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  • × author_ss:"Lynch, C.A."
  1. Lynch, C.A.; Preston, C.M.: Describing and classifying networked information resources (1992) 0.03
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    Source
    Electronic networking: research, applications, and policy. 2(1992) no.1, S.10-22
  2. Buckland, M.K.; Lynch, C.A.: ¬The linked systems protocol and the future of bibliographic networks and systems (1987) 0.03
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  3. Lynch, C.A.: Response time measurement and performance analysis in public access information retrieval systems (1988) 0.02
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  4. Buckland, M.K.; Lynch, C.A.: National and international implications of the linked systems protocol for online bibliographic systems (1988) 0.02
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    Abstract
    NISO draft standard Z39.50 (sometimes called the "Linked Systems Protocol") provides a standard for linking computers to permit the searching and retrieval of machine-readable bibliographic and authority records. The concept, context, status, and potential of the Linked Systems Protocol are reviewed in relation to the historical development of bibliographies and library catalogs. The functions of a fully developed bibliographic Linked Systems Protocol are summarized and shown to have extensive implications for scholarship, bibliographic access, and the notion of a national database. Effective international use of such a protocol would require the solution of several traditional problems.
  5. Lynch, C.A.: ¬The next generation of public access information retrieval systems for research libraries : lessons from ten years of the MELVYL system (1992) 0.02
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  6. Lynch, C.A.: ¬The use of heuristics in user interfaces for online information retrieval systems (1987) 0.02
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  7. Preston, C.M.; Lynch, C.A.: Report of the first international conference on information and knowledge management (1993) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Reports from the 1st International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, Baltimore, Maryland, 8-11 Nov. 92. This is intended to start an annual series of meetings for researchers and practioners in retrieval, database management and artificial intelligence. The papers presented covered the categories of knowledge base / database integrating; document processing; temporal deductive logic software engineering; hypertext; object-oriented databases; database models; transaction management and query optimisation; classification-based database systems and knowledge representation and expert systems
  8. Lynch, C.A.: Building the infrastructure of resource sharing : union catalogs, distributed search, and cross database linkage (1997) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Effective resourcesharing presupposes an infrastructure which permits users to locate materials of interest in both print and electronic formats. 2 approaches for providing this are union catalogues and Z39.50 based distributed search systems and computer to computer information retrieval protocols. The advantages and limitations of each approach are considered, paying particular attention to a relaistic assessment of Z39.50 implementations. Argues that the union catalogue is far from obsolete and the 2 approaches should be considered complementary rather than competitive. Technologies to create links between the bibliographic apparatus of catalogues and abstracting and indexing databases and primary content in electronic form, such as the new Serial Item and Contribution Identifier (SICI) standard are also discussed as key elements in the infrastructure to support resource sharing
  9. Lynch, C.A.: ¬The Z39.50 information retrieval standard : part I: a strategic view of its past, present and future (1997) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The Z39.50 standard for information retrieval is important from a number of perspectives. While still not widely known within the computer networking community, it is a mature standard that represents the culmination of two decades of thinking and debate about how information retrieval functions can be modeled, standardized, and implemented in a distributed systems environment. And - importantly -- it has been tested through substantial deployment experience. Z39.50 is one of the few examples we have to date of a protocol that actually goes beyond codifying mechanism and moves into the area of standardizing shared semantic knowledge. The extent to which this should be a goal of the protocol has been an ongoing source of controversy and tension within the developer community, and differing views on this issue can be seen both in the standard itself and the way that it is used in practice. Given the growing emphasis on issues such as "semantic interoperability" as part of the research agenda for digital libraries (see Clifford A. Lynch and Hector Garcia-Molina. Interoperability, Scaling, and the Digital Libraries Research Agenda, Report on the May 18-19, 1995 IITA Libraries Workshop, <http://www- diglib.stanford.edu/diglib/pub/reports/iita-dlw/main.html>), the insights gained by the Z39.50 community into the complex interactions among various definitions of semantics and interoperability are particularly relevant. The development process for the Z39.50 standard is also of interest in its own right. Its history, dating back to the 1970s, spans a period that saw the eclipse of formal standards-making agencies by groups such as the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and informal standards development consortia. Moreover, in order to achieve meaningful implementation, Z39.50 had to move beyond its origins in the OSI debacle of the 1980s. Z39.50 has also been, to some extent, a victim of its own success -- or at least promise. Recent versions of the standard are highly extensible, and the consensus process of standards development has made it hospitable to an ever-growing set of new communities and requirements. As this process of extension has proceeded, it has become ever less clear what the appropriate scope and boundaries of the protocol should be, and what expectations one should have of practical interoperability among implementations of the standard. Z39.50 thus offers an excellent case study of the problems involved in managing the evolution of a standard over time. It may well offer useful lessons for the future of other standards such as HTTP and HTML, which seem to be facing some of the same issues.