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  • × theme_ss:"Bibliographie"
  1. Davison, P.: ¬The book encompassed : studies in the twentieth-century bibliography (1992) 0.05
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    Abstract
    The techniques and approaches fostered in the first half of this century by what was called the 'New Bibliography' have spread throughout the world, developing and expanding in association with bodies such as the Bibliographical Society. The essays specially commissioned for this volume take 'New Bibliography' into the twenty-first century. They survey bibliographic and textual studies in some thirty fields, and include discussions of major issues and developments. Areas covered include manuscript studies and the analysis of handwriting; the physical characteristics of the book - its paper, type, and binding; enumerative and descriptive bibliography; incunabula, cartography, book illustration, book catalogues, and the Stationers' Company; bibliographical developments in the history of science, and in many countries - France, Germany, Italy, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, the British Provincial Book Trade, Japan and the Orient, Australia and New Zealand; developments in the theory and practice of editing texts (including biblical texts); the history of the book; and the implications of the computer for bibliography.An important feature of these essays is that each makes proposals for future research, ensuring the vitality of bibliography in the next half-century. Appearing at the time of the Bibliographical Society's centenary, the collection provides a landmark, taking stock of developments in what has become a vast and vital area of study, and mapping out its future parameters.
    LCSH
    Bibliography / Great Britain / History / 20th century
    Bibliography / Great Britain / Methodology
    Subject
    Bibliography / Great Britain / History / 20th century
    Bibliography / Great Britain / Methodology
  2. Griffith, C.: CDMARC serials : the CONSER database goes CD-ROM (1993) 0.05
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    Abstract
    CDMARC serials is the Cooperative Online Serials (CONSER) database on Cd-ROM. The CONSER database is probably the most exhaustice source of serial titles ever assembled and fits onto a single CD. The hardware requirements are a CD-ROM drive recognising MSCDEX, a PC/XT or higher, 5 MB of free hard disc space and 530 K of free RAM. Reviews searching procedures. Records come in catalogue and card image, MARC tagged, custom labelled or custom tagged formats
    Source
    Information today. 10(1993) no.2, S.22-23
  3. New RLG resources for cataloguing and research (1998) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Describes a new RLG European Library Data initiative, the RLIN database, which will significantly increase the supply of catalogue records for Western European imprints and provide shared access to the holdings of major European libraries. Primary participants in this project are the national libraries of France, Spain and Switzerland. German and UK/Irish records will become available later in 1998. RLG is also previewing a new scholarly resource created in conjunction with the Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL): the Hand Press Book (HPB), a record of publishing throughout Great Britain and its dependencies from the 15th through the 18th centirues
  4. Ojedokun, A.A.: CD-MARC bibliographic databases as an alternative to other information sources : cataloguers' evaluation of the use of LC CD-MARC at Kenneth Dike Library, University of Ibadan, Nigeria (1996) 0.04
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    Abstract
    The LoC compact disc machine readable catalogue (LC CD-MARC or simple CD-MARC) was recently acquired by the Kenneth Dike Library. Its use by the cataloguing staff was evaluated in terms of efficiency (effect on cataloguing time) and effectiveness (effect on monthly output) when compared with using other information sources such as microfiches, CIP data and printed sources: LCSH; LoC NUC; and LC monographic series. The positive influence of the new technology was evident as there were reductions in cataloguing time and increases in monthly output of items catalogued
  5. Hall, S.: National bibliographies on CD-ROM (1997) 0.03
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    Abstract
    CD-ROM technology has great potential for storing and anabling access to the type of data contained in national bibliographies. Their ease of replication offer security as well as enabling the information contained to be made more widely availaible. Of the 2 methods used to convert print to electronic data, scanning and keying, Chagwyck-Healey use the latter. In the case of national bibliographies on CD-ROM, new records are created electronically and old records are converted by keying. Chadwyck-Healey have developed an extensive CD-ROM list, focusing on both bibliographic and full text literary works, and has produced national bibliographies on CD-ROM for the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal and Spain (with the Netherlands to appear shortly). National bibliographies on CD-ROM produced by other bodies are those of finland, Norway, Bulgarian, Singapore and the USA
  6. Rowley, J.E.: CD-ROM versus online : an evaluation of the effects of the user interface on search effectiveness; a pilot study (1989) 0.03
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    Abstract
    A controlled set of searches have been conducted by a group of searchers, at Manchester Polytechnic Library, on a trial subset of the British National Bibliography (BNB) data base on both CD-ROM and on-line. Various measures of search effectiveness and effiency were examined in relation to the effect of the differing user interface, including recall, precision, search time, user satisfaction and other more subjective factors. Discusses the potential for further research on the evaluation of CD-ROM.
