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An evaluation of the quality of Chinese-language records in the OCLC OLUC database and a study of a rule-based data validation system for online Chinese cataloging

Lei Zeng
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The article was published on 1992-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 8 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Cataloging & Rule-based system.

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Proceedings Article

Author-generated Dublin Core Metadata for Web Resources: A Baseline Study in an Organization

TL;DR: The results indicate that authors can create good quality metadata when working with the Dublin Core, and in some cases they may be able to create metadata that is of better quality than a metadata professional can produce.
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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.
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Quality of Korean Cataloging Records in Shared Databases

TL;DR: This study examines the quality of Korean cataloging records in OCLC's WorldCat by evaluating records in terms of specific errors, error frequency, areas where errors occur frequently, and errors that could inhibit record retrieval.

Bibliographic access to non-roman scripts in library opacs: a study of selected arl academic libraries in the united states

TL;DR: Most academic libraries catalog their non-Roman script materials using vernacular characters in bibliographic utilities, not on their OPACs as discussed by the authors, and despite the advances in multilingual support capabilities in automated library systems, academic libraries are still unable to exploit these systems to their maximum benefit.
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A Study on User Satisfaction with CJK Romanization in the OCLC WorldCat System

TL;DR: This study proposes consideration of using English translation as a parallel link with CJK Romanization for bibliographic information, and suggests a need to investigate user preferences for translation vs. transliteration of bibliographical information.
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