Literatur zur Informationserschließung
Diese Datenbank enthält über 40.000 Dokumente zu Themen aus den Bereichen Formalerschließung – Inhaltserschließung – Information Retrieval.
© 2015 W. Gödert, TH Köln, Institut für Informationswissenschaft
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1Wiesenmüller, H. ; Horny, S.: Basiswissen RDA : eine Einführung für deutschsprachige Anwender.2., überarbeitete und erweiterte Auflage.
Berlin : DeGruyter, 2017. XXII, 326 S.
ISBN 978-3-11-053868-7
Abstract: Mit der ersten Auflage von Basiswissen RDA lag erstmals ein deutschsprachiges Lehrbuch für das neue, internationale Katalogisierungsregelwerk RDA (Resource Description and Access) vor. Seither wurde nicht nur das Regelwerk selbst an vielen Stellen verändert, sondern auch die deutschsprachigen Anwendungsrichtlinien wurden erheblich erweitert und verfeinert - nicht zuletzt aufgrund der Praxiserfahrungen seit dem Beginn der aktiven Katalogisierung mit RDA. Die überarbeitete und erweiterte Neuauflage - präsentiert die Katalogisierungsregeln auf dem aktuellen Stand von 2017 - bietet an vielen Stellen zusätzliche Details und Erläuterungen - geht besonders auf typische Fragen und Probleme ein, die beim Katalogisieren mit RDA auftreten - wurde um Beispiele und Erklärungen für verschiedene Themenbereiche erweitert (u.a. Reproduktionen, E-Books, Sprachkurse) - behandelt auch das neue theoretische Modell IFLA LRM und die geplante Weiterentwicklung von RDA Die zweite Auflage von Basiswissen RDA ist ein unverzichtbarer Begleiter für Studierende, Auszubildende und Beschäftigte in Bibliotheken, die mit RDA arbeiten. Das Lehrbuch unterstützt nicht nur beim Anfertigen von korrekten Katalogisaten, sondern auch dabei, das neue Regelwerk zu verstehen.
Inhalt: Vgl. auch: http://www.basiswissen-rda.de/. IAllgemeiner Teil; 1 Formalerschließung: Konzepte und Standards; 1.1 Ziele von Formalerschließung; 1.2 Bisherige Regelwerke; 1.3 Bibliografische Beschreibung; 1.4 Eintragungen und Verweisungen; 1.5 EDV-Katalogisierung; 1.6 Aktuelle Herausforderungen; 2 Das FRBR-Modell; 2.1 Grundlagen; 2.2 Entitäten der Gruppe 1; 2.3 Entitäten der Gruppe 2; 2.4 FRBR in der Praxis; 3 RDA: Grundlagen; 3.1 Die Entwicklung von RDA; 3.2 RDA und FRBR; 3.3 Weitere Grundprinzipien von RDA; 3.4 Das RDA Toolkit; Haupteil; 4 Manifestationen und Exemplare; 4.1 Allgemeines 4.2 Grundprinzipien beim Erfassen und Übertragen4.3 Informationsquellen; 4.4 Titel der Manifestation; 4.5 Verantwortlichkeitsangabe; 4.6 Ausgabevermerk; 4.7 Erscheinungsvermerk; 4.8 Gesamttitelangabe; 4.9 Erscheinungsweise; 4.10 Identifikator für die Manifestation; 4.11 Anmerkung zur Manifestation; 4.12 Medientyp und Datenträgertyp; 4.13 Umfang; 4.14 Weitere Merkmale von Datenträgern; 4.15 Bezugs- und Zugangsinformationen; 4.16 Merkmale auf Exemplar-Ebene; 4.17 Begleitmaterial; 4.18 Beschreibung von mehrteiligen Monografien; 4.19 Beschreibung von monografischen Reihen 4.20 Beschreibung von integrierenden Ressourcen ; 5 Werke und Expressionen; 5.1 Allgemeines; 5.2 Titel des Werks; 5.3 Weitere Merkmale von Werken; 5.4 Inhaltstyp; 5.5 Weitere Merkmale von Expressionen; 5.6 Sucheinstiege für Werke und Expressionen; 5.7 Beschreibung des Inhalts; 6 Personen, Familien und Körperschaften; 6.1 Allgemeines; 6.2 Moderne Personennamen; 6.3 Moderne Personen: Merkmale und Sucheinstiege; 6.4 Besondere Personengruppen; 6.5 Familien; 6.6 Namen von Körperschaften; 6.7 Namen von untergeordneten Körperschaften; 6.8 Körperschaften: Merkmale und Sucheinstiege; 6.9 Gebietskörperschaften und die ihnen untergeordneten Körperschaften6.10 Konferenzen und ähnliche Veranstaltungen; 7 Geografika; 7.1 Allgemeines; 7.2 Namen von Geografika; 8 Primärbeziehungen; 8.1 Allgemeines; 8.2 Primärbeziehungen und Datenmodelle; 8.3 Kernelemente bei den Primärbeziehungen; ; 9 Beziehungen zu Personen, Familien und Körperschaften; 9.1 Allgemeines; 9.2 Geistiger Schöpfer: Allgemeines; 9.3 Körperschaft als geistiger Schöpfer; 9.4 Sonstige Person, Familie oder Körperschaft, die mit einem Werk in Verbindung steht; 9.5 Mitwirkender 9.6 Geistige Schöpfer und Mitwirkende: Besondere Fälle9.7 Beziehungen auf der Manifestationsebene; 9.8 Beziehungen auf der Exemplar-Ebene; 10 Beziehungen zwischen Werken, Expressionen, Manifestationen und Exemplaren; 10.1 Allgemeines; 10.2 In Beziehung stehende Werke; 10.3 In Beziehung stehende Expressionen; 10.4 In Beziehung stehende Manifestationen; 10.5 In Beziehung stehende Exemplare; 11 Beziehungen zwischen Personen, Familien und Körperschaften; 11.1 Allgemeines; 11.2 In Beziehung stehende Personen; 11.3 In Beziehung stehende Familien; 11.4 In Beziehung stehende Körperschaften; 12 Sacherschließung in RDA
Anmerkung: Rez. in: iwp 70(2019) H.1, S.83 (Barbara Müller-Heiden).
