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Cataloging

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


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Book
01 Jan 1995

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recommendations are made for ways that the library community, providers of government information, and automation specialists can work together to reexamine bibliographic standards, expand tape loading to non-U.S. depository documents collections, link useful bibliographical databases with library catalogs, and use cataloging of Internet resources to show relationships between physical collections and remotely accessible government information.

9 citations

Book
01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: This book presents an agent's unique insight into Pricing, Licensing, and Technological Aspects Based on Proximity to Publishers and Libraries as well as management challenges facing Libraries.
Abstract: * About the Editor * Contributors * Preface * List of Abbreviations * Chapter 1. Current Trends in Electronic Journal Publishing: An Agent's Unique Insight into Pricing, Licensing, and Technological Aspects Based on Proximity to Publishers and Libraries * Introduction * Management Challenges Facing Libraries * The Requirement of a License * Pricing Models * Access Technologies * Alternative Publishing * Conclusion * Chapter 2. To Use or Not to Use: The Benefits and Challenges of Using a Subscription Agent for Electronic Journals * The Benefits of Using a Subscription Agent * The Benefits of Using a Vendor/Publisher * The Benefits of Using a Third-Party Provider * The Challenges of Working with Subscription Agents * The Challenges of Working with Vendors/Publishers * The Challenges of Working with Third-Party Providers * Conclusion * Chapter 3. Collection Development and Cataloging of Online Materials: What Libraries Are Doing Now * Introduction * Methodology * Results and Analysis * Conclusion * Appendix * Chapter 4. IP Ranges versus Passwords: The Pros, the Cons, and What's in Between * Passwords * IP Access * IP and Password! * Password Advantages * Access Through Aggregators * Librarians Make a Difference * Future of Password and IP Access * Chapter 5. Consortia and Electronic Journals: An Overview * The Impetus to Cooperate * History of Cooperation and Consortia * Description of a Consortium: OhioLINK * Support for Consortia * Consortia: What Works * Consortia: E-Journal Problems * The Future of Consortial Arrangements * Conclusion * Chapter 6. Usage Data: Issues and Challenges for Electronic Resource Collection Management * Introduction * Guidelines, Standards, and Initiatives Relating to Usage Data * Communication Between Libraries and Vendors * Can Libraries Collect Their Own Usage Data? * Key Use Measures for Vendor Statistics * Pitfalls of Usage Data * Putting the Data to Work: Using Usage Data in Academic Libraries * Collection and Dissemination of Usage Data * Conclusion * Chapter 7. Case Study in Claiming/Troubleshooting E-Journals: UCLA's Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library * Background * University of California System * UCLA's Library E-Resources Management * Organizational Structure for E-Resources Claiming/Troubleshooting * Categories of Troubleshooting Issues and Solutions * Using the Troubleshooting Screen * Conclusion * Chapter 8. Electronic Reserve: A Future in Transition? * Introduction * Digitization at Deakin University * Copyright * General Comments * Aggregators * Changes in the Conception of a "Reserve" Collection * The Future? * Conclusion * Chapter 9. E-Books After the Fall: A New Model * Definition * Background * The Future * The New Model * Libraries * Conclusion * Chapter 10. Open Access and Retrieval: Liberating the Scholarly Literature * Budapest Open Access Initiative * New Generation Journals * Self-Archiving * EPrints * Open Archives Initiative * Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting * Roles and Responsibilities of Self-Archiving * "The Future of Ideas" * Chapter 11. E-Serials and Regional Accreditation * Regional Accreditation's Perspective on E-Serials * Southern Region * Western Region * Northwest Region * New England Region * Middle States Region * North Central Region * How Some Libraries Interpreted and Responded to Standards * Unresolved Issues Relating to E-Serials and Accreditation * Conclusion * Chapter 12. Managing E-Resources: A Database Driven Approach * Introduction * LORA Public Interface * LORA Staff Interface * Implementation * Looking Ahead: Planned Additions * Conclusion * Chapter 13. Developing a Database for E-Journals That Improves Both Access and Management * Introduction and History * Cataloging Woes * The E-Journals Database * Conclusion * Index * Reference Notes Included

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first study to track use of free resources by click‐throughs to the OPAC and usage statistics show that cataloging free resources is well worth the effort.
Abstract: Purpose – This paper seeks to demonstrate the value of adding links to freely available web content to the library catalog (OPAC). This aims to answer the research question: “Is there value to cataloging freely available Internet resources in the OPAC?”Design/methodology/approach – Using a URL redirection system for tracking user access to freely available web publications, three years of click‐through use statistics were gathered by placing redirect URLs in the 856 field, tabulating the use data by project category, and redirecting the user to the desired resource.Findings – Usage statistics over three years show that cataloging free resources is well worth the effort.Originality/value – This is the first study to track use of free resources by click‐throughs to the OPAC.

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ICP replaces and broadens the scope of the Paris Principles from just textual works to all types of materials and from just the choice and form of entry to all aspects of bibliographic and authority data used in catalogues.
Abstract: The Paris Principles (1961) is the most relevant theoretical reference framework in the history of cataloguing; it was taken as the basis for the codes developed worldwide from the mid-sixties. In 2001, it was suggested calling an international meeting to re-examine critically the Paris Principles and to broaden its scope to today's issues. The analysis dealt with the broader bibliographic universe, the greater variety of types of resources, the changes brought about by automation and informatics, the search modes and the languages used by readers who think and act globally, the need to avail of the same strategies to search OPACs, and the need for an architecture built on shared rules. On 2009 IFLA published the Statement of International Cataloguing Principles (ICP). The ICP is built on a highly adaptable conceptual framework and has employed the tremendous diversity of the library and information worlds, both physical and digital. It required strenuous work in the five-year IME ICC (IFLA Meetings of Ex...

9 citations


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