2011년 10월 25일 화요일

Library 2.011 worldwide virtual conference

Library 2.011 worldwide virtual conference, November 2 - 4, 2011.



한국 기준 시간표 클릭!

2011년 7월 14일 목요일

[Article] A Study on the Functional Requirement of Subject Authority Data for Subject Authority Control

2011 Park, Ziyoung (2011). A Study on the Functional Requirement of Subject Authority Data for Subject Authority Control. Journal of Information Management, 42(1): 113–135.

[Abstract]
The final report of the Functional Requirement of Subject Authority Data(FRSAD), the 3rd report of the FRBR family model, is announced by IFLA in June, 2010. This model represents the international trends of subject authority control and suggests a direction to the future subject authority record suitable for the FRBR system. Therefore aims of this study are to analysis the FRSAD model in context of the FRBR family and apply the model to the subject headings and bibliographic records of Korean National Library. For these aims, we analyse the model focused on the entities, attributes, and relationships between entities. From this analysis, we have found the openness of the FRSAD, which does not force a certain entity types and has focus on the conceptual aspects of the entity not only the form of the headings. Moreover, we suggest examples by applying the FRSAD frame and facets of the FAST to the Headings of the NLSH and related KORMARC fields. The scope of this study is the additional entities of the FRBR groups, so personal names, corporate names, family names and titles are not included. As a result, it is necessary to determine the criteria for the types of thema and to apply the types consistently in bibliographic records. A follow up research will be needed to suggest more detailed examples.

2011년 6월 15일 수요일

Library 2.0 - the future of libraries in the digital age

Library 2.0 - the future of libraries in the digital age

11월에 '2.011 Conference'라는 재미있는 온라인 회의도 한다.

사이트는 여기!

2011년 5월 26일 목요일

Hack Library School (학생 블로그)

문헌정보학과 학생들이 쓴 강의, 장학제도, 캠퍼스 관련 블로그이다.

바로가기

2011년 4월 12일 화요일

JLIS


JLIS.it is published by the University of Florence - Department of studies on the Antiquities, Middle Age, the Renaissance and Linguistics
저널 사이트 클릭!

ISSN: 2038-1026


이탈리아 플로렌스 대학에서 발행하는 오픈액세스 저널이다.
아쉬운 점은 이탈리아어로 된 논문이 많다는 것이다.

2011년 3월 22일 화요일

AACR의 역사

이 정보는 JSC RDA 웹페이지를 번역, 정리한 것입니다.
웹페이지 바로가기 클릭!





Early English Language Cataloguing Codes

영국박물관목록규칙(British Museum Rules)

파니치(Anthony Panizzi)가 영국박물관 목록작성을 위해 개발한 첫번째 영미권 목록규칙.
영국박물관은 1839년에 파니치의 91개 법칙을 승인했다. [1]
이 목록규칙은 1936년까지 개정되었으며, 이 영국박물관의 도서관부는 1973년에 영국국가도서관 산하로 편입되었다.

커터의 사전체 목록규칙(Cutter’s Rules for a Dictionary Catalog)

커터(Charles Ammi Cutter)의 사전체 목록규칙 초판은 1876년에 발간되었다. [2]
커터는 이 규칙에서 최초로 목록의 기능(objectives)를 포함한 목록 원칙을 정립했다.
이 규칙은 표목부(저자, 표제, 주제, 형식표목)와 기술부 모두를 포함한다.

Anglo-American Code

미국(Developments in the United States)

미국도서관협회(ALA)의 목록규칙인“Condensed Rules for an Author & Title Catalog”가 1883년에 Library Journal에 처음으로 게재되었다. [3]
1900년에 ALA는 이 규칙을 개정하기 위해 미국국회도서관의 J.C.M. Hanson가 담당하는 위원회를 결성했다. 미국국회도서관에서 카드목록을 소개할 예정이었으므로 ALA의 목록규칙과 미국국회도서관의 목록규칙을 통합하는 것이 핵심사안이었다.
1902년에는 미국국회도서관이 ALA 목록규칙의 개정판(advance edition of the revised ALA rules)을 발간했다. 이 때에는 ALA 목록규칙과 Cutter의 목록규칙(1904년 발표)을 통일된 형식으로 표현하는 것에 중점을 두었다..