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung ; Grundlagen u. Einführungen: Allgemeine Literatur
Objekt: RDA
LCSH: Resource description & access / Handbooks, manuals, etc ; Descriptive cataloging / Rules / Handbooks, manuals, etc ; Descriptive cataloging / Standards / Handbooks, manuals, etc
RSWK: Resource description and access / Bibliothek / Katalogisierung / Einführung / Lehrbuch
BK: 06.70 Katalogisierung Bestandserschließung
DDC: 025.32 / dc23
GHBS: AVI (DU) ; BBXP (THK)
LCC: Z694.15.R47 W54 2015
RVK: AN 74500 ; AN 74400 ; AN 74000
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2Coyle, K.: FRBR, before and after : a look at our bibliographic models.
Chicago : ALA, 2016. xv, 179 S.
ISBN 978-0-8389-1345-1
Abstract: This book looks at the ways that we define the things of the bibliographic world, and in particular how our bibliographic models reflect our technology and the assumed goals of libraries. There is, of course, a history behind this, as well as a present and a future. The first part of the book begins by looking at the concept of the 'work' in library cataloging theory, and how that concept has evolved since the mid-nineteenth century to date. Next it talks about models and technology, two areas that need to be understood before taking a long look at where we are today. It then examines the new bibliographic model called Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) and the technical and social goals that the FRBR Study Group was tasked to address. The FRBR entities are analyzed in some detail. Finally, FRBR as an entity-relation model is compared to a small set of Semantic Web vocabularies that can be seen as variants of the multi-entity bibliographic model that FRBR introduced.
Inhalt: Part I. Work, model, technologyThe work -- The model -- The technology -- Part II. FRBR and other solutions -- Introduction -- FRBR : standard for international sharing -- The entity-relation model -- What is modeled in FRBR -- Does FRBR meet FRBR's objectives? -- Some issues that arise -- Bibliographic description and the Semantic Web.
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung
Objekt: FRBR
LCSH: FRBR (Conceptual model)
DDC: 025.3'2 / dc23
LCC: Z666.6.C69 2016
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3Deokattey, S. ; Sharma, S.B.K. ; Kumar, G.R. ; Bhanumurthy, K.: Knowledge organization research : an overview.
Mumbai : Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, 2015. 44 S.
(BARC/2015/I/002)
Abstract: The object of this literature review is to provide a historical perspective of R and D work in the area of Knowledge Organization (KO). This overview/summarization will provide information on major areas of KO. Journal articles published in core areas of KO: (Classification, Indexing, Thesauri and Taxonomies, Internet and Subject approach to information in the electronic era and Ontologies will be predominantly covered in this literature review. Coverage in this overview may not be completely exhaustive, but it succinctly showcases major developments in the area of KO. This review is a good source of additional reading material on KO apart from prescribed reading material on KO
Inhalt: Vgl.: http://www.researchgate.net/publication/278021544.
Themenfeld: Literaturübersicht
DDC: 025.3/.4
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4Kaplan, A.G. ; Riedling, A.M.: Catalog it! : a guide to cataloging school library materials.3rd ed.
Santa Barbara, CA : Libraries Unlimited, 2015. 230 S.
ISBN 978-1-586-83197-4
Abstract: This invaluable cataloging resource gives pre-service and practicing school library media specialists the tools they need to be intelligent consumers of commercial cataloging and competent organizers of new materials in their collections. The second edition contains expanded information on Library of Congress Subject Headings and electronic cataloging and cataloging systems, as well as Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) and Machine Readable Cataloging (MARC). Whether you're a practicing cataloger looking for a short text to update you on the application of RDA to cataloging records or a school librarian who needs a quick resource to answer cataloging questions, this guide is for you. - Thoroughly updates a best-selling, essential guide to cataloging - Addresses the new standards specifically as they apply to school libraries - Helps school librarians understand and implement the new cataloging standards in their collections - Distills the latest information and presents it in a format that is clear and accessible - Fills the need for up-to-the-minute cataloging guidance for the busy librarian who wants information in a hurry
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung
LCSH: Cataloging / Handbooks, manuals, etc ; School libraries ; Instructional materials centers
BK: 06.70 (Katalogisierung / Bestandserschließung) ; 06.42 (Öffentliche Bibliotheken)
DDC: 025.3
LCC: Z693
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5Pomerantz, J.: Metadata.
