Contributed by Organizations or Campuses; Articles, Papers, and Reports; Library Standards; and Information Access Management

On the Record: Report of The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:On the Record: Report of The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control (ID: CSD5308)
Source:Library of Congress
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/09/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This is the final report from The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control.

The Report is based on the key premise that the community is at a critical juncture in the evolution of bibliographic control and information access/provision. It is time to take stock of past practices, to look at today's trends, and to project a future path consistent with the goals of bibliographic control: to facilitate discovery, management, identification, and access of and to library materials and other information products. Libraries must work in the most efficient and cooperative manner to minimize where possible the costs of bibliographic control, but both the Library of Congress and library administrators generally must recognize that they need to identify and allocate (or, as appropriate, reallocate) sufficient funding if they are serious about attaining the goals of improved and expanded bibliographic control.

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Metasearch Authentication and Access Management

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Title:Metasearch Authentication and Access Management (ID: CSD4474)
Author(s):Michael Teets (OCLC, Inc.) and Peter E. Murray (Wright State University)
Source:D-Lib Magazine
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (2006)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:"Metasearch – also called parallel search, federated search, broadcast search, and cross-database search – has become commonplace in the information community's vocabulary. All speak to a common theme of searching and retrieving from multiple databases, sources, platforms, protocols, and vendors at the point of the user's request. Metasearch services rely on a variety of approaches including open standards (such as NISO's Z39.50 and SRU/SRW), proprietary programming interfaces, and "screen scraping." However, the absence of widely supported standards, best practices, and tools makes the metasearch environment less efficient for the metasearch provider, the content provider, and ultimately the end-user."
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