    Source
    Online information 89: Proceedings of the 13th International Online Information Meeting, London, 12-14 December 1989
  7. Bourne, R.: Bridging the gap : technological differences in the production of current national bibliographies (1994) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Describes the activities of the IFLA Section on Bibliography in the improvement of bibliographic control and, especially, the encouragement of national bibliographies. Outlines a project to identify those aspects of producing a current national bibliography that distinguishes advanced countries from those that are economically disadvantaged. Presents observations regarding technology and national bibliographies and invites comments upon them to serve as input to the project. Deals with: format; coverage; currency; quality; national networks; infrastructure; education; scholarship and the national library community; and information technology
  8. Egghe, L.: Sampling and concentration values of incomplete bibliographies (2002) 0.03
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    Abstract
    This article studies concentration aspects of bibliographies. More, in particular, we study the impact of incompleteness of such a bibliography on its concentration values (i.e., its degree of inequality of production of its sources). Incompleteness is modeled by sampling in the complete bibliography. The model is general enough to comprise truncation of a bibliography as well as a systematic sample on sources or items. In all cases we prove that the sampled bibliography (or incomplete one) has a higher concentration value than the complete one. These models, hence, shed some light on the measurement of production inequality in incomplete bibliographies.
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and technology. 53(2002) no.4, S.271-281
  9. Parent, I.: ¬The importance of national bibliographies in the digital age (2007) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Technological developments are introducing both challenges and opportunities for the future production of national bibliographies. There are new complex issues which must be addressed collectively by national bibliographic agencies. As an international community, we must consider new methods and models for the on-going provision of authoritative data in national bibliographies, which continue to play an essential role in the control of and access to each country's published heritage.
  10. Albert-Samuel, C.: ¬La BNF et la Bibliographie Annuelle de l'Histoire des France : 42 ans de collaboration (1996) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Production of the annual bibliography on French history resumed in 1955, after disruption caused by the war, as a collaborative initiative set up by the national library (BNF) and the national centre for higher research (CNRS). Staff from CNRS are based at the BNF, which allows direct access to collections and acquisitions, and the bibliography is published by CNRS
    Footnote
    Übers. des Titels: The BNF and the Bibliographie Anuelle de l'Histoire des France: 42 years of collaboration
  11. Walravens, H.: New developments in standard numbering (1994) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Standard numbering has been a most efficient tool for publishers, the book trade and libraries during the last 25 years; it has led to rationalization, more efficiency and higher speed of most operations. With the development of new media the coverage of standard numbering systems has been extended. A new standard covers printed music which offers the same options as ISBN and ISSN and will enable the music trade to rationalize its operations, especially in connection with the EAN bar code. Current discussions focus on a wider use of the Standard Address Number, and similar location codes which would be another major factor of rationalization
    Series
    Publications of Essen University Library; 17
    Source
    Resource sharing: new technologies as a must for universal availability of information. Festschrift in honor of Hans-Peter Geh; 16th Int. Essen Symposium, 18.-21.10.1993. Ed. by A.H. Helal
  12. Yerkey, N.; Glogowski, M.: Bibliographic scatter of library and information science literature (1989) 0.03
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    Abstract
    As part of a largerstudy concerning the scatter of library and information science (LIS) documents in bibliographic databases, this paper focuses on the publishing sources of a sample of 822 highly relevant documents. 67% were journal articles with the largest subject categories outside of LIS being medicine / health sciences, business, education, and computer science. Other journal titles ranged from popular and trade magazines to scholarly journals spanning the disciplinary map. The largest number of nonjournal items were conference reports, government reports, bibliographic resource guides, monographs, and nongovernment agency reports. These were scattered mostly between technological and medical databases. The results show that LIS is an interdisciplinary field, borrowing and supplying information to and from other disciplines. Articles written about the application of LIS concepts to other fields are often published in the journals of those other fields, not in LIS journals