Cambridge, MA : MIT Press, 2015. xi, 239 S.
ISBN 978-0-262-52851-1
(The MIT Press essential knowledge series)
Abstract: When "metadata" became breaking news, appearing in stories about surveillance by the National Security Agency, many members of the public encountered this once-obscure term from information science for the first time. Should people be reassured that the NSA was "only" collecting metadata about phone calls -- information about the caller, the recipient, the time, the duration, the location -- and not recordings of the conversations themselves? Or does phone call metadata reveal more than it seems? In this book, Jeffrey Pomerantz offers an accessible and concise introduction to metadata. In the era of ubiquitous computing, metadata has become infrastructural, like the electrical grid or the highway system. We interact with it or generate it every day. It is not, Pomerantz tell us, just "data about data." It is a means by which the complexity of an object is represented in a simpler form. For example, the title, the author, and the cover art are metadata about a book. When metadata does its job well, it fades into the background; everyone (except perhaps the NSA) takes it for granted. Pomerantz explains what metadata is, and why it exists. He distinguishes among different types of metadata -- descriptive, administrative, structural, preservation, and use -- and examines different users and uses of each type. He discusses the technologies that make modern metadata possible, and he speculates about metadata's future. By the end of the book, readers will see metadata everywhere. Because, Pomerantz warns us, it's metadata's world, and we are just living in it.
Inhalt: Introduction -- Definitions -- Descriptive metadata -- Administrative metadata -- Use metadata -- Enabling technologies for metadata -- The Semantic Web -- The future of metadata.
Anmerkung: Rez, in: JASIST 68(2017) no.9, S.2271-2274 (L.C. Howarth)
Themenfeld: Metadaten
LCSH: Metadata , Information organization
RSWK: Metadaten / Semantic Web / Metadatenmodell
BK: 54.62 Datenstrukturen
DDC: 025.3 / dc23
GHBS: AZC (E)
LCC: Z666.7
RVK: ST 270 ; ST 265
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6Maxwell, R.L.: Maxwell's handbook for RDA : explaining and illustrating RDA, Resource description and access, using MARC 21.
London : Facet Publ., 2014. X, 900 S.
ISBN 978-1-85604-832-3
Abstract: Designed to interpret and explain RDA: Resource Description and Access, this handbook illustrates and applies the new cataloguing rules in the MARC21 environment for every type of information format. In this clear and comprehensive resource, cataloguing expert Robert Maxwell brings his trademark practical commentary to bear on the new, unified cataloguing standard. From books to electronic materials to music and beyond, Maxwell: * Explains the conceptual grounding of RDA, including FRBR and FRAD * Addresses the nuances of how cataloguing will, and won't, change in the MARC21 environment * Shows cataloguers how to create and work with authority records of persons, families, corporate bodies, geographic entities, works, and expressions * Explores recording relationships, working with records of manifestations and items, and more * Provides numerous sample records to illustrate RDA principles. Comprehensive in its coverage, the book will aid readers in understanding and becoming comfortable with the potentially forbidding new structure of RDA and contains appendices that discuss the treatment of specialised materials. Readership: A guided tour of the new standard from a respected authority, this essential handbook will help cataloguers, LIS students, and cataloguing instructors navigate RDA smoothly and find the information they need efficiently. ; In this clear and comprehensive resource, cataloguing expert Robert Maxwell brings his trademark practical commentary to bear on the new, unified cataloguing standard. Designed to interpret and explain RDA: Resource Description and Access, this handbook illustrates and applies the new cataloguing rules in the MARC21 environment for every type of information format. From books to electronic materials to music and beyond, Maxwell: explains the conceptual grounding of RDA, including FRBR and FRAD; addresses the nuances of how cataloguing will, and won't, change in the MARC21 environment; shows cataloguers how to create and work with authority records of persons, families, corporate bodies, geographic entities, works, and expressions; explores recording relationships, working with records of manifestations and items, and more; and provides numerous sample records to illustrate RDA principles. Comprehensive in its coverage, the book will aid readers in understanding and becoming comfortable with the potentially forbidding new structure of RDA and contains appendices that discuss the treatment of specialised materials. A guided tour of the new standard from a respected authority, this essential handbook will help cataloguers, LIS students, and cataloguing instructors navigate RDA smoothly and find the information they need efficiently.
