PPT - Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA
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Transcript PPT - Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA
Background/Overview
by Dr. Barbara B. Tillett
Chief, Policy and Standards Division
Library of Congress
For AMIGOS
February 4, 2011
Overview
Influences on RDA
Changing environment
Why not AACR3?
RDA goals and structure
Examples of changes
US RDA Test
Training materials available and
workshops being offered to help minimize
costs
2
Influences
Anglo-American cataloging tradition
Paris Principles
ISBD
FRBR/FRAD
Internet
Toronto Conference 1997
IME ICC ICP
Web environment collaborations
3
Influences Panizzi – 1841
(“91 rules”)
Not just finding list/inventory
Full and complete data
Collocation by authors
References
4
Influences – Cutter
Objects:
(1876-1904 eds.)
Find
author,
title, subject
Show
given
author, given
subject, kind of
literature
Assist
in choice
edition,
literary or
topical character
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IFLA’s Influence on
Cataloguing Codes
1961
“Paris
Principles”
(influenced by
Lubetzky and
Verona)
1967
1941
1949
1876
1902
1904
1906
1908
1841
Anglo-American Tradition
7
More of IFLA’s Influence
1969 – ISBDs
•
•
International Standard Bibliographic
Description
2007
Consolidated
edition
8
AACR2
1978
1988
1998
2002
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FRBR
IFLA’s Functional
Requirements for
Bibliographic Records
(FRBR)
User tasks
Find
Identify
Select
Obtain
Entities, Relationships,
Attributes
Mandatory elements for a
national level bibliographic
record
10
Functional Requirements
for Authority Data (FRAD)
June 2009
Extends the FRBR
model to authority data
(Still to come is FRSAD
on subject authority
data)
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International Cataloguing
Principles (ICP) - 2009
Principles
& Glossary
20
languages
http://www.ifla.org/en/public
ations/statement-ofinternational-cataloguingprinciples
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Internet
Wide range of information carriers
•
Catalogs are no longer end points in isolation
•
complexity of content
Global access to data
Integrate bibliographic data with wider Internet
environment
•
•
Share data beyond institutions
Metadata (bibliographic information)
Created by a wider range of personnel
Within and outside libraries
Element-based metadata schemas
Dublin Core, ONIX, etc.
13
What’s wrong with AACR?
Increasingly complex
Lack of logical structure
Mixing content and carrier data (GMDs)
Not enough support for collocation - inherent
relationships missing
Anglo-American centric viewpoint
Written before FRBR
Before Internet and well-formed metadata
Based on slide from Ann Chapman, UKOLN
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1997 International Conference on the
Principles and Future Development
of AACR
Toronto, Canada Principles
JSC invited
worldwide experts
Issues leading to
RDA
Content vs. carrier
Logical structure of
AACR
Seriality
Internationalization
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JSC and Project Management Team
Marjorie Bloss, RDA project manager; Marg Stewart, CCC/ JSC chair; Alan
Danskin, BL; John Attig, ALA; Barbara Tillett, LC; Deirdre Kiorgaard,
ACOC; Hugh Taylor, CILIP; Nathalie Schulz, JSC secretary; Tom Delsey, editor
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AACR3
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JSC Collaborations with other
Metadata Communities
IFLA - Principles, Conceptual models, ISBD/ISSN
ONIX (Publishers) – types of content, media, carriers
Dublin Core, IEEE/LOM, Semantic Web, W3C
“Data Modeling Meeting” - London 2007
RDA/MARC
Working Group (MARBI)
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Other Collaborations
Law Library community
Treaties
Hebraica and Religion Teams at LC
Bible
proposals
Mss/Archives experts at LC (Mss. Div., NUCMC,
American Folklife Center, Rare Books)
DACS
Music Div and Motion Picture, Broadcasting and
Recorded Sound Div., MLA
AMIM2
and Ch.6 proposals for music
Prints & Photographs Division
CCO
Geography and Maps Divisions at LC
19
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GOALS:
RDA will be …
A new standard for resource description
and access
Designed for the digital world
•
Optimized for use as an online product
• Description and access of all resources
•
•
All types of content and media
Resulting records usable in the digital
environment (Internet, Web OPACs, etc.)
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RDA – The Goals
Rules should be easy to use and interpret
Be applicable to an online, networked
environment
Provide effective bibliographic control for all types
of media
Encourage use beyond the library community
Be compatible with other similar standards
Have a logical structure based on internationally
agreed principles
Separate content and carrier data
Examples – more of them, more appropriate
slide Ann Chapman, UKOLN
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RDA Structure
General introduction
Identifying Elements (Entities and their
attributes)
Relationships
Appendices
Capitalization, Abbreviations, Initial articles, etc.
Presentation (ISBD, MARC, etc.)
Relationship designators
Etc.
Glossary
and Index
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General Principles (ICP)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Convenience of user
Representation
Common usage
Accuracy
Sufficiency and
necessity
Significance
Economy
• Consistency and
•
•
Standardization
Integration
Defensible, not
arbitrary
• If contradict, take a
defensible, practical
solution.
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Transcription – Principle of
Representation in RDA
“Take what you see” as option in RDA
Correction
of inaccuracies elsewhere
No more abbreviating
Accept what you get
Facilitating
automated data capture
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Sample Changes from AACR2
Transcribed data (macros and templates)
Option
to keep rule of 3
e.g., “[and five others]” – no more “… et. al.”
First
place of publication is “core”
“Place of publication not identified” – not “s.l.”
“Publisher not identified” – not “s.n.”
