Academic literature on the topic 'IA. Cataloging, bibliographic control'

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Journal articles on the topic "IA. Cataloging, bibliographic control"

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Nero, Muriel D., and Jia He. "Is it Necessary: Quality Control in Cataloging?" International Journal of Librarianship 3, no. 2 (December 21, 2018): 85. http://dx.doi.org/10.23974/ijol.2018.vol3.2.96.

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Catalogers and technical services departments have always struggled with how much is too much when creating and enhancing bibliographic records as well as with what physical processing is needed to make these materials shelf-ready for timely circulation. Along with these decisions, catalogers also must address what quality control measures, if any, should be in place to guarantee resources are discoverable in the OPAC and discovery service. The authors of this paper describe their process and workflow for the quality control of tangible and electronic resources; they also discuss why quality control is performed. The importance of training cataloging staff on current cataloging rules and practices as a preventive measure to reduce mistakes is an essential part of the process. The ultimate goal of quality control is to eliminate errors and ensure the library’s resources are accessible.
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Johnson, Kay G. "Book Review: Maps and Related Cartographic Materials Cataloging, Classification, and Bibliographic Control." Library Resources & Technical Services 46, no. 2 (April 1, 2002): 75–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/lrts.46n2.75.

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Kiczek, Steven A. "Thomas Mann's Contributions to Current Library Debates on Cataloging and Bibliographic Control." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 48, no. 5 (May 20, 2010): 450–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01639371003766757.

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Fast, Margaret, Thomas G. DePetro, and Cathy Moore-Jansen. "Bibliographic Control of a Technical Report Series Through OCLC Cataloging and Indexing/Abstracting Services." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 18, no. 1 (March 11, 1994): 63–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j104v18n01_04.

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Hoffman, Gretchen L. "Could the Functional Future of Bibliographic Control Change Cataloging Work? An Exploration Using Abbott." Journal of Library Metadata 12, no. 2-3 (April 2012): 111–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19386389.2012.699825.

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Yee, Martha M. "Can Bibliographic Data be Put Directly onto the Semantic Web?" Information Technology and Libraries 28, no. 2 (June 1, 2009): 55. http://dx.doi.org/10.6017/ital.v28i2.3175.

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<span>This paper is a think piece about the possible future of bibliographic control; it provides a brief introduction to the Semantic Web and defines related terms, and it discusses granularity and structure issues and the lack of standards for the efficient display and indexing of bibliographic data. It is also a report on a work in progress—an experiment in building a Resource Description Framework (RDF) model of more FRBRized cataloging rules than those about to be introduced to the library community (Resource Description and Access) and in creating an RDF data model for the rules. I am now in the process of trying to model my cataloging rules in the form of an RDF model, which can also be inspected at </span><a href="http://myee.bol.ucla.edu/">http://myee.bol.ucla.edu/</a><span>. In the process of doing this, I have discovered a number of areas in which I am not sure that RDF is sophisticated enough yet to deal with our data. This article is an attempt to identify some of those areas and explore whether or not the problems I have encountered are soluble—in other words, whether or not our data might be able to live on the Semantic Web. In this paper, I am focusing on raising the questions about the suitability of RDF to our data that have come up in the course of my work.</span>
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Baker, Thomas, Karen Coyle, and Sean Petiya. "Multi-entity models of resource description in the Semantic Web." Library Hi Tech 32, no. 4 (November 11, 2014): 562–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/lht-08-2014-0081.

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Purpose – The 1998 International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) document “Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records” (FRBR) has inspired a family of models that view bibliographic resources in terms of multiple entities differentiated with regard to meaning, expression, and physicality. The purpose of this paper is to compare how three FRBR and FRBR-like models have been expressed as Semantic Web vocabularies based on Resource Description Framework (RDF). The paper focusses on IFLA’s own vocabulary for FRBR; RDF vocabularies for Resource Description and Access (RDA), an emergent FRBR-based standard for library cataloging; and BIBFRAME, an emergent FRBR-like, native-RDF standard for bibliographic data. Design/methodology/approach – Simple test records using the RDF vocabularies were analyzed using software that supports inferencing. Findings – In some cases, what the data actually means appears to differ from what the vocabulary developers presumably intended to mean. Data based on the FRBR vocabulary appears particularly difficult to integrate with data based on different models. Practical implications – Some of the RDF vocabularies reviewed in the paper could usefully be simplified, enabling libraries to integrate their data more easily into the wider information ecosystem on the Web. Requirements for data consistency and quality control could be met by emergent standards of the World Wide Web Consortium for validating RDF data according to integrity constraints. Originality/value – There are few such comparisons of the RDF expressions of these models, which are widely assumed to represent the future of library cataloging.
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Weinberg, Bella. "Hebraic Authorities: A Historical-Theoretical Perspective." Judaica Librarianship 8, no. 1 (September 1, 1994): 45–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.14263/2330-2976.1230.

