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A study of the perception of cataloging quality among catalogers in academic libraries

Karen Snow
TLDR
The concept of "quality" in library cataloging is explored and the perception of quality cataloging among catalogers who work in academic libraries is examined in order to develop a framework for evaluatingquality cataloging definitions.
Abstract
This study explores the concept of "quality" in library cataloging and examines the perception of quality cataloging among catalogers who work in academic libraries. An examination of the concept of "quality cataloging" in library science literature revealed that even though there is some general agreement on how this concept is defined, the level of detail and focus of these definitions often vary. These various perceptions were dissected in order to develop a framework for evaluating quality cataloging definitions; this framework was used to evaluate study participants' definitions of quality cataloging. Studying cataloger perceptions of quality cataloging is important because it is catalogers (particularly original catalogers) who are largely responsible for what is included in bibliographic records. Survey participants (n = 296) provided their personal definition of quality cataloging as well as their opinions on their department's cataloging, their influence upon their department's policies and procedures, and the specific data that should be included in a quality bibliographic record. Interview participants (n = 20) provided insight on how their opinions of quality cataloging were formed and the influences that shaped these opinions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Library Cataloging, Classification, and Metadata Research: A Bibliography of Doctoral Dissertations

TL;DR: The present bibliography comprises research produced as doctoral dissertations and doctoral theses dealing with library cataloging, classification, and metadata, which contains 170 titles, accepted in 1982 or later, that were available for online and database searching through November 25, 2019.
Dissertation

Controlled Vocabularies in the Digital Age: Are They Still Relevant?

William Baker
TL;DR: This research tends to confirm that LCSH could benefit from simplification as well as automation and offers some suggestions for improvements in both areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conceptualizations of Catalogers' Judgment through Content Analysis: A Preliminary Investigation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate catalogers' judgment through an exploration of the texts collected in the database of Library and Information Science Source (LIS) and find that verbs, adjectives, and nouns intimately associated with cataloger's judgment are extracted, analyzed, and grouped into 16 categories, leading to five conceptual descriptions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining, Assessing, and Rethinking Quality Cataloging

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss definitions of quality cataloging in the literature and different ways it has been evaluated and measured, as well as how these perceptions are formed by academic library catalogers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining Data Quality in Bibliographic and Authority Records: A Case Study of the COBISS.SI System

TL;DR: The article presents the set-up and application of a methodological framework that was used for the definition and measurement of bibliographic and authority records quality in COBIB.SI and the framework’s applicability in data quality measurement and evaluation, as well as in data profiling that would benefit further development of COBISS + catalog.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Library Cataloging, Classification, and Metadata Research: A Bibliography of Doctoral Dissertations

TL;DR: The present bibliography comprises research produced as doctoral dissertations and doctoral theses dealing with library cataloging, classification, and metadata, which contains 170 titles, accepted in 1982 or later, that were available for online and database searching through November 25, 2019.
Dissertation

Controlled Vocabularies in the Digital Age: Are They Still Relevant?

William Baker
TL;DR: This research tends to confirm that LCSH could benefit from simplification as well as automation and offers some suggestions for improvements in both areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conceptualizations of Catalogers' Judgment through Content Analysis: A Preliminary Investigation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate catalogers' judgment through an exploration of the texts collected in the database of Library and Information Science Source (LIS) and find that verbs, adjectives, and nouns intimately associated with cataloger's judgment are extracted, analyzed, and grouped into 16 categories, leading to five conceptual descriptions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining, Assessing, and Rethinking Quality Cataloging

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss definitions of quality cataloging in the literature and different ways it has been evaluated and measured, as well as how these perceptions are formed by academic library catalogers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining Data Quality in Bibliographic and Authority Records: A Case Study of the COBISS.SI System

TL;DR: The article presents the set-up and application of a methodological framework that was used for the definition and measurement of bibliographic and authority records quality in COBIB.SI and the framework’s applicability in data quality measurement and evaluation, as well as in data profiling that would benefit further development of COBISS + catalog.
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