영국(Developments in the United Kingdom)

1893년에 영국도서관협회(LA)에서는“Cataloguing Rules”를 발행했다.[4]
1902년에는 이 규칙의 개정위원회가 결성되었고, 영국박물관 목록규칙(British Museum rules)과 ALA 목록규칙의 개정판을 주로 참고하였다.
영국목록규칙(LA rules)의 개정 초안이 1904년 영국도서관협회 회의에서 논의되었다.

협력(Co-operation)


--- 여기서부터 다시 수정 ----
In light of the similar work being done on both sides of the Atlantic, Melvil Dewey suggested that there should be co-operation to produce an Anglo-American code. The American Library Association and the Library Association formally agreed to co-operate in 1904. Consultation between the two bodies occurred by correspondence.
The first international cataloguing code was published in 1908 in an American edition (Catalog Rules, Author and Title Entries [5]) and a British edition (Cataloguing Rules, Author and Title Entries [6])
Both editions contained 174 rules covering both entry and heading for authors and titles, and description.
Areas of disagreement between the two editions centred on authors and publications that changed names or titles.
In both editions disagreements were explained either in a note or by printing two versions of the rule. Library of Congress supplementary rules were also included where necessary.
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A.L.A. Cataloging Rules
1941 edition
In the 1930s committees of American Library Association and the Library Association discussed revision of the 1908 rules. The two bodies co-operated until 1939 when the Second World War ended British involvement.
A preliminary second edition of the American edition of the 1908 rules was published by the American Library Association in 1941, and contained 324 rules in two parts: Part I, Entry and Heading; Part II, Description of book; as well as various appendices, including one on “authority cards.” [7].
1949 edition
The 1941 edition was criticised for being too detailed and complex, and in 1949 A.L.A. Cataloging Rules for Author and Title Entries was published [8]. This edition contained only rules for entry and heading.
American alternative rules in the 1908 code were reflected in the 1949 code.
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Rules for Descriptive Cataloging in the Library of Congress
As the 1949 ALA code did not contain rules for descriptive cataloguing, the Library of Congress took responsibility for documenting rules of this nature. As Library of Congress catalogue cards were widely used by American libraries, there was interest in the rules used by the Library of Congress.
Rules for Descriptive Cataloging in the Library of Congress was published in 1949, and the rules were adopted by the American Library Association [9]. Included were rules for separately published monographs, serials, and some non-book materials.
Supplementary rules were subsequently issued for additional non-book formats.
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Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules
AACR 1967
In 1951 the American Library Association asked Seymour Lubetzky, of the Library of Congress, to analyse the 1949 ALA code. An approach was also made to the Library Association regarding co-ordination of revision of the 1949 code.
In 1953 Lubetzky’s report (Cataloging Rules and Principles [10]) was published. This work advocated a move towards a principle-based rather than case-based code.
In 1956 Lubetzky was appointed editor of the revised code, and in 1960 he produced the draft Code of Cataloging Rules; Author and Title Entry [11].
The International Conference on Cataloguing Principles was held in Paris in 1961 to examine the choice and form of headings in author/title catalogues. The outcome was a statement of 12 principles known as the Paris Principles [12].
In 1962 C. Sumner Spalding, of the Library of Congress, became the new editor of the code.
The American Library Association and Library Association co-operated by exchanging minutes and working papers, and attending each other’s meetings. In addition, the Library of Congress assisted with revision of the descriptive cataloguing rules, and the Canadian Library Association was involved in reviewing drafts of the rules.
In 1967 two versions of the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (AACR) were published, a North American text [13] and a British text [14].
Both texts of AACR contained three parts:
Part I, Entry and Heading
– Based on the Paris Principles, the 1949 ALA rules, and Lubetzky’s 1960 draft.

Part II, Description
– Consisted of revised rules from the 1949 Library of Congress rules.

Part III, Non-book materials
– Contained rules for both entry and description of non-book materials.
– Consisted of revised rules from the 1949 Library of Congress rules, and supplementary Library of Congress rules.