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The standardization of Hebrew names in cataloging and bibliography has its roots in the Anglo-American tradition of Romanized author main entry. Cross-references from Hebrew names to their Roman equivalents are found in some British Hebraica catalogs published in the 19th century. In the Hebrew bibliographic tradition, in contrast, title main entry predominated and, given the nondistinctiveness of Jewish names, author access was rarely provided. Israeli librarians adopted the Western tradition of author main entry while retaining their commitment to original-alphabet cataloging; their Hebraic authority work consisted primarily of standardization of Hebrew orthography. The Hebraic capability of the Research Libraries Information Network (RLIN) made American Judaica librarians aware of the advantages of Hebrew name access; they had formerly been accustomed to Hebrew title access only. Many libraries are inputting parallel Hebrew access points to RLIN, with varying degrees of authority control. The USMARC Format for Authority Data has been revised to allow for parallel non-Roman data; the fields defined for non-Roman data have not been implemented, however, because the Library of Congress cannot handle non-Roman scripts in its processing system. Hebraic authority control is therefore done locally, in manual mode or with database management software.
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Richardson, Ellen. "Ain't No (Sky)River Wide Enough to Keep Me from Getting to You: SkyRiver, Innovative, OCLC, and the Fight for Control over the Bibliographic Data, Cataloging Services, ILL, and ILS Markets." Legal Reference Services Quarterly 31, no. 1 (January 2012): 37–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0270319x.2012.654065.

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D. Hall-Ellis, Sylvia. "Accept, coach, and inspire: a formula for success." Bottom Line 27, no. 3 (November 4, 2014): 103–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/bl-06-2014-0020.

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Purpose – Technical services librarians, catalogers and metadata specialists serve as the integral managers of comprehensive integrated systems designed to facilitate the ingestion, annotation, cataloging, storage, retrieval and distribution of organized, discoverable resources. Yet, despite the escalating costs to upgrade integrated library systems, maintain authority control for name and subject heading points of access and create original surrogate records for new library resources, technical services departments did not grow. Design/methodology/approach – The goal of sharing metadata is to reduce the local cost of its creation with minimal changes. However, research suggests that catalogers and metadata specialists review and authenticate the standards-compliant work of others, thus negating the goal of sharing and increasing the cost of building and maintaining online catalogs and discovery tools. How can a library administrator encourage the acceptance of metadata created at other information organizations and make prudent investments to support technical services functions? Findings – There are four strategies that administrators can adopt regarding these issues. Research limitations/implications – All libraries can benefit from considering the four strategies. Practical implications – First, cultivate a robust community of practice within the information organization. Second, recognize the importance of accepting standards-compliant bibliographic metadata with few modifications. Third, provide opportunities for managers to become skilled at coaching their team members. Fourth, inspire confidence. Social implications – Librarianship is a profession that an individual enters through graduate education in library and information science. As a new entrant, an individual becomes of a member of the community of practice and assumes personal responsibility for learning and mastering technical skills and competencies through experience, mentoring, professional development and continued actions (or tasks) comprising activities situated in a library or information environment. Originality/value – This is an original opinion piece.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "IA. Cataloging, bibliographic control"

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Flamino, Adriana Nascimento. "MARCXML: um padrão de descrição para recursos informacionais em Open Archives." Thesis, Marília : [s.n], 2006. http://eprints.rclis.org/16623/1/FLAMINO_AN_DISSERTACAO.pdf.