    Source
    Journal of education for library and information science. 30(1989), S.90-101
  13. Hendry, D.G.; Jenkins, J.R.; McCarthy, J.F.: Collaborative bibliography (2006) 0.02
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    Abstract
    A bibliography is traditionally characterized by the judgments, bounded by explicit selection criteria, made by a single compiler. Because these criteria concern the attributes ascribed to a work and the needs of readers, bibliographic work is largely conceptual even across technological eras and domains. Yet, the development of networked information services, made possible by WWW infrastructure, has enabled very large numbers of people to discover, organize, and publish information, including bibliographies. Indeed, bibliographies, or at least bibliography-like artifacts, are a common genre of website, often published by people without specialized skills in information organization who follow non-rigorous selection procedures. Nevertheless, even if the items from these lists are poorly selected and described, this publishing activity is fundamentally important because it structures information locally, creating a patchy network of secondary access points. In turn, these access points enable information discovery, the formation and development of communities of interest, the estimation of document relevance by search engines, and so on. In sum, this activity, and the enabling technical infrastructure, invites bibliographies to take on new interactive possibilities. The aim of this article is to extend the traditional view of bibliography to encompass collaborative possibilities for wide, or narrow, participation in the shaping of bibliographies and the selection of items. This is done by examining the nature of bibliography on the Web, by proposing a conceptual model that opens bibliography to participatory practices, and by discussing a case study where a team sought to develop a bibliography of electronic resources. This examination reveals splendid opportunities for expanding the notion of bibliography with participatory policies while remaining true to its ancient roots.
  14. Bencken, K.: Auskunftsmittel der allgemeinen Auskunft : Teil A: Allgemeinenzyklopädien (1983) 0.02
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    Content
    Enthält die Lehreinheiten: LE1: Kriterien zur Beurteilung von Allgemeinenzyklopädien - LE2: Meyers Enzyklopädisches Lexikon - LE3: Meyers Enzyklopädisches Lexikon, Jahrbuch - LE4: Brockhaus Enzyklopädie - LE5: Das neue Fische Lexikon in Farbe - LE6-7: New Encyclopaedia Britannica - LE8: Britannica Book of the Year - LE9: La Grande Encyclopédie (Larousse) - LE10: Great Soviet Encyclopaedia
  15. Larivière, V.; Macaluso, B.: Improving the coverage of social science and humanities researchers' output : the case of the Érudit journal platform (2011) 0.02
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    Abstract
    In non-English-speaking countries the measurement of research output in the social sciences and humanities (SSH) using standard bibliographic databases suffers from a major drawback: the underrepresentation of articles published in local, non-English, journals. Using papers indexed (1) in a local database of periodicals (Érudit) and (2) in the Web of Science, assigned to the population of university professors in the province of Québec, this paper quantifies, for individual researchers and departments, the importance of papers published in local journals. It also analyzes differences across disciplines and between French-speaking and English-speaking universities. The results show that, while the addition of papers published in local journals to bibliometric measures has little effect when all disciplines are considered and for anglophone universities, it increases the output of researchers from francophone universities in the social sciences and humanities by almost a third. It also shows that there is very little relation, at the level of individual researchers or departments, between the output indexed in the Web of Science and the output retrieved from the Érudit database; a clear demonstration that the Web of Science cannot be used as a proxy for the "overall" production of SSH researchers in Québec. The paper concludes with a discussion on these disciplinary and language differences, as well as on their implications for rankings of universities.
