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  1. IFLA Cataloguing Principles : steps towards an International Cataloguing Code. Report from the 1st Meeting of Experts on an International Cataloguing Code, Frankfurt 2003 (2004) 0.05
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    BK
    06.04 / Ausbildung, Beruf, Organisationen <Information und Dokumentation>
    Classification
    06.04 / Ausbildung, Beruf, Organisationen <Information und Dokumentation>
    Footnote
    The next section collects three papers, all presented at the meeting by the people best placed to address the topics authoritatively and comprehensively. The first is by John D. Byrum, of the Library of Congress, and Chair of the ISBD Review Group, who clearly and concisely explains the history and role of the ISBDs in "IFLA's ISBD Programme. Purpose, process, and prospects." The next paper, "Brave new FRBR world" is by Patrick Le Boeuf, of the Bibliothèque nationale de France and Chair of the FRBR Review Group (a French version is available an the website). Drawing from his extensive expertise with FRBR, Le Boeuf explains what FRBR is and equally importantly is not, points to its impact in the present context of Code revision, and discusses insights relevant to the working group topics that can be drawn from FRBR. Closing this section is Barbara Tillett's contribution "A Virtual International Authority File," which signals an important change in thinking about international cooperation for bibliographic control. Earlier efforts focussed an getting agreement about form and structure of headings, this view stresses linking authority files to share the intellectual effort yet present headings to the user in the form that is most appropriate culturally.
    The section of background papers starts most appropriately by reprinting the Statement of Principles from the 1961 Paris Conference and continues with another twelve papers of varying lengths, most written specifically for the IME ICC. For the published report the papers have been organized to follow the order of topics assigned to the Tive working groups: Working Group 1 Personal names; WG2 Corporate bodies; WG3 Seriality; WG4 Multivolume/multipart structures; and WG5 Uniform titles, GMDs. Pino Buizza and Mauro Guerrini co-author a substantial paper "Author and title access point control: On the way national bibliographic agencies face the issue forty years after the Paris Principles," which was first presented in Italian at the November 2002 workshop an Cataloguing and Authority Control in Rome. Issues that remain unresolved are which name or title to adopt, which form of the name or title, and which entry word to select, while choice of headings has become more uniform. The impact of catalogue language (meaning both the language of the cataloguing agency and of the majority of users of the catalogue) an these choices is explored by examining the headings used in ten national authority files for a full range of names, personal and corporate. The reflections presented are both practical and grounded in theory. Mauro Guerrini, assisted by Pino Buizza and Lucia Sardo, contributes a further new paper "Corporate bodies from ICCP up to 2003," which is an excellent survey of the surprisingly controversial issue of corporate bodies as authors, starting with Panizzi, Jewett, Cutter, Dziatzko, Fumagalli, and Lubetzky, through the debate at the Paris Conference, to the views of Verona, Domanovszky and Carpenter, and work under the auspices of IFLA an the Form and structure of corporate headings (FSCH) project and its Rvew, as well as a look at the archival standard ISAAR(CPF). This paper is the only one to have a comprehensive bibliography.
    Ton Heijligers reflects an the relation of the IME ICC effort to AACR and calls for an examination of the principles and function of the concept of main entry in his brief paper "Main entry into the future?" Ingrid Parent's article "From ISBD (S) to ISBD(CR): a voyage of discovery and alignment" is reprinted from Serials Librarian as it tells of the successful project not only to revise an ISBD, but also to harmonize three Codes for serials cataloguing: ISBD (CR), ISSN and AACR. Gunilla Jonsson's paper "The bibliographic unit in the digital context" is a perceptive discussion of level of granularity issues which must be addressed in deciding what to catalogue. Practical issues and user expectation are important considerations, whether the material to be catalogued is digital or analog. Ann Huthwaite's paper "Class of materials concept and GMDs" as well as Tom Delsey's ensuing comments, originated as Joint Steering Committee restricted papers in 2002. It is a great service to have them made widely available in this form as they raise fundamental issues and motivate work that has since taken place, leading to the current major round of revision to AACR. The GMD issue is about more than a list of terms and their placement in the cataloguing record, it is intertwined with consideration of whether the concept of classes of materials is helpful in organizing cataloguing rules, if so, which classes are needed, and how to allow for eventual integration of new types of materials. Useful in the Code comparison exercise is an extract of the section an access points from the draft of revised RAK (German cataloguing rules). Four short papers compare aspects of the Russian Cataloguing Rules with RAK and AACR: Tatiana Maskhoulia covers corporate body headings; Elena Zagorskaya outlines current development an serials and other continuing resources; Natalia N. Kasparova covers multilevel structures; Ljubov Ermakova and Tamara Bakhturina describe the uniform title and GMD provisions. The website includes one more item by Kasparova "Bibliographic record language in multilingual electronic communication." The volume is rounded out by the appendix which includes the conference agenda, the full list of participants, and the reports from the five working groups. Not for the casual reader, this volume is a must read for anyone working an cataloguing code development at the national or international levels, as well as those teaching cataloguing. Any practising cataloguer will benefit from reading the draft statement of principles and the three presentation papers, and dipping into the background papers."