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The scientific communication is suffering considerable alterations so much in its process as in its structure and philosophy. The open archives and open access initiatives are contributing significantly for the undoing of the traditional model of scientific communication and for the construction of a new disaggregated model and with interoperability, fairer and efficient to disseminate the research results and like this, the knowledge generated by the scientific communities. However, due to the progresses of the information and communication technologies, not only the structure and the flow of the scientific communication is suffering considerable alterations, as well as the own concept and support of the scientific documents. This has been generating the need of the development of tools to optimize the organization, description, exchange and information retrieval processes, besides the digital preservation, among others. Highlight that the MARC format it has been allowing per decades the description and the exchange of bibliographical and cataloging registrations to the institutions, favoring the access to the contents informacionais contained in several collections. However, with the exponential growth of information and of the documents generation (above all digital), this has been demanding larger flexibility and interoperability among the several information systems available. In this scenery, the XML markup language is presented as one of the current developments that has as purpose to facilitate and to optimize the administration, storage and transmission of contents through Internet, it being incorporate for several sections and areas of the knowledge for the handling easiness and operational flexibility. Front to that, an exploratory study of theoretical analysis was accomplished, identifying the adaptation of the MARCXML format in the construction in ways of descriptive representation for information resources in open archives, as a complex and flexible standard of metadata, that will make possible the interoperability among information systems heterogeneous, besides the access to the information. As result of this research, It's considered that MARCXML is an appropriate format for description of data in a complex structure. It’s ended that the measure that increases the complexity of the documents in the repositories and open archives, plus it’s justified a structure of metadata, as the MARCXML format, that support the description of the pecificities of the informational resources, once this initiative is not and nor it will be if restricting to scientific documents, but expanding the other types of informational resources more and more complex and specific, also demanding an appropriate description for the specificities of the bibliographical entities.
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Lynch, Clifford. "The New Context for Bibliographic Control In the New Millennium." the Library of Congress, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105464.

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Information finding is changing in a world of digital information and associated search systems, with particular focus on methods of locating information that are distinct from, but complementary to, established practices of bibliographic description. A full understanding of these developments is essential in re-thinking bibliographic control in the new millennium, because they fundamentally change the roles and importance of bibliographic metadata in information discovery processes. There are three major approaches to finding information: through bibliographic surrogates, that represent an intellectual description of aspects and attributes of a work; through computational, content-based techniques that compare queries to parts of the actual works themselves; and through social processes that consider works in relationship to the user and his or her characteristics and history, to other works, and also to the behavior of other communities of users.
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McCallum, Sally. "Extending MARC for Bibliographic Control in the Web Environment:Challenges and Alternatives." the Library of Congress, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105983.

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This paper deconstructs the "MARC format" and similar newer tools like DC, XML, and RDF, separating structural issues from content-driven issues. Against that it examines the pressures from new types of digital resources, the responses to these pressures in format and content terms, and the transformations that may take place. The conflicting desires coming from users and librarians, the plethora of solutions to problems that constantly appear (some of which just might work), and the traditional access expectations are considered. Footnotes There are a large number of terms being used in the broader information community that often mean approximately the same thing, but relate concepts to the different backgrounds of the players. For example librarians are sometimes confused that metadata is something new and a replacement for either cataloging or MARC. Metadata is cataloging and not MARC. In this article terms based on library specialist terminology are used, with occasional use of alternative terms indicated below, depending on context. No difference in meaning is intended by the use of alternative terminology . The descriptions of the terms are indicative, not strict. cataloging data or cataloging content = metadata - used broadly, in this context, for all data (descriptive, administrative, and structural) that relates to the resources being described. content rules - rules for formulation of the data including controlled lists and codes. data elements - the individual identifiable pieces of cataloging data (e.g., name, title, subtitle) and including elements that are often called attributes or qualifiers (since generally this paper does not need to isolate data elements in to subtypes). relationships - the semantics that relate data elements, e.g., name is author of title, title has subtitle. content rules - the rules for formulating data element content structure = syntax - the physical arrangement of parts of an entity record - the bundle of information that describes a resource format = DTD - a defined specification of structure and markup markup = tag set = content designation - a system of symbols used to identify in some way the following data. ANSI/NISO Z39.2, Record Interchange Format, and ISO 2709, Format for Data Interchange. The two standards are essentially identical in specification. ANSI/NISO has a few provisions where the ISO standard is not specific, but there is no conflict between the two standards. Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records. IFLA Study Group on the Functional Requirements for the Bibliographic Record. Munich, Saur, 1998. ISO 8879, Standardized General Markup Language (SGML).
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Bozzarelli, Oriana. "Authority control. Teorie, applicazioni e prospettive di sviluppo." Thesis, 2004. http://eprints.rclis.org/14297/1/authority_control_OB.pdf.

