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Topic

Cataloging

About: Cataloging is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4770 publications have been published within this topic receiving 32489 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: By taking description out of the current record constraints, serials librarians will better be able to express the relationships between multiple versions of the same publication, and how a particular journal has changed over time.
Abstract: As resources have become ever more complicated in a digital world, it is evident that cataloging practices and the metadata standards we use to guide these practices are becoming more constraining. Recent developments within the library community can have a significant impact on serials cataloging and may help improve information retrieval for the end user. While the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) holds some promise for improving the representation of serials, linked data principles may further transform the way in which resources and the relationships between them are captured and presented to our users. By taking description out of the current record constraints, serials librarians will better be able to express the relationships between multiple versions of the same publication, and how a particular journal has changed over time. The linked data model also opens up many opportunities for the provision of value-added content to bibliographic descriptions.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In Fall 2010, in the Music Library at the University of North Texas, a subgroup of the full-time music catalogers were both participating in the U.S. National RDA Test and overseeing the cataloging of a large gift of scores.
Abstract: This article discusses Resource Description and Access (RDA) and new catalogers' errors in Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2nd ed. (AACR2).

13 citations

Book
15 Nov 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors set the stage for the archives administration and legal and ethical issues in recording technology and preservation of oral histories on the Internet, focusing on three issues: setting the stage, legal, ethical issues and preservation.
Abstract: 1 Setting the Stage 2 Archives Administration 3 Legal and Ethical Issues 4 Recording Technology 5 Transcribing 6 Cataloging 7 Preservation 8 Oral Histories on the Internet

12 citations

Book
16 Dec 2014
TL;DR: This chapter discusses cataloging practices in the Dewey Decimal Classification era, as well as some of the techniques used in the Library of Congress Cataloging Project.
Abstract: CONTENTS * Acknowledgments * Chapter 1: Introduction To Library Cataloging Chapter 2: The Cataloging Environment Chapter 3: Preparing Bibliographic Descriptions Chapter 4: Name and Title Access Points Chapter 5: Subject Analysis Chapter 6: Subject Heading Authorities Chapter 7: Library of Congress Subject Headings Chapter 8: Sears List of Subject Headings Chapter 9: Classification and Call Numbers Chapter 10: Dewey Decimal Classification Chapter 11: Library of Congress Classification Chapter 12: Computer Encoding Chapter 13: Managing the Catalog Department * Glossary Answers to Chapter Questions Appendix: Additional Exercises Answers to Additional Exercises Index

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
21 May 2004-Notes
TL;DR: It is argued that the advantages of electronic theses and dissertations far outweigh the perceived disadvantages, and that the reluctance of many in the academic community to exploit this technology is unfortunate; and the best way to provide access to ETDs is via the open Web: by creating a fully aggregated, vertical index of digital resources like that which I describe in other publications.
Abstract: Theses and dissertations have long been regarded as the bedrock of graduate education. But digital representations of these works, known as electronic theses and dissertations (or ETDs), are a relatively new phenomenon that present student authors with seemingly endless possibilities to express their creativity. With this comes new learning opportunities and the possibility of widespread recognition through a heretofore unprecedented level of exposure and communication. The adaptation and exploitation of this technology also poses new challenges and problems related to copyright and the long-term retention of these documents. Operating within the larger context--a digital universe in which academe, ETDs, and ETDs in music are not living up to their potential--students preparing musical ETDs face additional challenges and problems: the integration of a variety of music formats and software into text documents, and the appropriate use of copyrighted materials, which raise issues that are more troublesome for music than other disciplines. In the following pages I will argue that the advantages of electronic theses and dissertations far outweigh the perceived disadvantages, and that the reluctance of many in the academic community to exploit this technology is unfortunate. I will also argue that the best way to provide access to ETDs is via the open Web: by creating a fully aggregated, vertical index of digital resources like that which I describe in other publications. (1) Copyright, fair use, and the question of whether or not publishers view ETDs as prior publications are also discussed. A CONCISE HISTORY OF ETDS (2) The history of electronic theses and dissertations begins in 1987 with a meeting convened by Nick Altair of UMI in Ann Arbor, Michigan, involving participants from Virginia Tech, the University of Michigan, and two fledgling software companies: ArborText and SoftQuad. The discussion focused on the latest approaches to electronic publishing and the idea of applying the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML, an ISO standard approved in 1986) to the preparation of dissertations, possibly as an extension of the Electronic Manuscript Project of the Association of American Publishers. That same year (1987) SoftQuad released AuthorEditor, the first graphical SGML editor. In 1988 the first SGML Document Type Definition (DTD) (3) for theses and dissertations was developed by SoftQuad's Yuri Rubinsky with funding from Virginia Tech. With the appearance of Adobe's Acrobat software and Portable Document Format (PDF) in the early 1990s it became clear that students could easily prepare their own ETDs, and that the inherent complexities of SGML could be avoided where ETDs are concerned. Thus in 1994, Virginia Tech, as part of a pilot project, began to convert some of the printed theses and dissertations received from its graduate schools to PDF. In 1996 the pace of ETD activities gained momentum when the U.S. Department of Education funded a three-year nationwide effort to extend the concept of ETDs across the country. The aforementioned pilot project at Virginia Tech led to a mandatory requirement that all theses and dissertations submitted after 1996 be only in electronic form. Thereafter the concept of ETDs spread to Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, and other countries. And, last but not least, to coordinate all these efforts, in 1996 the free, voluntary federation called the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations (NDLTD) was established and quickly began to expand. Today NDLTD has more than 196 member institutions, 172 of which are academic institutions in the U.S. and abroad. (4) To date, these institutions have put a combined total of more than forty thousand ETDs online. Metadata records (similar to the cataloging information one might find in a library catalog, including title, year, author, abstract, and descriptors) for these documents can be found in the OCLC-based NDLTD Union Catalog. …

12 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202335
2022147
202128
202050
201969
201877