    Weitere Rez. in: ZfBB 52(2005) H.3/4, S.227-228 (K. Haller): " ... Im Mittelpunkt der Publikation steht das revidierte Statement of International Cataloguing Principles. Es wendet sich mit seinen Grundsätzen gleichermaßen an Bibliografien und Bibliothekskataloge sowie Datensammlungen in Archiven, Museen und dergleichen Einrichtungen. Terminologisch und inhaltlich geht das Statement von den Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) aus. Durch die Functional Requirements and Numbering of Authority Records (FRANAR) werden die Normdateien und die Sacherschließung in das Statement eingebracht. Die FRBR sind ein theoretisches Modell, ein strategisches Dokument, in dem durch die Entitäten die logischen Zusammenhänge dargestellt und damit die notwendi ge Erschließungsqualität definiert wird. Es geht um klare Grundsätze für Wahl, Anzahl und Art der Suchbegriffe (access points) und deren Beziehungen. ... Insgesamt ist die Publikation sehr zu begrüßen und als Pflichtlektüre allen Verantwortlichen im Erschließungsbereich und dem in Ausbildung befindlichen Nachwuchs dringend zu empfehlen."
  2. ¬The thesaurus: review, renaissance and revision (2004) 0.05
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    Footnote
    The didactic parts of the book are a collection of exercises, readings and resources constituting a "Teach yourself " chapter written by Alan Thomas, ending with the warning that "New challenges include how to devise multi-functional and usersensitive vocabularies, corporate taxonomies and ontologies, and how to apply the transformative technology to them." This is absolutely right, and there is a need for some good writing that would tackle these issues. Another chapter, by James Shearer, skilfully manages to compress a practical exercise in building a thesaurus into some twenty A5 size pages. The third chapter in this set, by Marianne Lykke Nielsen, contains extensive reviews of key issues and selected readings under eight headings from the concept of the thesaurus, through the various construction stages and ending with automatic construction techniques. . . . This is a useful and approachable book. It is a pity that the index is such a poor advertisement for vocabulary control and usefulness."
    LCSH
    Subject headings
    RSWK
    Informations- und Dokumentationswissenschaft / Information Retrieval / Inhaltserschließung / Thesaurus (BVB)
    Subject
    Informations- und Dokumentationswissenschaft / Information Retrieval / Inhaltserschließung / Thesaurus (BVB)
    Subject headings
    Theme
    Konzeption und Anwendung des Prinzips Thesaurus
  3. Khairy, I.; Wastawy, S.: ¬The Development of name and subject authority file (Bibalex) at the Library of Alexandria (2008) 0.05
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    Abstract
    This paper aims at illustrating the methodology of constructing the Arabic authority headings. Accordingly, the main focus is on the system of linking name headings in Arabic-Roman scripts and subject headings in the three languages Arabic, English and French. The Bibliotheca Alexandrina's biscript / trilingual authority file project »bibalex« can be considered the first step toward establishing cooperative projects with union catalogs and authority files.
  4. Hearn, S.: Comparing catalogs : currency and consistency of controlled headings (2009) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Evaluative and comparative studies of catalog data have tended to focus on methods that are labor intensive, demand expertise, and can examine only a limited number of records. This study explores an alternative approach to gathering and analyzing catalog data, focusing on the currency and consistency of controlled headings. The resulting data provide insight into libraries' use of changed headings and their success in maintaining currency and consistency, and the systems needed to support the current pace of heading changes.