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The authority control, though being a process which integrates the catalogue architecture – and which assures the indexes quality (author, title, descriptor) and supports the relational and syndetic structure of the catalogue, endorsing capabilities of fully retrieving the information it contains – for a long time has been disregarded in the context of the theoretic thought of the catalogue pertaining process. During the last years this trend was reversed: the authority control gained a first level role on the international bibliotheconomic scenario; at the present time in this area there are many operative plans and new applications, often managed in a co-operative and trans-national way, in some cases stimulating the authority control to extend its range of action outside libraries, in order to interoperate with heterogeneous systems like archives, e-commerce systems and museums. This work wants to define the role and the functions of the nominal and semantic authority control. The first part deals with the authority control under the theoretic point of view: all its elements are examined, while its origin and development in the cataloguing process and in relation with the organisation and relational structure of the catalogue is outlined. The second part treats the semantic indexes control; after a short theoretic-normative report, the situation of the authority control in Italy, which has today, like it never had, a particular evolution, is deeply examined. Referring to the Sistema Biliotecario Nazionale (SBN, National Library Service), the story of the evolution of the semantic authority control in Italy is sketched, along with the new development perspectives favoured by the Nuovo Soggettario project. At the end this work treats what should be considered the most important existing project, on a co-operative international basis, of subject authority control: the Subject Authority Cooperative Program (SACO).
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MORENO, Fernanda P. "FRBR - Requisitos Funcionais para Registros Bibliográficos: um estudo no catálogo da Rede Bibliodata." Thesis, 2006. http://eprints.rclis.org/7593/1/DISSERTA%C3%87%C3%83O_FERNANDA_MORENO_-_UnB.pdf.

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In the context of library studies and Information Science, descriptive representation a serie of specialist meetings trying to establish standards to bibliographic description. Originated by one of international meetings, FRBR - Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records, published by International Federation of Library Association and Institutions IFLA in 1998, it started a new interpretation of the bibliographic records was introduced, reorganizing their elements and presenting concepts and definitions of entities, attributes and relationships. The study became reflexes of the model FRBR in an electronic catalog, on-line, nationwide, through the examination of bibliographic records in format Machine Readable Cataloging – MARC, in order to systematize the relationship between the elements. Using appropriate literature and characteristics regarding potentials to realize the study, had been selected registers according to Catálogo Coletivo da Rede Bibliodata (Bibliodata Network Public Collection Catalog), and characterizing a study case. To illustrated the reflex of the model on the records, was used the conversional tool, FRBR Display Tool, from Library of Congress (LC), and besides the use of auxiliary tools when was made necessary. In order to complete the study, a few issues encountered in the literature were brought back as a manner to reach the goal of systematizing the relationships, given the relative failure of the tool under this aspect. Analytics stages comprise sample registers, notoriously descriptive and of the register converted in document that contains register model. In this phase, that is impossible to discuss every case, some tipical cases for each type of entitle purpose in FRBR. The results conducting to a necessity of register normalization and it is suggested tags MARC linking a better visualization of the model. Absence of discussions due to the use of models and international standards is considering as a potential trouble and there are paths indicated for the ways of future researches that would be realize, and one contribution to construct theorist corpus of the area.
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Assunção, Maria Clara. "Catalogação de documentos musicais escritos: uma abordagem à luz da evolução normativa." Thesis, 2005. http://eprints.rclis.org/7633/1/Tese_-_Todaps.pdf.

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This study results from the awareness of the insufficiency in standards and rules used for the identification and description of written musical documents. Enlightened by the new standard development, particularly the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) and recent studies on the concept of a work and bibliographic relationships, an equilibrium is intended between the music cataloguing rules normally used on libraries, very generalist, and the rules usually used by musicologists for the description of the same documents, particularly RISM rules, which are very specific an inaccessible to a lesser specialized public. Some proposals are made in order to contribute to the handling of music by the current revisions of FRBR, ISBD(PM) and UNIMARC. The final result is intended to be a description model according to the practice and the spirit underlying library cataloguing, still detailed enough to result in a useful tool to musicians and musicologists. The model is tested in a sample of bibliographic records from the opera Lauriane, composed by Augusto Machado.
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Silveira, Naira Christofoletti. "Análise do impacto dos requisitos funcionais para registros bibliográficos (FRBR) nos pontos de acesso de responsabilidade pessoal." Thesis, 2007. http://eprints.rclis.org/11032/1/Disserta%C3%A7%C3%A3o_vers%C3%A3o_final.pdf.

