Breaking Out Of The Box: Transforming Archival Collections And Workflows Through Collaborative Description Projects, 2019 University of Kentucky
Breaking Out Of The Box: Transforming Archival Collections And Workflows Through Collaborative Description Projects, Cindy Cline, Libby Hertenstein, Lindy Smith, Rachel Howard, Rebecca Pattillo, Ruth E. Bryan
Library Presentations
Archivists and archival collections can often be siloed into the “special” corner of their parent library: under described, underutilized, and often even unknown. Finding a path out of isolation may require taking a new look at collection management needs and considering new partners in the work. Collaboration with colleagues can result in positive ripple effects that extend beyond the initial project goals. This session will highlight three innovative description projects where archivists partnered with non-archivists to improve access to targeted collections and will detail how their collaborations transformed their archival collections, work structures and relationships, and, ultimately, their users. After …
Book Review: Text Lies And Cataloging: Ethical Treatment Of Deceptive Works In The Library, 2019 Columbus State University
Book Review: Text Lies And Cataloging: Ethical Treatment Of Deceptive Works In The Library, Amy B. Parsons
Faculty Bibliography
No abstract provided.
Friends Of Musselman Library Newsletter Spring 2019, 2019 Gettysburg College
Friends Of Musselman Library Newsletter Spring 2019, Musselman Library
Friends of Musselman Library Newsletter
From the Dean (Robin Wagner)
Library News
- Don't Judge a book by its Cover: The Human Library
- You Can Come Home Again!
- Exhibits
- Recalling WWII at Home (Devin McKinney and Micheal Birkner)
- Library Works to Alleviate Textbook Misery (Janelle Wertzberger)
- Books Sent to African Library (Piper O'Keefe '17)
- Musselman Makeover
Paying it Forward (Sierra Green '11 and Olivia Simmet '18)
Student Paper Tops 1800 Downloads (Dayna Seeger '15)
Buy the Book
What's so Funny (Sunni DeNicola)
Book Displays Offer Outreach Opportunities (Sunni DeNicola)
Honor With Books
Data Drives Collecting Decisions
Rare Discovery: Signed 1st Edition by Adam Smith
Pressed Within …
Toward Inclusive Description: Reparations Through Community-Driven Metadata, 2019 University of Dayton
Toward Inclusive Description: Reparations Through Community-Driven Metadata, Jillian M. Ewalt
Marian Library Faculty Publications
This case study covers the process and policies involved in creating accurate and inclusive metadata for a historically marginalized community. The Japanese American Digitization Project was a consortial, collaborative digitization project with the goal of unifying and providing online access to tens of thousands of archival materials documenting the Japanese American experience. Traditionally, the Japanese American experience, particularly the internment during World War II, has been laden with euphemistic language. This article outlines community-driven metadata development, implementing an inclusive controlled vocabulary, and thinking about archival metadata as a process that can contribute to reparations.
My Own Private Library: A Peek Inside The Personal Library Of A Librarian, 2019 University of Georgia Law Library
My Own Private Library: A Peek Inside The Personal Library Of A Librarian, Rachel S. Evans
Articles, Chapters and Online Publications
The author shares the scope of her personal media collection, detailing home collection management and cataloging practices, and item organization. Stories are given for special items in the collection throughout the piece and photos are included.
Information Outlook, March/April 2019, 2019 San Jose State University
Information Outlook, March/April 2019, Special Libraries Association
Information Outlook, 2019
Volume 23, Issue 2
Cataloging And Metadata Committee -- Music Library Association (Open Access), 2019 The University of Akron
Cataloging And Metadata Committee -- Music Library Association (Open Access), Mike Monaco
Michael Monaco
Electronic Theses And Dissertations Workflows: Interdepartmental Collaboration At The University Of Arkansas Libraries, 2019 University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
Electronic Theses And Dissertations Workflows: Interdepartmental Collaboration At The University Of Arkansas Libraries, Rachel Paul, Cedar C. Middleton
Collaborative Librarianship
Creating workflows that involve the work of multiple departments within a large organization can be challenging, especially when the procedures are complex and involve a number of stakeholders. This paper describes and evaluates the redesign of an interdepartmental workflow for the dissemination of electronic theses and dissertations (ETDs) at a mid-sized academic library. The paper outlines the collaborative planning process within the library as well as the eventual outreach to additional stakeholders on campus, addressing the challenges of tackling such communication between the library and other ETD stakeholders. It then presents a detailed examination of the newly revised, semi-automated workflow, …
A-Z List Migration: Employing Collaborative Project Management At The University Of Guelph Mclaughlin Library, 2019 University of Guelph
A-Z List Migration: Employing Collaborative Project Management At The University Of Guelph Mclaughlin Library, Kailey Brisbin, Melanie S. Parlette-Stewart, Randy Oldham
Collaborative Librarianship
From 2003 – 2016, the University of Guelph McLaughlin Library maintained a custom ColdFusion database of databases. Motivated by a myriad of issues, a project working group set the goal of decommissioning the ColdFusion A-Z list and migrating to SpringShare LibGuides platform A-Z list feature. This article focuses on our A-Z list migration, highlighting the collaborative approach we took to curating our list of journal databases and operationalizing and distributing this shared task across several teams within our library. This article describes our project and approach, lessons learned, recommendations and best practices, as well as future directions.