  5. Junger, U.; Hapke, T.: Erschließung 2013: Visionen und mögliche Entwicklungen : Bericht über einen Workshop der Facharbeitsgruppe Erschließung und Informationsvermittlung auf der 12. Verbundkonferenz des Gemeinsamen Bibliotheksverbundes am 11. September 2008 in der Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz (2008) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Das Thema Erschließung war immer ein Kernthema bibliothekarischer Arbeit. Es wird zunehmend durch Aspekte der Internationalisierung und der Wirtschaftlichkeit beeinflusst. Wachsende Massendigitalisierung und verstärktes Aufkommen von E-Books stellen die Tradition der bisherigen bibliothekarischen Katalogisierungsgewohnheiten in Frage. Die Vielfalt der Datenproduzenten, deren Daten in die Bibliothekskataloge einfließen, nimmt zu. So liefern, zum Beispiel bei E-Books, in der Regel die Verlage auch die Nachweisdaten, die - wenn überhaupt - eher internationalen Standards als den RAK entsprechen. Innerhalb der Möglichkeiten des Web 2.0 entstehen sogenannte Next-Generation-Kataloge. Nutzer erstellen sich hier im Rahmen von LibraryThing auch ihre eigenen Kataloge. Der Anspruch von Bibliotheken, ihren Kunden für alle Fächer ein einheitliches Instrument zur Recherche nach lokal verfügbaren Ressourcen zu geben, macht grundsätzliche Diskussionen notwendig, zumal den Kunden mit der Suchmaschine Google ein Instrument zur Verfügung steht, das alle Nutzerbedürfnisse zu befriedigen scheint. Auch zur Rechtfertigung des Aufwands in den Bibliotheken ist es notwendig, die Nutzerperspektive einzunehmen und das eigene Arbeiten kritisch zu reflektieren. Ein Beispiel sei hier genannt: So dürfte es für Nutzer in der Regel irrelevant sein, ob es sich bei einem elektronischen Buch um eine Primär- oder eine Sekundärausgabe handelt. Die Anwendung des geltenden Regelwerks zur Formalerschließung kann hier aber zu unterschiedlichen Katalogisierungsergebnissen führen. Warum eigentlich? Seit kurzem ist zumindest dem Missstand abgeholfen, dass die elektronische Fassung z.B. einer Dissertation die Haupteintragung - anders als die zugehörige Druckausgabe - unter dem Sachtitel, und nicht unter dem Verfasser erhielt. Vor diesem Hintergrund hat sich die Facharbeitsgruppe Erschließung und Informationsvermittlung entschieden, ihren alljährlichen Workshop auf der Verbundkonferenz des Gemeinsamen Bibliotheksverbundes in diesem Jahr dem Thema "Zukunft der Erschließung" zu widmen, auch aus dem Eindruck heraus, dass hierzulande - im Gegensatz zu den USA - so gut wie keine grundsätzlichen Diskussionen stattfinden, obwohl es Anlass und Anregung gäbe. Zu denken ist z.B. an die Studie "On the Record", die eine Expertengruppe im Auftrag der Library of Congress erstellt hat und die Leitlinien für die bibliothekarische Erschließungsarbeit der Zukunft enthält.
    Der Ausrichter des Workhops, die Facharbeitsgruppe Erschließung und Informationsvermittlung (FAG-El) des Gemeinsamen Bibliotheksverbundes (GBV) begleitet die Arbeit des GBV und der Verbundzentrale des GBV. Als eine von fünf Facharbeitsgruppen bereitet sie strategische Weiterentwicklungen vor und entwirft in Abstimmung mit der Verbundzentrale Konzepte und Konventionen für das von ihr behandelte Themenspektrum: - Strategien zur formalen und sachlichen Erschließung - Metadaten: Erzeugung, Transfer zwischen Systemen, nutzerorientierte Aufbereitung - Nutzerorientierte Weiterentwicklung der Nachweissysteme, Bibliothek 2.0 - Digitale Bibliothek und die Integration elektronischer Ressourcen in die bestehende Informationsinfrastruktur - Informationskompetenz, E-Learning, Auskunftsdienste.
