180 likes | 261 Views
What’s the use?: Searching for catalog user tasks beyond finding, identifying, selecting , and obtaining. Marty Kurth Heads of Cataloging Interest Group June 30, 2014. http:// images.wwcomics.com/images/large/WdSci_15_73.jpg.
E N D
What’s the use?: Searching for catalog user tasks beyond finding, identifying, selecting, and obtaining Marty Kurth Heads of Cataloging Interest Group June 30, 2014
From “Professional vs Paraprofessional (again),” email message to AUTOCAT, 4 May 1994. Cataloging, as a professional occupation, is, in its broadest and deepest sense, the activity of creating (i.e., planning, implementing), monitoring (including data control and quality) and modifying catalog systems as systems. . . . Francis Miksa
From Lynch, ElkeGreifeneder, and Michael Seadle, “Interactions between libraries and technology over the past 30 years: An interview with Clifford Lynch 23.06.2012,” Library Hi Tech 30:4 (2012): 575. [H]ow do you conduct and curate a public conversation about cultural memory? You see institutions putting up materials now with fairly restricted metadata, because that is all they have and to reach out broadly for expertise to strengthen their knowledge of the collection. That process needs to become routine and it is a very complex process to engineer and to orchestrate. Clifford Lynch
From“The Academy Unbound: Linked Data as Revolution,” Library Resources & Technical Services 56:4 (2012): 227. Linked data has the potential to revolutionize the academic world of information creation and exchange. Basic tenets of what libraries collect, how they collect, how they organize, and how they provide information will be questioned and rethought. Philip Schreur
FRBR generic user tasks • to find entities that correspond to the user’s stated search criteria • to identify an entity • to select an entity that is appropriate to the user’s needs • to acquire or obtain access to the entity described (FRBR, p. 8, 79) http://www.ifla.org/files/assets/cataloguing/frbr/frbr_2008.pdf
Other relevant ideas from Schreur • Linked bibliographic data on the open web can invoke an “iterative process of data use and correction” (p. 228) • To participate in this process, “libraries must move from the exclusive creation of records to the inclusion of data captured at the source” (p. 236) • Which will require services that create structured bibliographic data “as an automated by-product of the work of the academy” including “data enhancement and correction . . . by crowdsourcing” (p. 237)
Dempsey’s “Four sources of metadata about things” • Professional • Crowdsourced (user-contributed) • Programmatically promoted (e.g., entity identification services) • Intentional or transactional (generated through use) http://orweblog.oclc.org/archives/001351.html http://www.educause.edu/ero/article/thirteen-ways-looking-libraries-discovery-and-catalog-scale-workflow-attention
From Lynch, ElkeGreifeneder, and Michael Seadle, “Interactions between libraries and technology over the past 30 years: An interview with Clifford Lynch 23.06.2012,” Library Hi Tech 30:4 (2012): 575. [H]ow do you conduct and curate a public conversation about cultural memory? You see institutions putting up materials now with fairly restricted metadata, because that is all they have and to reach out broadly for expertise to strengthen their knowledge of the collection. That process needs to become routine and it is a very complex process to engineer and to orchestrate. Clifford Lynch
FRBR generic user tasks • to find entities that correspond to the user’s stated search criteria • to identify an entity • to select an entity that is appropriate to the user’s needs • to acquire or obtain access to the entity described (FRBR, p. 8, 79) http://www.ifla.org/files/assets/cataloguing/frbr/frbr_2008.pdf
Quick FRBR overview • Entities • work, expression, manifestation, item • person, corporate body • concept, object, event, place • Attributes (of entities) • Relationships (that link entities)
Relationships open the door to more active user engagement Bibliographic relationshipsare important “in assisting the user to relate one entity or another or to ‘navigate’ the universe of entities represented in a bibliographic file or database. In a sense ‘relate’ could be viewed as a fifth user task.” (FRBR, p. 80) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_Beatle
A five-task model • to find entities that correspond to the user’s stated search criteria • to identify an entity • to select an entity that is appropriate to the user’s needs • to acquire or obtain access to the entity described • to relate entities to one another
Searching for active user tasks (FRBR, p. 84) http://www.ifla.org/files/assets/cataloguing/frbr/frbr_2008.pdf
Searching for active user tasks (FRBR, p. 85) http://www.ifla.org/files/assets/cataloguing/frbr/frbr_2008.pdf
A six-task model • to find entities that correspond to the user’s stated search criteria • to identify an entity • to select an entity that is appropriate to the user’s needs • to acquire or obtain access to the entity described • to assign an attribute to an entity • to declare a relationship between entities
Other models of active user tasks John Unsworth’sScholarly Primitives Open Annotation Data Model Motivations Bookmark Classify Comment Describe Edit Highlight Identify Link Moderate Question Reply Tag http://www.openannotation.org/spec/core/ • Discover • Annotate • Compare • Refer • Sample • Illustrate • Represent http://people.brandeis.edu/~unsworth/Kings.5-00/primitives.html
From The Intellectual Foundation of Information Organization(MIT Press, 2000), 29. [B]ibliographic objectives . . . can be seen as historically determined: they have emerged as the bibliographic universe has expanded and has triggered ever-increasing difficulties in the search for information and as users’ needs have become more demanding. Elaine Svenonius