    Object
    Web of Science
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 62(2011) no.12, S.2437-2442
  16. Hawkins, D.T.; Larson, S.E.; Caton, B.Q.: Information Science Abstracts : tracking the literature of information science (2003) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Subject classifications and thesauri have become more important than ever in the Web environment. Efforts made to organize information into subject classifications, or taxonomies, offer users the opportunity to substantially improve the effectiveness of their search and retrieval activities. This article continues earlier research an the development of a new definition of the field of information science and the creation of a "map" of the field showing subjects central to it and their relationships to those an the periphery. A case study describes the creation of a new classification structure (taxonomy) for the Information Science Abstracts (ISA) database, aiming to reflect and accommodate the rapid and continued technological and market changes affecting the information industry today and into the future. Based an a sample of some 3,000 ISA abstracts, two validation experiments were conducted by a three-member team comprising a database editor, a reference librarian, and an abstractor-indexer, who represent three of the major communities within the information science field. In the first experiment, the sample of abstracts was classified according to the proposed new taxonomy; alter analysis of the data and revision of the taxonomy, it was revalidated and fine tuned in a second experiment. Indexer consistency measures obtained in this study were significantly higher than those found in previous studies. The taxonomy resulting from this research employs the concepts, definition, and map of information science previously developed. It presents them in an organized hierarchical view of the field and thus makes a significant contribution to information science.
    Content
    Das System: 1. INFORMATION SCIENCE RESEARCH 1.1 Basic concepts, definitions, theories, methodologies, and applications 1.2 Properties, needs, quality, and value of information 1.3 Statistics, measurement Bibliometrics, citation analysis, scientometrics, informetrics 1.4 Information retrieval research Searching techniques (Boolean, fuzzy, natural language), the search process, precision/relevance, ranking/recall, searching models, query formulation, inverted files, updating, database structures 1.5 User behavior and uses of information systems Searcher tactics, information overload, user surveys, usability studies 1.6 Human-computer interface Human factors, ergonomics, design issues 1.7 Communication Editing, writing, linguistics, Internet authoring and design principles 1.8 Operations research/mathematics Modeling, Boolean logic, coding, systems analysis, algorithms, compression 1.9 History of information science, biographies
    2. KNOWLEDGE ORGANIZATION 2.1 Thesauri, authority lists Taxonomies, ontologies, semantic networks, nomenclatures, terminologies, vocabularies 2.2 Cataloging and classification Tagging, metatags, Dublin Core, DOIs, OPACs, MARC, AACR2, topic maps, cataloging processes and theories 2.3 Abstracting, indexing, reviewing Automatic indexing and abstracting 2.4 Standards and protocols NISO, Z39.5, XML, SGML, HTML, Open Archives Initiative (OAI), Encoded Archival Description (EAD), OpenURL, portable document format (PDF) 3. THE INFORMATION PROFESSION 3.1 Information professionals Intermediaries, searchers, reference librarians, information brokers, translators, educators, librarians and librarianship, mentoring, career outlook, future of the profession, professional ethics, skills and competencies 3.2 Organizations and societies 4. SOCIETAL ISSUES 4.1 Information ethics, plagiarism, credibility 4.2 Information literacy, lifelong learning 4.3 The Information Society Universal access and accessibility, technological and socioeconomic impacts of information, technology forecasts, information flows, futures scenarios, preservation 5. THE INFORMATION INDUSTRY 5.1 Information and knowledge management Knowledge transfer in organizations, business strategies 5.2 Markets and players Vendor profiles and Interviews, trends 5.3 Economics and pricing Business models, value chain 5.4 Marketing, e-commerce 6. PUBLISHING AND DISTRIBUTION 6.1 Print 6.2 Electronic E-journals, e-books 6.3 Secondary publishing Abstracting and indexing services, directories 6.4 Scholarly communication Peer review process, future of journals, dissertations, grey literature
    7. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES 7.1 Internet World Wide Web, Invisible Web, Deep Web, search engines, browsers, hypermedia, Listservs, bulletin boards, portals, gateways, directories, pathfinders 7.2 Intranets, Web conferencing 7.3 Software Programming languages, operating systems, platforms 7.4 Hardware 7.5 Multimedia 7.6 Document management Imaging, scanning, text retrieval, digitization, records management, bookmarking, hypertext systems, preservation technologies, digitization, linking and electronic cross referencing, storage, digital rights management 7.7 AI, expert systems, intelligent agents Cybernetics, visualization and mapping, data mining, pattern and character recognition, search agents and robots 7.8 Telecommunications Networks, wireless and satellite information delivery, Palm Pilots and other PDAs, LANs and