    Dass Bibliotheken sich der nutzergetriebenen Erschließung öffnen müssen, war Konsens. Um die in den Vorträgen gleichfalls geforderte Vernetzung von Datenbeständen und die dafür hilfreiche Normierung von Daten zu befördern, wäre es sinnvoll, wenn die bibliothekarischen Normdateien - allen voran die kooperativ gepflegte Schlagwortnormdatei - zur freien Nachnutzung ins Netz gestellt würden, ähnlich wie die Library of Congress es mit ihren Subject Headings vorgemacht hat, die SKOS-kodiert mittlerweile für Experimente zur Verfügung steheng. In Sachen Retrievalsysteme prallten gegensätzliche Meinungen aufeinander: Auslöser war das von Frau Jaeggi eingebrachte Beispiel "jakobinischer Freiheitsdrang": Sollte eine solche Suchanfrage automatisch so umgewandelt werden (z.B. in "Jakobiner" und "Freiheit"), dass der Nutzer ein sinnvolles Ergebnis erhält, oder soll dieser intellektuelle Schritt Aufgabe des Recherchierenden bleiben? Sollen die Bibliothekare sich nur um den Input kümmern, und den Output, die Gestaltung von Suchsystemen, besser anderen überlassen, die von bibliothekarischer Terminologie und Regelgeleitetheit unbelastet sind? Aber: Müssen Input und Output nicht immer zusammen betrachtet werden, weil man nicht herausholen kann, was man zuvor nicht hineingesteckt hat? Konsens unter allen Diskutanten war aber, dass themenbezogene Recherchen durch eine bessere Benutzerführung erleichtert werden müssen und dass der Schatz an Informationen und Wissen, der insbesondere in inhaltserschließenden Daten steckt, in den Bibliothekskatalogen endlich an die Oberfläche geholt werden muss. Zusammenfassend lässt sich sicher sagen: - Qualitätvolle bibliothekarische Erschließung ist nicht obsolet. - Sie ist Bestandteil der Wissensorganisation, die im Web erfolgt. - Öffnung und Vernetzbarkeit sind daher das Gebot der Stunde.
  6. ueda, K.: Simplified plan for a new maintenance system for three tools : Basic subject Headings, Nippon Decimal classification, and Nippon Cataloguing Rules (2000) 0.05
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  7. People, places & things : a list of popular Library of Congress Subject Headings with Dewey Numbers (2001) 0.05
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  8. Wilson, M.D.; Spillane, J.L.; Cook, C.; Highsmith, A.L.: ¬The relationship between subject headings for works of fiction and circulation in an academic library (2000) 0.05
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  9. Hoffman, G.: Hebrew subject headings at Bar-Ilan University : an update (2000) 0.05
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  10. Landry, P.: ¬The MACS project : multilingual access to subject headings (LCSH, RAMEAU, SWD) (2000) 0.05
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  11. Kreider, L.J.: LCSH works! : Subject searching effectiveness at the Cleveland Public Library and the growth of Library of Congress Subject Headings through cooperation (2000) 0.05
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    Abstract
    The nature of a library's collections determines what kind of subject access to provide to those collections. The collections of the Cleveland Public Library serve both the recreational and research needs of a large urban population. The Cleveland Public Library uses Library of Congress Subject Headings to describe its collections. A study of subject searches entered by library patrons over the course of one week reveals several patterns among the types of subject headings used most frequently, reflecting the characteristics of the population served. Other topics discussed include subject access to fiction, juvenileliterature, and specialized collections
    Source
    The LCSH century: one hundred years with the Library of Congress Subject Headings system. Ed.: A.T.Stone
  12. Crawford, L.: People, places & things introduced (2001) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Ein Beitrag zum Nutzen von: People, places & things: a list of popular Library of Congress Subject Headings with Dewey Numbers. 2001.
  13. Rozman, D.: Nacela za predmetno oznacevanje : iskanje enotnosti v raznolikosti (2001) 0.05
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    Footnote
    Übers. d. Titels: Principles underlying subject headings: seeking unity in diversity
  14. Vizine-Goetz, D.: Popular LCSH with Dewey Numbers : Subject Headings for Everyone (2001) 0.05
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  15. Plummer, K.A.: Mathematics subject headings for the PreK-12 community: a comparison of key terms from the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) Mathematics Standards to ERIC Thesaurus descriptors and the Library of Congress Subject Headings (2006) 0.05
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    Abstract
    The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) is an international organization which supports the teaching and learning of mathematics for children from Pre-Kindergarten through Grade 12. In the year 2000, the NCTM produced Principles and Standards for School Mathematics; a document that has become the basis for state and local mathematics curriculum standards across the United States. This article examines the key terms identified in the NCTM standards, identifies their equivalents in the ERIC Thesaurus and the Library of Congress Subject Headings, and makes recommendations to bring library subject headings closer to reflecting the language common to mathematics educators.