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The alterations to the way knowledge is produced and the great amount of documents stimulate and pressurize into changes in cataloguing. In this context, a theoretical model for cataloguing known as Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) was published in 1998. Generally speaking, the cataloguing codes are divided into two parts: one related to description and another to the access points. This work aims to analyse the procedures to choose the access points of personal responsibility of the bibliographic records, in order to relate them to the concepts shown in the FRBR. The present work is characterized as a theoretical search and the investigation resorts to deductive approach to analyse the rules and the internationally accepted principles utilized in the choice of the access points. This search also has an empirical part to collect factual data about the use of cataloguing rules and to compare the registers with or without the use of the FRBR. As a result, it is observed that the cataloguing rules are still directed to the impressed catalogues. However, the concepts presented by the FRBR are related to the automated catalogues. The FRBR enlarge the dimensions of the responsabilities about the content of work and expression, and they translate the social changes to the possibilities of information representation in the bibliographic records. With the FRBR the rules have to be stipulated to facilitate the user activities. This implies in the review of the cataloguing rules, mainly the ones related to the choice of the access point. In this way, the professional of information will pay more efforts to determine which the access points for the user are. Among the uncountable impacts caused by the FRBR, perhaps the most important are to resume the discussion about the cataloguing in theoretical level and to highlight the importance of intellectual work of professional of information.
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Caldas, SESC. "ELEMENTOS NECESSÁRIOS À REPRESENTAÇÃO DESCRITIVA DE PARTITURAS: um estudo com as Bachianas Brasileiras n.1, 2 e 4 de Heitor Villa-Lobos." Thesis, 2007. http://eprints.rclis.org/11833/1/TCC_-_S%C3%A9rgio_-_Final.pdf.

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Estudo sobre o uso dos elementos constitutivos de partituras necessários à representação descritiva. Discute-se, em princípio, os conceitos de representação descritiva, regras para catalogação AACR2 e formato MARC para registros bibliográficos. Apresenta-se, em seguida, conceitos musicais; traça-se uma abordagem específica sobre a evolução da notação musical, apresentando conceitos de diversos tipos de partituras e dos principais elementos gráficos de representação do som. Identifica-se os elementos de representação descritiva nas Bachianas Brasileiras n.1, 2 e 4 de Heitor Villa-Lobos e em seguida apresenta-se uma relação de equivalência entre os elementos identificados e as áreas de catalogação. Elegeu-se analisar o modelo de registro bibliográfico da Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP) e da Biblioteca Nacional (BN), sobretudo apresentando aspectos relacionados aos parágrafos descritivos e recuperáveis, sob a ótica do profissional da informação e do músico. Debate-se a adequação do uso dos elementos das partituras nos registros bibliográficos e conclui-se apresentando resultados e sugestões para estudos futuros.
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Handler, Margret. "Der Teilnachlaß von Univ.-Prof. Dr. med. Burghard BREITNER (1884 – 1956) : Ordnung, Inventarisierung, Erschließung, Verzeichnung." Thesis, 1999. http://eprints.rclis.org/15457/1/MargretHandler_verh_Schmied-Kowarzik.pdf.

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This paper deals with the arranging, accession, indexing, and listing of the literary remains of Univ.-Prof. Dr. med. Burghard Breitner (1884 – 1956). According to the "Literary Remains and Autographs Rules" (in German: "Regeln zur Erschließung von Nachlässen und Autographen", RNA), the items were identified and allocated to the following groups: manuscripts, correspondences, documents, and collections. The manuscripts were sorted chronologically, the correspondences were sorted alphabetically, and both the documents and the collections were sorted by means of subject terms. Following that, the items were filed in folders. Selected metadata (shelf number, author, title, writer of the letter, receiver of the letter, location, date, etc.) was written on the folders and entered in the inventory. Exemplarily, some manuscripts and correspondences were entered into allegro-HANS, a database established at the Austrian National Library aimed at the indexing of remains, according to the RNA. The records in allegro-HANS can be migrated to the union catalogue of the Austrian academic libraries, based on the library system Aleph 500. Due to the large extent of the remains, it was not possible to compile a complete catalogue. However, the selected folders give an impression of the character and importance of the remains. This paper also contains a short biography of Burghard Breitner and a list of his publications.
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López, González Héctor Alejandro. "Descripción de atributos de recursos digitales audiovisuales en registros RDA representados en el sistema de gestión de contenidos Joomla!" Thesis, 2012. http://eprints.rclis.org/17074/1/TESIS%20Alejandro.pdf.