WANs 7.9 Security, access control, authentication, encryption Digital watermarking 7.10 Other B. ELECTRONIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND SERVICES 8.1 Information searching and retrieval systems and Services Bibliographie, numeric, and Image databases; descriptions of online Services 8.2 Customized information systems, alerting, current awareness 8.3 Document delivery systems and Services Interlibrary loan, resource sharing 8.4 Geographie information systems 9. SUBJECT-SPECIFIC SOURCES AND APPLICATIONS 9.1 Physical sciences Chemistry, physics, engineering, earth sciences, Computer science, energy, mathematics 9.2 Life sciences Medicine, biosciences, agriculture, environment 9.3 Social sciences, humanities, history, linguistics 9.4 Business Management, economics, companies 9.5 Law, political science, government Patents and trademarks, intellectual property, case law 9.6 News 9.7 Education, library and information science, ready reference 9.8 Other/multidisciplinary Biography and genealogy databases, encyclopedias, databases of theses and dissertations
    10. LIBRARIES AND LIBRARY SERVICES 10.1 Library descriptions and types Special, government, academic, and public libraries, archives, museums, state and national libraries, depository libraries 10.2 Library Services 10.3 Library automation, operations, and strategic planning 10.4 Library consortia and networks, coalitions, cooperatives 10.5 Digital and virtual libraries, hybrid libraries 10.6 Education and training Distance learning, continuing education, bibliographic instruction library schools, courses and Curricula 11. GOVERNMENT AND LEGAL INFORMATION AND ISSUES 11.1 Intellectual property protection Copyright issues and implications, fair use, trademarks, patent law 11.2 Legislation, laws, and regulations (except Copyright) 11.3 Contracts and licensing 11.4 Liability issues Filtering, censorship, privacy 11.5 Sources of public information 11.6 Information policies and studies Security, encryption, privacy, freedom of information, censoring, national and other information policies 11.7 Systems and infrastructure Technology transfer
    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and technology. 54(2003) no.8, S.771-781
  17. Holden, C.: ¬The bibliographic work : history, theory, and practice (2021) 0.02
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    Abstract
    The bibliographic work has assumed a great deal of importance in modern cataloging. But the concept of the work has existed for over a century, and even some of the earliest catalog codes differentiate between the intellectual work and its instances. This article will delve into the history and theory of the work, providing a basic overview of the concept as well as a summary of the myriad uses of the work throughout the history of cataloging. In addition to monographs, this paper will look at the work as applied to music, moving images, serials, and aggregates.
  18. Tennis, J.T.: Is there a new bbliography? (2011) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Describes the position claiming that the contemporary technological, socio-political, and socio-economic environment gives us pause to consider the core theory and practices of bibliography, combining bibliography of the work (in library and information science), bibliography of the text (in textual studies and scholarly editing), and bibliography of the artifact (in book history and now digital forensics), and calls for collaborative multidisciplinary research at the intersection of these fields to ask, is there a new bibliography?
  19. Karch, L.S.: Serials information on CD-ROM : a reference perspective (1990) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Since its introduction as a library resource in 1984, the use of CD-ROM technology has proliferated among a multitude of vendors. In 1987, Ulrich's, a major supplier of serials information, jumped on the bandwagon when the entire data bases of Ulrich's International Periodicals Directory and Ulrich's Irregular Serials and Annuals become available on CD-ROM as Ulrich's Plus. The next year, Ebsco introduced The Serials Directory in CD-ROM version. Examines and compares these data base systems as reference tools.
    Date
    15. 1.1996 5:22:42
  20. Bell, B.: Reviewing recommendations from the International Congress on National Bibliographies Paris, 1977 (1993) 0.01
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    Abstract
    In 1977 the International Congress on National Bibliographies (ICNB) was convened in Paris to develop guidelines for a current national bibliography in printed format. At the IFLA New Dehli meetings the ICNB 1977 Recommendations were reviewed. A Second International Congress on National Bibliographies is being planned to establish guidelines to cover publication of the national bibliographies through new technologies, to discuss the feasibility of raising the minimum requirements in all formats for national bibliographies to better reflect what is published in a country, to investigate more effective methods of proper legal deposit and to investigate feasibiblity of drafting similar recommendations for retrospective national bibliographies. Presents the discussion report of the Division of Bibliographic Control meeting
    Source
    International cataloguing and bibliographic control. 22(1993) no.2, S.29-33

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