“Date of publication not identified”
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RDA Element Analysis
RDA element (domain: manifestation)
Title
element
Title proper
element sub-type
Parallel title
element sub-type
Other title information element sub-type
Variant title
element sub-type
Earlier variant title
element sub-type
Later variant title
element sub-type
Key title
element sub-type
Abbreviated title
element sub-type
Devised title
element sub-type
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RDA elements
“Core”
Media, Carrier, and Content Types to replace
GMDs
Other examples of new elements:
File
characteristics for digital materials
Video format characteristics
Custodial information for archival resources
Braille characteristics
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New Terminology from IFLA
AACR2 terms
RDA terms
Heading
Access point
Added Entry
Access point
Authorized heading
Authorized access point
See references
Variant access point
Uniform title
Preferred title
Name of the work (to
include name of creator
when applicable)
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Based on Gordon Dunsire’s slide
Database/format Scenarios
Bib record (flat-file)
Z
666.7
.L55
2009
Lee, T. B.
Cataloguing has a future
1 sound disc
Spoken word.
Donated by the author.
1. Metadata
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Based on Gordon Dunsire’s slide
Database/format Scenarios
Bib record (flat-file)
100 01 $a Lee, T. B.
245 00 $a Cataloguing has a future
300
$a 1 sound disc
500
$a Spoken word.
561 1 $a Donated by the author.
650 0 $a Metadata
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Based on Gordon Dunsire’s slide
Database/format Scenarios
FRBR registry (IFLA)
Future
record
FRBR
Bibrecord
record (description)
(flat-file)
Bib
Work
information
record
RDA element registry
Author: Lee, T. B.
Title: Cataloguing has a future
Work title:
has a future
Content type:Cataloguing
Spoken word
Expression
information
Carrier type:
Audio disc
Name authority record
Name:
Identifier: …
Subject authority record
Subject: Metadata
Manifestation
information
Provenance:
Donated by the author
Label:
Identifier: …
RDA content type registry
Item information
ONIX
Label: Spoken word
RDA carrier type registry
Identifier: …
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Linked Data
Work information
Author:
Subject:
Work Title: Cataloguing has a future
Name authority record
Name: Lee, T. B.
Identifier: …
Expression information
Content type:
Manifestation information
Title: Cataloguing has a future
Carrier type:
Subject authority record
Label: Metadata
Identifier: …
RDA content type registry
Item information
Provenance: Donated by the author
RDA carrier type registry
Audio disc
Label: Spoken word
Identifier: …
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Package for Data Sharing
Communication format record
Work information
Author:
Subject:
Work Title: Cataloguing
Cataloguing has
has aa future
future
Expression information
Content type:
Name: Lee, T. B.
Identifier: …
Subject authority record
Manifestation information
Title: Cataloguing has a future
Carrier type:
Label: Metadata
Identifier: …
RDA content type registry
Item information
Provenance: Donated by the author
Audio disc
Name authority record
RDA carrier type registry
Label: Spoken word
Identifier: …
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Package for displays
Future display
(
)
Author: Lee, T. B.
Content type: Spoken word
Title: Cataloguing has a future
Carrier type: (Audio disc)
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Databases,
Repositories
VIAF
LCSH
Services
Web front
end
Internet
“Cloud”
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http://www.rda-jsc.org/
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U.S. RDA Test Timeline
June 2010 ALA released RDA Toolkit
June-Aug.31 ALA allowed free
access to RDA Toolkit to everyone
who registered
June-Sept. 30 U.S. testers were
training and had time to practice
Oct. 1-Dec. 31 U.S. test of RDA
Jan.-Mar. 2011 analysis of test
results and decisions by U.S. national
libraries (expected by June 2011)
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Preparing to use RDA
MARC 21 format adjustments in local ILS
Local decisions on RDA alternatives/
options
Local decision on which elements to include
beyond the RDA Core elements
Templates and macros set up for standard
data
Practice time and discussions after basic
training
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Results of the Test
Surveys for cataloger’s experience and costs
Feedback on user reaction to records built
on RDA instructions
To
help inform future adjustments to RDA
To help improve the IFLA models and principles
Test records
http://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/RDAtest/rdatestrecords.html
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Summary
User-oriented models (FRBR/FRAD)
Collocate
works/expressions
Identify resources through specific
elements (attributes) and relationships
Internationalization
Cost
reduction through increased sharing
of data
Across information communities
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Summary
Principle-based rules (ICP)
Cataloger’s
judgment (User-focused)
Take what you see for transcribed data
(Representation)
Add controlled vocabularies for
precision of searching
Facilitate harvesting and sharing of
descriptive metadata
Less
rigid, more flexible
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Thank you!
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Acronyms and Links
DC – Dublin Core
• DCMI – Dublin Core Metadata Initiative
http://dublincore.org/
• DCAM – Dublin Core Abstract Model
http://dublincore.org/documents/2007/04/02/abstract-model/
FRAD – Functional Requirements for Authority Data
http://www.ifla.org/VII/d4/wg-franar.htm
FRBR – Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (this site
includes a Webliography)
http://www.ifla.org/VII/s13/frbr/frbr.htm
IFLA – International Federation of Library Associations and
Institutions
http://www.infla.org
JSC – Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA
http://www.rda-jsc.org/
RDA – Resource Description and Access
http://www.rda-jsc.org/rda.html
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Other Help
ALA Publishing URL for RDA Toolkit:
http://www.rdatoolkit.org/
RDA Toolkit demo:
http://www.rdatoolkit.org/training/guidedtour
US RDA Test, General information:
http://www.loc.gov/bibliographic-future/rda/
Library of Congress Documentation for the RDA Test
(training materials and decisions for test on RDA options):
http://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/RDAtest/rdatest.html
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