Inhalt: 1. Introduction 2. Describing Manifestations and Items 3. Describing Persons 4. Describing Families 5. Describing Corporate Bodies 6. Describing Geographic Entities 7. Describing Works 8. Describing Expressions 9. Recording Relationships Appendix A. Printed Books and Sheets Appendix B. Cartographic Resources Appendix C. Unpublished Manuscripts and Manuscript Collections Appendix D. Notated Music Appendix E. Audio Recordings Appendix F. Moving Image Resources Appendix G. Two-dimensional Graphic Resources Appendix H. Three-dimensional Resources and Objects Appendix I. Digital Resources Appendix J. Microform Resources Appendix K. Serials and Integrating Resources Appendix L. Analytical Description.
Anmerkung: Rez. in: BuB. 67(2015) H.1, S.70-71 (H. Wiesenmüller) ;
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung
Objekt: RDA
LCSH: Descriptive cataloging ; Handbooks, manuals, etc. ; Resource description & access ; Standards
RSWK: MARC 21 / Resource description and access / Einführung
DDC: 025.32
GHBS: BBXP (FH K)
LCC: Z694.15.R47
RVK: AN 74400
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7Kincy, C.P. ; Layne, S.S.: Making the move to RDA : a self-study primer for catalogers.
Lanham, MD : Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. xiv, 332.
ISBN 978-0-8108-8769-5
Inhalt: Development, objectives, and principles -- Underlying models and organization -- Major differences between RDA and AACR2 -- Attributes of manifestations and items -- Attributes of works and expressions -- Attributes of persons, families, corporate bodies, and places -- Recording relationships -- Creating and interpreting bibliographic records for books -- Creating and interpreting bibliographic records for non-book resources -- Creating and interpreting authority records.
Anmerkung: Volltext unter: http://lib.myilibrary.com?id=568636. Rez. in: Cataloging and classification quarterly 53(2015) no.2, S.252-255 (Robert Rendall)
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung ; Grundlagen u. Einführungen: Allgemeine Literatur
Objekt: RDA
LCSH: Resource description & access / Handbooks, manuals, etc ; Descriptive cataloging / Handbooks, manuals, etc
DDC: 025.32
LCC: Z694.15.R47
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8Hart, A.: RDA made simple : a practical guide to the new cataloging rules.
Santa Barbara, CA : Libraries Unlimited, 2014. ix, 176 S.
ISBN 978-1-61069-485-8
Abstract: Looking for a comprehensive, all-in-one guide to RDA that keeps it simple and provides exactly what you need to know? This book covers planning and training considerations, presents relevant FRBR and FRAD background, and offers practical, step-by-step cataloging advice for a variety of material formats. - Supplies an accessible, up-to-date guide to RDA in a single resource - Covers history and development of the new cataloging code, including the results of the U.S. RDA Test Coordinating Committee Report - Presents the latest information on RDA cataloging for multiple material formats, including print, audiovisual, and digital resources - Explains how RDA's concepts, structure, and vocabulary are based on FRBR (Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records) and FRAD (Functional Requirements for Authority Data), both of which are reviewed in the book
Anmerkung: Rez. in: Cataloging and classification quarterly 54(2016) no.2, S.145-146 (E. Shoemaker)
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung ; Grundlagen u. Einführungen: Allgemeine Literatur
Objekt: RDA
LCSH: Resource description & access ; Descriptive cataloging ; Standards ; Electronic books
RSWK: Resource description and access / Einführung
DDC: 025.32
LCC: Z694.15.R47.H367 2014
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9Day, R.E.: Indexing it all : the subject in the age of documentation, information, and data.
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 2014. XIV, 170 S.
ISBN 978-0-262-02821-9
(History and foundation of information science)
Abstract: In this book, Ronald Day offers a critical history of the modern tradition of documentation. Focusing on the documentary index (understood as a mode of social positioning), and drawing on the work of the French documentalist Suzanne Briet, Day explores the understanding and uses of indexicality. He examines the transition as indexes went from being explicit professional structures that mediated users and documents to being implicit infrastructural devices used in everyday information and communication acts. Doing so, he also traces three epistemic eras in the representation of individuals and groups, first in the forms of documents, then information, then data. Day investigates five cases from the modern tradition of documentation. He considers the socio-technical instrumentalism of Paul Otlet, "the father of European documentation" (contrasting it to the hermeneutic perspective of Martin Heidegger); the shift from documentation to information science and the accompanying transformation of persons and texts into users and information; social media's use of algorithms, further subsuming persons and texts; attempts to build android robots -- to embody human agency within an information system that resembles a human being; and social "big data" as a technique of neoliberal governance that employs indexing and analytics for purposes of surveillance. Finally, Day considers the status of critique and judgment at a time when people and their rights of judgment are increasingly mediated, displaced, and replaced by modern documentary techniques.
Inhalt: Paul Otlet : friends and books for information needsRepresenting documents and persons in information systems : library and information science and citation indexing and analysis -- Social computing and the indexing of the whole -- The document as the subject : androids -- Governing expression : social big data and neoliberalism.
