development of bibliographic utilities from their inception in the late 60s in Europe and North America, each acting as the hub of a bibliographic resource sharing community and establishing private telecommunications connections. Explores the impact of incrementing network bandwidth on the utilities, the expectations of the communities they serve and the prospect of their consequent dependence on common communications highways. Considers the terms and structures being established to manage and resource these common telecommunication networks and the extent to which their governance facilitates accountabiblity to the users and providers they serve
  12. Woodward, H.; McKnight, C.: Electronic journals : issues of access and bibliographic control (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    While the use of academic computer networks for scholarly communication purposes id widely documented, it is only recently that electronic journals have appeared on the network. Explores the issues of access to and bibliographic control of electronic journals from a local and national perspective, and to assist librarians in the implementation and enhancement of access mechanisms and bibliographic control of electronic journals by the identification of information sources and examination of good practice
  13. Waite, E.J.: Reinvent catalogers (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Reports the results of outsourcing a significant part of cataloguing at Loyola University, Chicago, to OCLC, which, has been a considerable success. Argues for the benefits of outsourcing book selection through the use of approval plans and promotes the view that the ability to extract information from electronic information networks is more important than the knowledge needed to organize catalogues and print collections
  14. Bärhausen, A.; Euskirchen, A.: Nachbearbeitung der Katalog-Konversion oder : Es bleibt viel zu tun, packen wir's an! (1999) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 1.2000 19:36:10
    22. 1.2000 19:40:40
  15. Houissa, A.: Arabic personal names : their components and rendering in catalog entries (1991) 0.01
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    Source
    Cataloging and classification quarterly. 13(1991) no.2, S.3-22
  16. RAK-Mitteilung Nr.16 : Regeln für die alphabetische Katalogisierung von Nichtbuchmaterialien (RAK-NBM). Entwurf (1995) 0.01
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    Pages
    22 S
  17. Jones, E.: ¬The FRBR model as applied to continuing resources (2005) 0.01
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    Date
    10. 9.2000 17:38:22
  18. Münnich, M.: RAK2: Sachstandsbericht : vom Bibliothekartag '95 zum Bibliothekartag '96 (1996) 0.01
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    Date
    21. 9.1996 16:03:22
  19. Hirons, J.; Hawkins, L.; French, P.: AACR2 and you : revisiting AACR2 to accomodate seriality (2000) 0.01
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    Date
    18. 8.2002 17:22:13
  20. Weber, R.: "Functional requirements for bibliographic records" und Regelwerksentwicklung (2001) 0.01
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    Source
    Dialog mit Bibliotheken. 13(2001) H.3, S.20-22

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