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This paper presents a proposal for the implementation of RDA in the description of films and videotapes, also shows a Web tool developed in Joomla! for access and control of information, facilitating the location, identification, selection and retrieval of records created in the RDA.
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Books on the topic "IA. Cataloging, bibliographic control"

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Smiraglia, Richard P. Bibliographic control of music, 1897-2000. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, 2006.

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Smiraglia, Richard P. Music cataloging: The bibliographic control of printed and recorded music in libraries. Englewood, Colo: Libraries Unlimited, 1989.

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S, Intner Sheila, Smiraglia Richard P. 1952-, and American Library Association. Resources and Technical Services Division., eds. Policy and practice in bibliographic control of nonbook media. Chicago: American Library Association, 1987.

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Seminar, on Bibliographic Records (1990 Stockholm Sweden). Seminar on Bibliographic Records: Proceedings of the seminar held in Stockholm, 15-16 August 1990, and sponsored by the IFLA UBCIM Programme and the IFLA Division of Bibliographic Control. Mūnchen: K. G. Saur, 1992.

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Smiraglia, Richard P. Musiccataloging: The bibliographic control of printed and recorded music in libraries. Englewood, Colo: Libraries Unlimited, 1989.

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Taylor, Marcia. Bibliographic control of computer files: The feasibility of a union catalogue of computer files. [London]: British Library, Research and Development Dept., 1990.

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Preconference on Bibliographic Control of Conference Proceedings (1994 Miami, Fla.). Bibliographic control of conference proceedings, papers, and conference materials from the Preconference on the Bibliographic Control of Conference Proceedings at the annual conference of the American Library Association June 24, 1994, Miami, Florida. Chicago: Association of College and Research Libraries, 1996.

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Komorous, Hana. International guidelines for the cataloguing of newspapers: For the IFLA Section on Serial Publications, Working Group on Newspapers. London: IFLA Universal Bibliographic Control and International Marc Programme, 1989.

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OCLC. Archives and manuscript control format. 2nd ed. Dublin, Ohio: OCLC, Online Computer Library Center, 1986.

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John, Byford, Trickey Keith V, and Woodhouse Susi, eds. AACR, DDC, MARC and friends: The role of CIG in bibliographic control. London: Library Association Pub., 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "IA. Cataloging, bibliographic control"

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Brugger, Judith M. "Cataloging for Digital Libraries." In Electronic Resources: Selection and Bibliographic Control, 59–73. CRC Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003075349-5.

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Văn Tặc, Phạm, and Phạm Thị Minh Tâm. "The Situation of Bibliographic Control in Vietnamese Libraries." In Advances in Library and Information Science, 258–85. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-6618-3.ch016.

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The role of bibliographic control in Vietnamese libraries is analyzed from various perspectives such as the function, objectives, and direction of standardization in cataloging. In Vietnam, the unified description cataloging and bibliographic control in libraries still faces many difficulties due to the inconsistent application of the MARC21, AACR2, DDC, ISBD, and other emerging cataloging standards in the Vietnamese library system. This chapter analyzes the limitations of applying standards through the Cataloguing in Publication (CIP) tool and offers suggestions for improving the situation for better bibliographic control and better information for users.
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Sanner, Elyssa M. "Preliminary Training for RDA: A Survey of Cataloging Department Heads." In Functional Future for Bibliographic Control, 161–89. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315093802-11.

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Davis-Brown, Beth, and David Williamson. "Cataloging at the Library of Congress in the Digital Age." In Electronic Resources: Selection and Bibliographic Control, 171–96. CRC Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003075349-12.

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Dillon, Martin, and Erik Jul. "Cataloging Internet Resources: The Convergence of Libraries and Internet Resources." In Electronic Resources: Selection and Bibliographic Control, 197–238. CRC Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003075349-13.

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Keenan, Teressa M. "Charting a Course With NOMAP: Integrating Metadata Workflows Into a Traditional Cataloging Unit." In Functional Future for Bibliographic Control, 147–60. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315093802-10.

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Hoffman, Gretchen L. "Could the Functional Future of Bibliographic Control Change Cataloging Work? An Exploration Using Abbott." In Functional Future for Bibliographic Control, 59–74. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315093802-4.

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Morgan, Eric Lease. "Possible Solutions for Incorporating Digital Information Mediums into Traditional Library Cataloging Services." In Electronic Resources: Selection and Bibliographic Control, 143–70. CRC Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003075349-11.

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