Each text contained an appendix listing rules for entry and heading that differed in the other version.
In 1966 there was a “memorandum of agreement” for continued revision of AACR between ALA and LA. In light of their earlier involvement, the Library of Congress and the Canadian Library Association were also formally represented in the revision process.
Amendments and changes from 1969-1975 were published for the North American text in the Library of Congress Cataloging Service and for the British text in the Library Association Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules Amendment Bulletin.
ISBD and AACR Revisions
At the International Meeting of Cataloguing Experts in Copenhagen in 1969, a program of International Standard Bibliographic Description (ISBD) was developed. The objective was to identify components in a bibliographic description, their preferred order, and the necessary punctuation.
The first ISBD standard to be produced was that for Monographs (ISBD(M)) in 1971 [15].
AACR chapter 6 was revised in line with ISBD(M), and published in two versions in 1974 [16, 17]. The revised chapter contained rules for printed monographs and reproductions of printed monographs (including microform reproductions).
Other ISBDs were developed, leading to the publication by the American Library Association of revisions to AACR chapter 12 (AV and Special Instructional Materials) [18], and AACR chapter 14 (Sound Recordings) [19].
In 1975 work began on developing a general framework, known as ISBD(G) [20].
AACR2 1978
In 1974 the Joint Steering Committee for the Revision of AACR (JSC) was established, with membership from the American Library Association, the British Library, the Canadian Library Association (represented by the Canadian Committee on Cataloguing), the Library Association, and the Library of Congress.
The JSC was charged with incorporating the North American and British texts into a single version. The JSC appointed two editors for the revised code, Michael Gorman of the British Library, and Paul W. Winkler of the Library of Congress.
The Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, Second edition (AACR2) was published in one version in 1978 [21].
AACR2 was divided into two parts:
Part I, Description
– Based on the ISBD(G) framework.
– Included a general chapter (chapter 1), and chapters for individual formats, including new chapters for machine-readable data files (chapter 9) and three-dimensional artefacts and realia (chapter 10).
– The rules for non-book materials were based on alternative codes that were published in the 1970s.

Part II, Entry and Heading
– Rules were brought more closely into line with the Paris Principles.

AACR2 was adopted by the Library of Congress, the National Library of Canada, the British Library, and the Australian National Library in January 1981.
In 1981 an abridged version, the Concise AACR2 was published [22].
Revisions to AACR2 were adopted in 1982, 1983 (published 1984), and 1985 (published 1986).
A draft revision of AACR2 chapter 9 (renamed: Computer Files) was published in 1987 [23].
From 1981 an Australian Committee on Cataloguing (ACOC) representative was sent to JSC meetings, and from 1986 ACOC became a full JSC member.
1988 Revision
The 1988 Revision of AACR2 incorporated the 1982, 1983, and 1985 revisions plus subsequent unpublished revisions [24].
The 1988 Revision was published in both book and loose-leaf format.
One set of amendments was published in 1993.
1998 Revision
The 1998 Revision of AACR2 incorporated the 1993 amendments, and revisions approved between 1992 and 1996 [25].
The 1998 Revision was published in book and CDROM format.
Amendments packages were published in 1999 and 2001. The 2001 amendments included a complete revision of chapter 9 (renamed: Electronic Resources).
2002 Revision
The 2002 Revision of AACR2 incorporated the 1999 and 2001 amendments, and changes approved in 2001, including complete revisions of chapter 3 (Cartographic Materials) and chapter 12 (renamed: Continuing Resources) [26].
The revision of chapter 12 arose from a recommendation of the International Conference on the Principles and Future Development of AACR, and IFLA-led efforts to harmonize ISBD(CR), ISSN practice, and AACR2.
In 2002 AACR was published only in loose-leaf format.

For more information of the history of AACR, see also the 1978, 1988 and 1998 AACR2 prefaces.

참고문헌

[1] Panizzi, Anthony. “Rules for the Compilation of the Catalogue,” Catalogue of Printed Books in the British Museum, (1841), v. 1, p. [v]-ix.

[2] Cutter, Charles Ammi. Rules for a Printed Dictionary Catalogue. – Washington, D.C. : Government Printing Office, 1876.

[3] “Condensed Rules for an Author & Title Catalog,” Library Journal 8 (1883), 251-254.

