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Well, after over a week of checking the RDA site every day, today we received the announcement on the cataloguing lists that RDA full draft has been delayed (again), until (they say) 17 November:
Due to complications in software development, the Committee of
Principals has determined that the full draft of RDA will be issued
in PDF files. [...]
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Having worked in the Alcohol and Other Drug sector before moving into more general health librarianship this year, I’ve been interested in the growing literature on network theory within medicine. As a non-clinician, it can be a little bit difficult to follow some of the debate - especially at the genetic level. A recent article in [...]
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This week on AUTOCAT, Judith Kirk (Western Michigan University Libraries, Kalamazoo) shared the results of her recent informal survey of authority control practice. Although the opt-in sample size was small (12 libraries) and entirely US-based, it included some interesting snippets. These two comments on the management of authority control caught ...
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Poetry International has an interesting blogging experiment going on. From the card attendees found on our seats on Saturday evening (and presumably all this year’s events):
This year, poets, artists, young creatives, international writers and professionals from the world of literature join us as festival bloggers in residence. They are ...
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In a recent article in Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, Lynne C. Howarth and Jean Weihs provide a history of one of the hottest topics in the RDA draft - the demise of the Rule of Three.
Beginning with some historical background on the main entry concept generally, referencing Cutter and the ALA Rules of 1941, they [...]
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“The full draft of RDA will be available for Constituency Review during the week of November 3rd,” according to an email from the Joint Steering Committee to LIS-UKBIBS.
Even more excitingly, they’re planning “to issue it in a preliminary version of the software with Browse and Quick Search functionality.”
Of course, ...
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Preparing this week’s lecture, I came across an interesting paper by Ling Hwey Jeng questioning the necessity and cost-effectiveness of authority control.
After a brief synopsis of the main aims and objectives, Jeng concludes that
In cataloging, accuracy means authoritative, standardized, and consistent accuracy. It means both completeness ...
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A UCLA study carried out on 24 middle-aged and older adults has found that Internet searching increases brain function.
Study participants performed Web searches and book-reading tasks while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans, which recorded the subtle brain-circuitry changes experienced during these activities ...
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One of the highlights of Elisad was hearing metadata expert Karen Coyle speak. Her paper Future of the Catalog was unusual for Elisad in that no reference was made to AOD, but it was no less riveting for that, and probably very healthy for subject specialists to be faced with a wider perspective.
Beginning with stats [...]
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Well done to Suzanne Wheatley (View from the Hill) for spotting this personal add in London Lite this week:
“To Deborah the library agency cataloguer. I saw you on a Thursday about a month ago. You’re gorgeous with amber eyes - and the rest. How about coffee and conversation and we can find out if our [...]
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