  16. Leth, P.: Subject access - the Swedish approach (2007) 0.05
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    Object
    Swedish Subject Headings system
  17. Strader, C.R.: Author-assigned keywords versus Library of Congress Subject Headings : implications for the cataloging of electronic theses and dissertations (2009) 0.05
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    Abstract
    This study is an examination of the overlap between author-assigned keywords and cataloger-assigned Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) for a set of electronic theses and dissertations in Ohio State University's online catalog. The project is intended to contribute to the literature on the issue of keywords versus controlled vocabularies in the use of online catalogs and databases. Findings support previous studies' conclusions that both keywords and controlled vocabularies complement one another. Further, even in the presence of bibliographic record enhancements, such as abstracts or summaries, keywords and subject headings provided a significant number of unique terms that could affect the success of keyword searches. Implications for the maintenance of controlled vocabularies such as LCSH also are discussed in light of the patterns of matches and nonmatches found between the keywords and their corresponding subject headings.
  18. Anderson, J.D.; Pérez-Carballo, J.: Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) (2009) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Library of Congress Subject Headings (LSCH), which celebrated its 100th birthday in 1998, is the largest cataloging and indexing language in the world for the indication of the topics and formats of books and similar publications. It consists of a controlled list of main headings, many with subdivisions, with a rich system of cross references. It is supported by the U.S. government, and undergoes systematic revision. In recent decades its managers have begun to confront challenges such as biased terminology, complicated syntax (how terms are put together to form headings), and effective displays in electronic media. Many suggestions have been made for its improvement, including moving to a fully faceted system.
  19. ¬The LCSH century : One hundred years with the Library of Congress Subject Headings system (2000) 0.05
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    Content
    Enthält die Beiträge: BACKGROUND: Alva T STONE: The LCSH Century: A Brief History of the Library of Congress Subject Headings, and Introduction to the Centennial Essays - THEORY AND PRINCIPLES: Elaine SVENONIUS: LCSH: Semantics, Syntax and Specificity; Heidi Lee HOERMAN u. Kevin A. FURNISS: Turning Practice into Principles: A Comparison of the IFLA: Principles Underlying Subject Heading Languages (SHLs) and the Principles Underlying the Library of Congress Subject Headings System; Hope A. OLSON: Difference, Culture and Change:The Untapped Potential of LCSH - ONLINE ENVIRONMENT: Pauline Atherton COCHRANE: Improving LCSH for Use in Online Catalogs Revisited-What Progress Has Been Made? What Issues Still Remain?; Gregory WOOL: Filing and Precoordination: How Subject Headings Are Displayed in Online Catalogs and Why It Matters; Stephen HEARN: Machine-Assisted Validation of LC Subject Headings: Implications for Authority File Structure - SPECIFIC PERSPECTIVES: Thomas MANN: Teaching Library of Congress Subject Headings; Louisa J. KREIDER: LCSH Works! Subject Searching Effectiveness at the Cleveland Public Library and the Growth of Library of Congress Subject Headings Through Cooperation; Harriette HEMMASI u J. Bradford YOUNG: LCSH for Music: Historical and Empirical Perspectives; Joseph MILLER u. Patricia KUHR: LCSH and Periodical Indexing: Adoption vs. Adaptation; David P MILLER: Out from Under: Form/Genre Access in LCSH - WORLD VIEW: Magda HEINER-FREILING: Survey on Subject Heading Languages Used in National Libraries and Bibliographies; Andrew MacEWAN: Crossing Language Barriers in Europe: Linking LCSH to Other Subject Heading Languages; Alvaro QUIJANO-SOLIS u.a.: Automated Authority Files of Spanish-Language Subject Headings - FUTURE PROSPECTS: Lois Mai CHAN u. Theodora HODGES: Entering the Millennium: a new century for LCSH
    Footnote
    Die einzelnen Beiträge sind über die Buchversion erfasst: In: The LCSH century: one hundred years with the Library of Congress Subject Headings system. Ed.: A.T. Stone. New York: Haworth Press 2000.