Anmerkung: Vgl. auch den Beitrag: Day, R.E.: An afterword to indexing it all: the subject in the age of documentation, information, and data. In: Bulletin of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 42(2016) no.2, S.25-28. Rez. in: JASIST 67(2016) no.7, S.1784-1786 (H.A. Olson).
Themenfeld: Geschichte der Sacherschließung
LCSH: Documentation / History ; Documentation / Social aspects ; Information science / Philosophy ; Information science / Social aspects ; Indexing / Social aspects ; Subject (Philosophy) ; Information technology / Social aspects
RSWK: Informations- und Dokumentationswissenschaft / Geschichte
BK: 06.01 Geschichte des Informations- und Dokumentationswesens
DDC: 025.3 ; 025.04
LCC: Z1001
RVK: AN 95100
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10Sicilia, M.-A. (Hrsg.): Handbook of metadata, semantics and ontologies.
Singapore : World Scientific, 2014. viii, 570 S.
ISBN 978-981-283-629-8
Abstract: Metadata research has emerged as a discipline cross-cutting many domains, focused on the provision of distributed descriptions (often called annotations) to Web resources or applications. Such associated descriptions are supposed to serve as a foundation for advanced services in many application areas, including search and location, personalization, federation of repositories and automated delivery of information. Indeed, the Semantic Web is in itself a concrete technological framework for ontology-based metadata. For example, Web-based social networking requires metadata describing people and their interrelations, and large databases with biological information use complex and detailed metadata schemas for more precise and informed search strategies. There is a wide diversity in the languages and idioms used for providing meta-descriptions, from simple structured text in metadata schemas to formal annotations using ontologies, and the technologies for storing, sharing and exploiting meta-descriptions are also diverse and evolve rapidly. In addition, there is a proliferation of schemas and standards related to metadata, resulting in a complex and moving technological landscape - hence, the need for specialized knowledge and skills in this area. The Handbook of Metadata, Semantics and Ontologies is intended as an authoritative reference for students, practitioners and researchers, serving as a roadmap for the variety of metadata schemas and ontologies available in a number of key domain areas, including culture, biology, education, healthcare, engineering and library science.
Anmerkung: Rez. in: Cataloging and classification quarterly 54(2016) no.7, S.504-505 (Claudia Horning).
Themenfeld: Metadaten
LCSH: Metadata ; Semantics ; Semantic networks (Information theory) ; Artificial intelligence ; Database management
RSWK: Metadaten / Ontologie/ Aufsatzsammlung
BK: 54.72 Künstliche Intelligenz ; 06.35 Informationsmanagement
DDC: 025.3
GHBS: TVUC (SI) ; TZH (HA)
LCC: Z666.7
RVK: ST 300 ; ST 304
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11Chambers, S. (Hrsg.): Catalogue 2.0 : the future of the library catalogue.
London : Facet Publ., 2013. XXVII, 212 S.
ISBN 978-1-85064-716-6
Abstract: Will there be a library catalogue in the future and, if so, what will it look like? In the last 25 years, the library catalogue has undergone an evolution, from card catalogues to OPACs, discovery systems and even linked data applications making library bibliographic data accessible on the web. At the same time, users expectations of what catalogues will be able to offer in the way of discovery have never been higher. This groundbreaking edited collection brings together some of the foremost international cataloguing practitioners and thought leaders, including Lorcan Dempsey, Emmanuelle Bermès, Marshall Breeding and Karen Calhoun, to provide an overview of the current state of the art of the library catalogue and look ahead to see what the library catalogue might become. Practical projects and cutting edge concepts are showcased in discussions of linked data and the Semantic Web, user expectations and needs, bibliographic control, the FRBRization of the catalogue, innovations in search and retrieval, next-generation discovery products and mobile catalogues.
Inhalt: Foreword - Marshall Breeding Introduction - Sally Chambers 1. Next generation catalogues: what do users think? - Anne Christensen 2. Making search work for the library user - Till Kinstler 3. Next-generation discovery: an overview of the European Scene - Marshall Breeding 4. The mobile library catalogue - Lukas Koster and Driek Heesakkers 5. FRBRizing your catalogue - Rosemie Callewaert 6. Enabling your catalogue for the semantic web - Emmanuelle Bermes 7. Supporting digital scholarship: bibliographic control, library co-operatives and open access repositories - Karen Calhoun 8. Thirteen ways of look at the libraries, discovery and the catalogue: scale, workflow, attention - Lorcan Dempsey.
Anmerkung: Rez. in: BuB. 66(2014) H.7/8, S.566-567 (D. Askey)
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung ; OPAC
LCSH: Online library catalogs / Web 2.0 / Semantic Web
RSWK: Bibliothekskatalog / Discovery Service / Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records / Semantic Web / Aufsatzsammlung ; Online-Katalog / Zukunft / Discovery Service / Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records / Semantic Web / Aufsatzsammlung
BK: 06.70 (Katalogisierung / Bestandserschließung) ; 06.60 (Bibliotheksbenutzung) ; 06.80 (Bibliothekskataloge)
DDC: 025.3132
GHBS: BBVP (FH K)
RVK: AN 74000
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12El-Sherbini, M.: RDA: strategies for implementation.