[4] Cataloguing Rules 1. of the British Museum 2. of the Bodleian Library 3. of the Library Association. – London : Library Association, 1893. (Library Association series ; no. 5)

[5] Catalog Rules, Author and Title Entries / compiled by committees of the American Library Association and the (British) Library Association. – American ed. – Chicago : American Library Association, 1908.

[6] Cataloguing Rules : Author and Title Entries / compiled by committees of the Library Association and of the American Library Association. – English ed. – London : Library Association, 1908.

[7] A.L.A. Catalog Rules, Author and Title Entries / prepared by the Catalog Code Revision Committee of the American Library Association, with the collaboration of a Committee of the (British) Library Association. – Preliminary American 2nd ed. – Chicago : American Library Association, 1941.

[8] A.L.A. Cataloging Rules for Author and Title Entries / prepared by the Division of Cataloging and Classification of the American Library Association. – 2nd ed. / edited by Clara Beetle. – Chicago : American Library Association, 1949.

[9] Rules for Descriptive Cataloging in the Library of Congress / adopted by the American Library Association. – Washington, D.C. : Library of Congress, Descriptive Cataloging Division, 1949.

[10] Lubetzky, Seymour. Cataloging Rules and Principles; a Critique of the A.L.A. Rules for Entry and a Proposed Design for their Revision. – Washington : Processing Dept., Library of Congress, 1953.

[11] Lubetzky, Seymour. Code of Cataloging Rules; Author and Title Entry. – Chicago : American Library Association, 1960.

[12] Statement of Principles Adopted at the International Conference on Cataloguing Principles, Paris, October 1961. – Annotated ed. with commentary and examples / by Eva Verona, assisted by ? [others]. – London : IFLA Committee on Cataloguing, 1971.

[13] Anglo-American Cataloging Rules / prepared by the American Library Association, the Library of Congress, the Library Association, and the Canadian Library Association. – North American text. – Chicago : American Library Association, 1967.

[14] Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules / prepared by the American Library Association, the Library of Congress, the Library Association and the Canadian Library Association. – British text. – London : Library Association, 1967.

[15] ISBD(M) : International Standard Bibliographic Description for Monographic Publications. – 1st standard ed. – London : IFLA Committee on Cataloguing, 1974.

[16] Anglo-American Cataloging Rules : North American Text : Chapter 6: Separately Published Monographs, Incorporating Chapter 9, "Photographic and Other Reproductions," and Revised to Accord with the International Standard Bibliographic Description (Monographs) – Chicago, American Library Association, 1974.

[17] Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules : British Text : Chapter 6 Revised (Including a Revision of Appendix V). – London : Library Association, 1974.

[18] Anglo-American Cataloging Rules : North American Text : Chapter 12 Revised : Audiovisual Media and Special Instructional Materials. – Chicago : American Library Association, 1975.

[19] Anglo-American Cataloging Rules : North American Text : Chapter 14 Revised : Sound Recordings. – Chicago : American Library Association, 1976.

[20] ISBD(G) : General International Standard Bibliographic Description : Annotated Text / prepared by the Working Group on the General International Standard Bibliographic Description set up by the IFLA Committee on Cataloguing. – London : IFLA International Office for UBC, 1977.

[21] Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules / prepared by the American Library Association, the British Library, the Canadian Committee on Cataloguing, the Library Association, the Library of Congress. – 2nd ed. / edited by Michael Gorman and Paul W. Winkler. – Chicago : American Library Association ; Ottawa : Canadian Library Association, 1978. [Note: Also published: London : Library Association, 1978]

[22] Gorman, Michael. The Concise AACR 2 : Being a Rewritten and Simplified Version of Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, Second Edition. – Chicago : American Library Association ; Ottawa : Canadian Library Association ; London : Library Association, 1981. [Note: Later revised in line with the 1988 and 1998 revisions of AACR2.]

[23] Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules Second Edition : Chapter 9 : Computer Files : Draft Revision / edited for the Joint Steering Committee for the Revision of AACR by Michael Gorman. – Chicago : American Library Association ; Ottawa : Canadian Library Association ; London : Library Association, 1987.