  20. Bee, G.: CrissCross (2006) 0.05
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    Content
    "»Simplify your life«, heißt einer der großen Sachbuchbestseller der letzten Jahre. Dessen Quintessenz: In einer zusehends komplexer werdenden Welt sind Vereinfachungen (über)lebensnotwendig. Dies gilt für alle Lebensbereiche, in besonderem Maße aber für die Suche nach Informationen. Um Bibliotheksbenutzer an die von ihnen gewünschte Literatur heranzuführen, kann seitens der Bibliotheken sicher noch einiges an Vereinfachungsleistung erbracht werden - insbesondere dann, wenn der Benutzer sich bei der Suche nicht mit den Beständen seines nationalen Bibliothekssystems begnügt, sondern die Möglichkeit nutzt, weltweit online zu recherchieren. Eine Suche unter Zuhilfenahme von Titelstichwörtern bereitet heute nur wenig Kopfzerbrechen, ist aber oft unbefriedigend für die sachliche Suche. Leider gestaltet sich der hier deutlich zielführende Rückgriff auf Sacherschließungsdaten in der Praxis erheblich schwieriger. Der Benutzer ist mit einer Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Erschließungssysteme konfrontiert, die vielfach unverbunden nebeneinander existieren. Da die Bestände der weitaus meisten Bibliotheken heterogen erschlossen sind, müsste der Benutzer alle Erschließungsverfahren kennen und nacheinander anwenden, um sicherzustellen, dass ihm keine Informationen verloren gehen.
    An diesem Punkt setzt das neue Projekt CrissCross an, das gemeinsam von der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek (DNB) und der Fachhochschule Köln betrieben und von der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) gefördert wird. CrissCross schafft Verbindungslinien zwischen einigen besonders verbreiteten und bewährten Erschließungsinstrumenten: Der deutschsprachigen Schlagwortnormdatei (SWD), den besonders im angloamerikanischen Raum verbreiteten Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), der französischen Dokumentationssprache Répertoire d'autorité-matière encyclopédique et alphabétique unifié (Rameau) und der Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) als dem international am meisten verbreiteten Klassifikationssystem. CrissCross kann dabei auf zwei wichtigen Vorgängerprojekten aufbauen. Hier ist zum einen das ebenfalls von DNB und der Fachhochschule Köln gemeinsam betriebene Vorgängerprojekt »DDC Deutsch« zu nennen. Bereits während dessen Laufzeit war deutlich geworden, wie vorteilhaft sich eine Anreicherung des DDC-Registers mit dem Schlagwortbestand der SWD auf die Klassifikationspraxis auswirken könnte. Genau dieser Schritt wird nun vollzogen, wobei sich die Projektarbeit auf die Sachschlagwörter konzentriert - kein kleines Unterfangen, beläuft sich doch die Zahl der zurzeit in der SWD befindlichen Datensätze mit dem Indikator s auf über 154.000.
    Ein weiteres Fundament sind die Vorarbeiten aus dem gemeinsam von DNB, der Schweizerischen Landesbibliothek und anderen Partnern betriebenen Projekt Multilingual Access to Subjects (MACS). Im Rahmen von MACS wurden in größerem Umfang LCSH und Rameau-Datensätze miteinander verknüpft; einigen der dabei entstandenen Schlagwortpärchen wurde dabei bereits ein SWD-Äquivalent zugeordnet. Dreierverbindungen dieses Typs, erweitert um DDC-Notationen, werden auch im Rahmen von CrissCross entstehen. Die unterschiedliche Strukturierung der einzelnen Schlagwortsprachen sorgt allerdings für eine Vielzahl von Problemen, die das Projektteam bewältigen muss. Durch die Verlinkung der Schlagwortsprachen und die Verknüpfung mit der DDC erstellt CrissCross ein multilinguales verbales Recherchevokabular. Ungewöhnlich und innovativ ist dabei vor allem die Verbindung von verbaler und klassifikatorischer Sacherschließung, die zu einer bedeutenden Erweiterung der Recherchemöglichkeiten führen wird. Dies wird vor allem dann der Fall sein, wenn in Onlineumgebungen nutzbare Hilfsmittel wie das von der DNB zurzeit entwickelte Normdatenrecherchetool zur Verfügung stehen. In naher Zukunft wird der Nutzer dann bei seiner Suche auf eine Vielzahl unterschiedlich erschlossener Werke stoßen, ohne dass ihm die im Hintergrund vollzogene Auswertung von Normdaten bewusst sein muss. Er braucht im Grunde genommen überhaupt kein Vorwissen über Sacherschließungsinstrumente mitzubringen. »Simplify your search«, könnte das Motto dieser Vorgehensweise lauten. Die Nutzerfreundlichkeit der Bibliotheken wird durch den Einsatz derartiger Instrumente eine deutliche Steigerung erfahren. CrissCross wird seinen Teil dazu beitragen."

Languages

Types

  • a 3708
  • m 835
  • el 235
  • x 210
  • s 192
  • i 50
  • r 30
  • b 13
  • n 8
  • l 5
  • p 3
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Themes

Subjects

Classifications