Chicago : ALA Editions, 2013. x, 394 S.
ISBN 978-0-8389-1168-6
Inhalt: From AACR2 to RDA -- Similarities and differnces between AACR2 and RDA -- RDA implementation strategies -- FRBR and FRAD concepts -- Identifying manifestations and items -- Identifying works and expressions -- Tips for using the RDA online toolkit -- Examples of RDA records -- Checklists.
Anmerkung: Weitere Ausg.: London ; Facet Publ Rez. in: Cataloging and classification quarterly 53(2015) no.1, S.120-122 (Peter H. Lisius)
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung
Objekt: RDA
LCSH: Resource description and access / Implementation
BK: 06.70
DDC: 025.32
GHBS: BBXP (FH K)
LCC: Z694.15.R47
RVK: AN 74000
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13Maxwell, R.L.: Handbook for RDA : Maxwell's handbook for RDA ; explaining and illustrating RDA: resource description and access using MARC 21.
London : Facet Publ., 2013. X, 900 S.
ISBN 978-1-85604-832-3
Inhalt: IntroductionDescribing manifestations and items -- Describing persons -- Describing families -- Describing corporate bodies -- Describing geographic entities -- Describing works -- Describing expressions -- Recording relationships -- Appendix A. Printed books and sheets -- Appendix B. Cartographic resources -- Appendix C. Unpublished manuscripts and manuscript collections -- Appendix D. Notated music -- Appendix E. Audio recordings -- Appendix F. Moving image resources -- Appendix G. Two-dimensional graphic resources -- Appendix H. Three-dimensional resources and objects -- Appendix I. Digital resources -- Appendix J. Microform resources -- Appendix K. Bibliographic records serials and integrating resources -- Appendix L. Analytical description.
Anmerkung: Weitere Ausg.: Chicago: ALA Editions Rez. in: Cataloging and classification quarterly 53(2015) no.1, S.116-119 (Karen Snow)
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung
Objekt: RDA
LCSH: MARC 21 ; Descriptive cataloging / Handbooks, manuals, etc ; Resource description and access
RSWK: Resource description and access / MARC 21 / Einführung
BK: 06.70
DDC: 025.32
GHBS: AVI (PB) ; BBXP (FH K)
LCC: Z694.15.R47
RVK: AN 74400 ; AN 74500 ; AN 74000
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14Jones, E.: RDA and serials cataloguing.
London : Facet Publ., 2013. XII, 215 S.
ISBN 978-1-85604-950-4
Abstract: In this manual, expert cataloguer Ed Jones shows you how to catalogue serials using the new cataloguing standard, RDA: Resource Description and Access. Serials and continuing resources present a variety of unique challenges in bibliographic management, from special issues and unnumbered supplements to recording the changes that a long-running periodical can experience over time. Easing cataloguers through the RDA: Resource Description and Access transition by showing the continuity with past practice, serials cataloguing expert Jones frames the practice within the structure of the FRBR and FRAD conceptual models on which RDA is based. With serials' special considerations in mind, this essential guide explains the familiarities and differences between AACR2 and RDA and demonstrates how serials cataloguers' work fits in the cooperative context of OCLC, CONSER and NACO. Jones looks in detail at the process of cataloguing serials and ongoing integrating resources using RDA, from attributes and relationships between works to identifying related entities. Finally, looking at the possibilities offered by Linked Data, he presents examples of how RDA records can ultimately engage with the Semantic Web.
Inhalt: Introduction to serials and serials cataloguing - Getting to know RDA: changes from AACR2 - Searching and the universe of serials - Cataloguing serials and ongoing integrating resources using RDA - General instructions relating to serials cataloguing using RDA and MARC 21 - Attributes of resources (Manifestations and Items and the Works and Expressions they embody) - Relationships between resources - Identifying Works and Expressions - Identifying related entities - Online serials and CONSER provider-neutral records - Ongoing integrating resources - RDA and Linked Data
Anmerkung: Parallelausg. bei der ALA
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung
Objekt: RDA
LCSH: Resource description & access ; Cataloging of serial publications ; Cataloging of integrating resources
RSWK: Resource description and access / Zeitschrift / Katalogisierung ; Schriftenreihe / Katalogisierung / Resource description and access ; Resource description and access / Fortlaufendes Sammelwerk / Katalogisierung
BK: 06.70 (Katalogisierung / Bestandserschließung)
DDC: 025.32
GHBS: BBXP (FH K)
LCC: Z694.15.R47
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15Willer, M. ; Dunsire, G.: Bibliographic information organization in the Semantic Web.
Oxford : Chandos Publishing, 2013. XXXII, 318 S.