[24] Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules / prepared under the direction of the Joint Steering Committee for Revision of AACR, a committee of the American Library Association, the Australian Committee on Cataloguing, the British Library, the Canadian Committee on Cataloguing, the Library Association, the Library of Congress ; edited by Michael Gorman and Paul W. Winkler. – 2nd ed., 1988 revision. – Ottawa : Canadian Library Association ; London : Library Association Publishing ; Chicago : American Library Association, 1988.

[25] Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules / prepared under the direction of the Joint Steering Committee for Revision of AACR, a committee of the American Library Association, the Australian Committee on Cataloguing, the British Library, the Canadian Committee on Cataloguing, the Library Association, the Library of Congress – 2nd ed., 1998 revision. – Ottawa : Canadian Library Association ; London : Library Association Publishing ; Chicago : American Library Association, 1998.

[26] Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules / prepared under the direction of the Joint Steering Committee for Revision of AACR, a committee of the American Library Association, the Australian Committee on Cataloguing, the British Library, the Canadian Committee on Cataloguing, Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, the Library of Congress. – 2nd ed., 2002 revision. – Ottawa : Canadian Library Association ; London : Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals ; Chicago : American Library Association, 2002-2005.

2011년 1월 27일 목요일

[Lectures]Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and Services/Gary Marchionini 편

Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and Services

에디터: Gary Marchionini, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
from: http://www.morganclaypool.com/toc/icr/1/1

강의자료를 공개하고, 출판하는 일은 바람직하다.
판매용(강좌당 미화 20불)이긴 하지만, 초록은 웹에서 제공하고 있다.

Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and Services is edited by Gary Marchionini of the University of North Carolina. The series will publish 50- to 100-page publications on topics pertaining to information science and applications of technology to information discovery, production, distribution, and management. The scope will largely follow the purview of premier information and computer science conferences, such as ASIST, ACM SIGIR, ACM/IEEE JCDL, and ACM CIKM. Potential topics include, but not are limited to: data models, indexing theory and algorithms, classification, information architecture, information economics, privacy and identity, scholarly communication, bibliometrics and webometrics, personal information management, human information behavior, digital libraries, archives and preservation, cultural informatics, information retrieval evaluation, data fusion, relevance feedback, recommendation systems, question answering, natural language processing for retrieval, text summarization, multimedia retrieval, multilingual retrieval, and exploratory search.

이 중 패싯 관련 강좌도 있다. 80쪽 분량이다.
Faceted Search by Daniel Tunkelang
Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and Services Jan 2009, Vol. 1, No. 1, Pages 1-80: 1-80.

2011년 1월 18일 화요일

[researcher]Kathryn La Barre

Kathryn La Barre는 아래와 같은 박사학위논문으로 졸업하였다. 특히 패싯 관련 선행연구의 꼼꼼함이 돋보이는 논문이다.
La Barre, K. (2006). The Use of Faceted Analytico-Synthetic Theory in the Practice of Website Construction and Design. Unpublished dissertation. Indiana University

최근에는 ARIST에 패싯 분석에 관한 장을 게재하였다. 역시 정리가 잘 되어있다.
La Barre, K. (2010). Facet analysis. In B. Cronin (Ed.) Annual Review of Information Science and Technology. Volume 44, p. 243-284. Medford, NJ: Information Today.

현재는 Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign의 부교수이다.

홈페이지(http://courseweb.lis.illinois.edu/~klabarre/overview.html)-------------------------------------------------

[univ]Kent State’s School of Library and Information Science

JESSE(JESSE@listserv.utk.edu)에 올라온
"Kent State Student Receives Prestigious Fellowship from Association of Research Libraries"
라는 글 중에서 발췌한 내용이다.
장학금 탔다는 기사보다, 아래와 같은 간략한 소개가 더 눈에 띄었다.

Kent State’s School of Library and Information Science offers the only Master of Library and Information Science degree program in Ohio that is accredited by the American Library Association, and one of the nation’s few master’s degrees in Information Architecture and Knowledge Management. The school is recognized by U.S. News and World Report as one of the nation’s top 20 graduate schools, and its youth librarianship program is ranked 13th. It is one of the largest library schools in the country, with nearly 700 students enrolled.