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Future of Enriched, Linked, Open and Filtered Metadata: Making Sense of IFLA LRM, RDA, Linked Data and BIBFRAME [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 222 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Aug-2022
  • Kirjastus: Facet Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1783304928
  • ISBN-13: 9781783304929
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 222 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Aug-2022
  • Kirjastus: Facet Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1783304928
  • ISBN-13: 9781783304929
The Future of Enriched, Linked, Open and Filtered Metadata is a comprehensive and accessible guide to creating accurate, consistent, complete, user-centred and quality metadata that supports the user tasks of finding, identifying, selecting, obtaining and exploring information resources. Based on the authors many years of academic research and work as a cataloguing and metadata librarian, it shows readers how they can configure, create, enhance and enrich their metadata for print and digital resources. The book applies examples using MARC21, RDA, FRBR, BIBFRAME, subject headings and name authorities. It also uses screenshots from cutting edge library management systems, discovery interfaces and metadata tools. Coverage includes:





definitions, discussions, and comparisons among MARC, FRBR, LRM, RDA, Linked Data and BIBFRAME standards and models discussion of the underlying principles and protocols of Linked Data vis-à-vis library metadata practical metadata configuration, creation, management, and cases employing cutting edge LMS, discovery interfaces, formats and tools discussion around why metadata needs to be enriched, linked, open and filtered to ensure the information resources described are discoverable and user friendly consideration of metadata as a growing and continuously enhancing, customer-focused and user-driven practice where the aim is to support users to find and retrieve relevant resources for their research and learning.

This practical book uses simple and accessible language to make sense of the many existing and emerging metadata standards, models and approaches. It will be a valuable resource for anyone involved in metadata creation, management and utilisation as well as a reference for LIS students, especially those undertaking information organisation, cataloguing and metadata modules.

Arvustused

"This work is a tour de force...Thoroughly recommended." -- Ian McCallum * Journal of the Australian Library and Information Association *

Figures
xi
Tables
xv
Code snippets xvii
About the Author xix
Preface xxi
Acknowledgements xxv
Abbreviations xxvii
1 Introduction to Metadata
1(40)
Overview
1(1)
What is metadata?
1(13)
History of metadata
14(3)
Benefits of metadata
17(2)
Types of metadata
19(1)
Descriptive metadata
19(6)
Preservation metadata
25(4)
Metadata for records and archives management
29(3)
Metadata for personal information management
32(1)
Metadata for research data
33(1)
Implications for open data science
34(3)
FAIR metadata principles
37(1)
Metadata for e-commerce and publishing
37(1)
Metadata creators
38(3)
2 Metadata Strategies and Quality Indicators
41(36)
Overview
41(5)
Application profiles
46(2)
Metadata quality indicators
48(4)
Metadata fixes and normalisation
52(1)
Metadata configuration
53(1)
Dublin Core
54(3)
Metadata, controlled vocabularies and ontologies
57(6)
Schema.org
63(6)
Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS)
69(1)
The MARC format
70(4)
Choice of metadata standards
74(3)
3 Metadata Use Cases
77(16)
Overview
77(1)
Metadata is for use
77(1)
Every user their metadata
78(1)
Every metadata has its user
78(1)
Metadata saves the time of the user
79(1)
Metadata is a growing organism
79(1)
The case of Alexander Litvinenko and metadata
80(3)
Metadata enriching and the case of the Costa Concordia
83(2)
Metadata enriching and the case of The School of Athens by Raphael
85(2)
The case of `illegal aliens'
87(6)
4 Contemporary Metadata Principles
93(14)
Overview
93(1)
The principle of sufficiency and necessity
94(1)
The principle of user convenience
95(2)
The principle of representation
97(1)
The principle of standardisation
98(1)
Metadata interoperability
99(8)
5 Enriched and Linked Metadata
107(38)
Overview
107(1)
The principle of metadata enriching
107(1)
The principle of metadata linking
107(6)
Linked Data
113(1)
Linked Data principles
114(8)
Linked Data for libraries
122(2)
From closed silos to open and distributed data models
124(1)
Slow adoption of Linked Data for library metadata
125(1)
Challenges to adopting Linked Data in libraries
126(1)
Benefits of linked library metadata for digital libraries
127(2)
Recommendations for making a conceptual shift
129(4)
Uniform Resource Identifiers and entity management
133(12)
6 Open Metadata
145(8)
Overview
145(1)
The principle of metadata openness
145(4)
Open licences
149(3)
Open science by design
152(1)
7 Filtered Metadata
153(12)
Overview
153(1)
User information search behaviours
153(6)
Discovery systems -- tools
159(3)
Conclusion
162(3)
8 FRBR, LRM and the Notion of Work
165(32)
Overview
165(4)
Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR)
169(2)
FRBR user tasks
171(1)
FRBR entities
172(2)
What is Work?
174(14)
IFLA Library Reference Model (LRM)
188(3)
NOMEN Entity
191(4)
IFLA'S LRM and Linked Data
195(2)
9 Resource Description and Access (RDA)
197(16)
Overview
197(1)
What is RDA?
197(5)
RDA entities
202(1)
RDA elements
203(1)
RDA relationship elements
204(3)
RDA Registry
207(1)
RDA Toolkit
207(6)
10 BIBFRAME: A New Metadata Framework
213(24)
Overview
213(1)
What is BIBFRAME?
214(4)
BIBFRAME Work
218(16)
Conclusion
234(3)
11 Crowdsourcing and User-Generated Metadata
237(20)
Overview
237(5)
The Wisdom of Crowds
242(2)
Motivation for metadata co-creators
244(1)
Metadata enriching using user-generated metadata
245(2)
Continuous enrichment of cultural heritage collections
247(1)
Metadata diversity better conforms to users' needs
248(1)
Enriching is a continuous and non-deterministic process
249(2)
The future of enriched, linked and open metadata
251(6)
References 257(20)
Index 277
Getaneh Alemu is Cataloguing and Metadata Librarian at Solent University where he manages a team of cataloguers with responsibility for providing accurate and usable metadata for the university. As part of his work at Solent Library, he introduced innovative approaches to cataloguing including writing cataloguing workflows, RDA templates and normalisation rules. He holds a PhD from the University of Portsmouth where he developed a theory of metadata enriching and filtering using a grounded theory method.

Getaneh is author of An Emergent Theory of Digital Library Metadata: Enrich then Filter (2015) and has published more than 20 peer-reviewed articles on metadata, digital libraries and Web 2.0 technologies. He served as a member of IFLAs Linked Data Technical Sub-Committee (LIDATEC) and is an editorial board member of the Journal of Librarianship and Information Science, International Journal of Metadata, Semantics and Ontologies, and Journal of Digital Library Perspectives. As an honorary tutor at the Centre for Archives and Information Studies (CAIS) at the University of Dundee, Getaneh also teaches a module on metadata standards and information taxonomies.