ISBN 978-1-84334-731-6
(Chandos information professional series)
Abstract: New technologies will underpin the future generation of library catalogues. To facilitate their role providing information, serving users, and fulfilling their mission as cultural heritage and memory institutions, libraries must take a technological leap; their standards and services must be transformed to those of the Semantic Web. Bibliographic Information Organization in the Semantic Web explores the technologies that may power future library catalogues, and argues the necessity of such a leap. The text introduces international bibliographic standards and models, and fundamental concepts in their representation in the context of the Semantic Web. Subsequent chapters cover bibliographic information organization, linked open data, methodologies for publishing library metadata, discussion of the wider environment (museum, archival and publishing communities) and users, followed by a conclusion.
Themenfeld: Semantic Web ; Formalerschließung
Objekt: FRBR
LCSH: Machine / readable bibliographic data ; Semantic Web
RSWK: Bibliografische Daten / Informationsmanagement / Semantic Web / Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records ; Bibliografische Daten / Semantic Web / Metadaten / Linked Data
BK: 06.70 Katalogisierung Bestandserschließung
DDC: 025.3/16
GHBS: BBVB (FH K)
LCC: Z699.35.M28
RVK: AN 96100
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16Welsh, A. ; Batley, S.: Practical cataloguing : AACR, RDA and MARC 21.
London : Facet Publ., 2012. XVI, 217 S.
ISBN 978-1-85604-695-4
Abstract: Resource Description and Access (RDA) is the first new international cataloguing standard for nearly thirty years. This essential new textbook builds on John Bowman's highly regarded "Essential Cataloguing" to provide cataloguers with the skills needed for transition to RDA. It gives an introduction to Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR), which provides the conceptual basis for RDA; discusses the differences between AACR2 and RDA; and shows the current state of play in MARC 21. The final chapter includes ten records displayed in AACR2 level 1, AACR2 level 2, RDA and MARC 21, making it easy to see the differences at a glance. There is also a fully-explained worked example based on RDA Appendix M. Written at a time of transition in international cataloguing, this book provides cataloguers and students with a background in general cataloguing principles, the current code (AACR2) and format (MARC 21) and the new standard (RDA). The contextual chapters provide library managers with an up-to-date overview of the development of RDA in order to equip them to make the transition.
Anmerkung: Rez. in: BuB 64(2012) H.10, S.716-717 (H. Wiesenmüller)
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung
Objekt: AACR ; RDA ; MARC 21 ; FRBR
LCSH: Descriptive cataloging / Rules ; FRBR (Conceptual model)
RSWK: Alphabetische Katalogisierung / Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records / Resource Description and Access / MARC 21 ; Bibliothek / Katalogisierung / Regel
DDC: 025.3/2
GHBS: AVH (W) ; BBXP (FH K)
RVK: AN 74400
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17Hider, P.: Information resource description : creating and managing metadata.
London : Facet Publ., 2012. XIX, 220 S.
ISBN 978-1-85604-667-1
Abstract: An overview of the field of information organization that examines resource description as both a product and process of the contemporary digital environment. This timely book employs the unifying mechanism of the semantic web and the resource description framework to integrate the various traditions and practices of information and knowledge organization. Uniquely, it covers both the domain-specific traditions and practices and the practices of the 'metadata movement' through a single lens - that of resource description in the broadest, semantic web sense. This approach more readily accommodates coverage of the new Resource Description and Access (RDA) standard, which aims to move library cataloguing into the centre of the semantic web. The work surrounding RDA looks set to revolutionise the field of information organization, and this book will bring both the standard and its model and concepts into focus.
Inhalt: Information resource attributes - metadata for information retrieval - metadata sources and quality - economics and management of metadata - knowledge organization systems - the semantic web - books and e-books, websites and audiovisual resources - business and government documents - learning resources - the field of information/knowledge organization.
Themenfeld: Formalerschließung ; Metadaten
LCSH: Libraries / information technology ; Libraries / Technological innovations ; Digital preservation ; Metadata ; Metadata
RSWK: Metadaten / Informationsquelle ; Metadaten / Management (BVB) ; Information / Beschreibung (BVB) ; Bestandserschließung (BVB)
BK: 06.99 (Information und Dokumentation: Sonstiges)
DDC: 025.3
GHBS: BBV (FH K)
LCC: Z666.7.H53 2013
RVK: AN 95000
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18Keyser, P. de: Indexing : from thesauri to the Semantic Web.
Oxford : Chandos, 2012. XXI, 249 S.
ISBN 978-1-8433-4292-2
(Chandos information professional series)
Abstract: Indexing consists of both novel and more traditional techniques. Cutting-edge indexing techniques, such as automatic indexing, ontologies, and topic maps, were developed independently of older techniques such as thesauri, but it is now recognized that these older methods also hold expertise. Indexing describes various traditional and novel indexing techniques, giving information professionals and students of library and information sciences a broad and comprehensible introduction to indexing. This title consists of twelve chapters: an Introduction to subject readings and theasauri; Automatic indexing versus manual indexing; Techniques applied in automatic indexing of text material; Automatic indexing of images; The black art of indexing moving images; Automatic indexing of music; Taxonomies and ontologies; Metadata formats and indexing; Tagging; Topic maps; Indexing the web; and The Semantic Web.
Inhalt: Vgl.: http://lib.myilibrary.com?id=548406.
Themenfeld: Konzeption und Anwendung des Prinzips Thesaurus ; Semantic Web
LCSH: Indexing
RSWK: Indexierung; Semantic Web ; Thesaurus
BK: 54.72 (Künstliche Intelligenz) ; 54.64 (Datenbanken) ; 06.74 (Informationssysteme)
DDC: 025.3
RVK: AN 95100
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19Krajewski, M.: Paper machines : about cards & catalogs, 1548-1929.
Cambridge, MA : MIT Press, 2011. vi, 215 S.
ISBN 978-0-262-01589-9
(History and foundations of information science)
Abstract: "Krajewski draws on recent German media theory and on a rich array of European and American sources in this thought-provoking account of the index card as a tool of information management. In investigating the road from the slips of paper of the 16th century to the data processing of the 20th, Krajewski highlights its twists and turns--failures and unintended consequences, reinventions, and surprising transfers."--Ann M. Blair, Henry Charles Lea Professor of History, Harvard University, and author of Too Much to Know: Managing Scholarly Information before the Modern Age -- Ann Blair "This is a fascinating, original, continuously surprising, and meticulously researched study of the long history of the emergence of card systems for organizing not only libraries but business activities in Europe and the United States. It is particularly important for English language readers due to its European perspective and the extraordinary range of German and other resources on which it draws." --W. Boyd Rayward, Professor Emeritus, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign -- W. Boyd Rayward "Markus Krajewski has done the history of cataloguing and the history of information management a considerable service: I recommend it highly." -- Professor Tom Wilson, Editor-in-Chief, Information Research
Inhalt: Originaltitel: Zettelwirtschaft: Die Geburt der Kartei aus dem Geiste der Bibliothek. Berlin: Kulturverlag Kadmos, 2002.
Anmerkung: Rez. in JASIST 64(2013) no.2, S.431-432 (A. Black)
Themenfeld: Geschichte der Kataloge ; Hypertext
Objekt: Synapsen
LCSH: Catalog cards / History ; Card catalogs / History ; Information organization / History
RSWK: Bibliothekskatalog / Medien / Geschichte 1548-1929
BK: 06.30 (Bibliothekswesen / Dokumentationswesen: Allgemeines)
DDC: 025.3/109
LCC: Z693.3.C37
RVK: AN 74160
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20Miller, S.J.: Metadata for digital collections : a how-to-do-it manual.
New York, NY : Neal-Schuman, 2011. XXIII, 343 S.
ISBN 978-1-555-70746-0
(How-to-do-it manuals ; 179)
Abstract: More and more libraries, archives, and museums are creating online collections of digitized resources. Where can those charged with organizing these new collections turn for guidance on the actual practice of metadata design and creation? "Metadata for Digital Collections: A How-to-do-it Manual" is suitable for libraries, archives, and museums. This practical, hands-on volume will make it easy for readers to acquire the knowledge and skills they need, whether they use the book on the job or in a classroom. Author Steven Miller introduces readers to fundamental concepts and practices in a style accessible to beginners and LIS students, as well as experienced practitioners with little metadata training. He also takes account of the widespread use of digital collection management systems such as CONTENTdm. Rather than surveying a large number of metadata schemes, Miller covers only three of the schemes most commonly used in general digital resource description, namely, Dublin Core, MODS, and VRA. By limiting himself, Miller is able to address the chosen schemes in greater depth. He is also able to include numerous practical examples that clarify common application issues and challenges. He provides practical guidance on applying each of the Dublin Core elements, taking special care to clarify those most commonly misunderstood. The book includes a step-by-step guide on how to design and document a metadata scheme for local institutional needs and for specific digital collection projects. The text also serves well as an introduction to broader metadata topics, including XML encoding, mapping between different schemes, metadata interoperability and record sharing, OAI harvesting, and the emerging environment of Linked Data and the Semantic Web, explaining their relevance to current practitioners and students. Each chapter offers a set of exercises, with suggestions for instructors. A companion website includes additional practical and reference resources.
Inhalt: Introduction to metadata for digital collections -- Introduction to resource description and Dublin Core -- Resource identification and responsibility elements -- Resource content and relationship elements -- Controlled vocabularies for improved resource discovery -- XML-encoded metadata -- MODS : the Metadata Object Description Schema -- VRA Core : the Visual Resources Association Core Categories -- Metadata interoperability, shareability, and quality -- Designing and documenting a metadata scheme -- Metadata, linked data, and the Semantic Web.
Anmerkung: Rez. in: Mitt VÖB 64(2011) H.3/4, S.554-557 (Saskia Breitling)
Themenfeld: Metadaten
Objekt: Dublin Core
LCSH: Cataloging of electronic information resources / Standards ; Metadata / Standards ; Dublin Core
RSWK: Elektronische Bibliothek, Elektronische Publikation, Katalogisierung, Metadatenmodell, Dublin Core, Einführung (BSB)
DDC: 025.3
LCC: Z695.24 .M55 2011