Out Of The Basement: Partnering To Enhance The Discovery And Use Of Graphic Novels, 2019 University at Albany, State University of New York
Out Of The Basement: Partnering To Enhance The Discovery And Use Of Graphic Novels, Wendy L. West, Rebecca A. Nous
Collaborative Librarianship
This paper presents a project designed to promote and increase the use of graphic novels, previously a seldom utilized collection, at the University at Albany Libraries. Several units in the Libraries collaborated to add additional graphic novels to the collection, augment bibliographic records with genre headings to enhance discovery, and promote this collection in the University Libraries and online. The Libraries used a variety of marketing techniques, including social media. Circulation statistics were recorded before, during, and after the promotional activities. This collaboration not only resulted in an increase in circulation activity for these titles while they were on display …
Unl Libraries Book Use By Broad Discipline (Social Sciences, Sciences, And Humanities): Circulations And Renewals: Books Acquired 2003/04 – 2007/08 Via Approval Plan Selection, Librarian Firm Order, And Ill Patron-Driven Acquisition, 2019 University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Unl Libraries Book Use By Broad Discipline (Social Sciences, Sciences, And Humanities): Circulations And Renewals: Books Acquired 2003/04 – 2007/08 Via Approval Plan Selection, Librarian Firm Order, And Ill Patron-Driven Acquisition, David C. Tyler, Brianna D. Hitt
UNL Libraries: White Papers
On numerous occasions over the course of the UNL Libraries’ continuing discussions concerning the allocation of collections monies, the UNL Libraries’ liaison librarians have made a variety of assertions, arguments, and claims concerning their patrons and their patrons’ needs. For example, the humanities librarians have repeatedly staked a claim to the humanities’ being the “book” discipline and have made a variety of assertions concerning humanities patrons and humanities books that could be treated as testable hypothesis.
For example:
1) Humanities patrons use books more than do other disciplines’ patrons;
2) Humanities patrons use more books than do other disciplines’ patrons; …
Characterizing Same Work Relationships In Large-Scale Digital Libraries, 2019 University of Denver
Characterizing Same Work Relationships In Large-Scale Digital Libraries, Peter Organisciak, Summer Shetenhelm, Danielle Francisco Albuquerque Vasques, Krystyna K. Matusiak
Library and Information Science: Faculty Conference Presentations
As digital libraries grow, they are prompting new consideration into same-work relationships. They provide unique opportunities for resource discovery, but their scale and aggregated models lead to challenges presented by duplicates and variants. Addressing this problem is complicated by metadata inconsistencies as well as structural/content differences. Following from work in algorithmically identifying duplicate works in the HathiTrust Digital Library, we present some cases that complicate our existing language for work entity relationships. These serve to contextualize the complexities of same-work alignment in digital libraries, ground future discussion around content similarity, and inform methods to better identify duplicates in large-scale digital …
Volume 39, Number 1, March 2019 Olac Newsletter, 2019 University of California, Santa Cruz
Volume 39, Number 1, March 2019 Olac Newsletter, Marcia Barrett, Debra Spidal, Richard N. Leigh, Jan Mayo, Yoko Kudo, Jay Weitz, Lisa Romano
OLAC Newsletters
Digitized March 2019 issue of the OLAC Newsletter.
A Road Taken: A Cataloging Team Becomes A Metadata Team, 2019 Clemson University
A Road Taken: A Cataloging Team Becomes A Metadata Team, Scott M. Dutkiewicz, Jessica L. Serrao
Publications
This chapter describes the issues confronted along the “road taken” by a technical services team as it transitioned from traditional monographic cataloging to metadata for digital collections. To serve changing user needs, the team shifted focus to providing quality metadata. Along this road, the team confronted and welcomed a number of changes. These included a unit merger, off-site relocation, shedding the cataloging role, learning how to produce metadata, identifying areas for growth with a library-wide Metadata Summit, working with new stakeholders, and managing new staff and faculty. The chapter concludes with the lessons the team learned and its prospects.
Collecting Virtual And Augmented Reality In The Twenty-First Century Library, 2019 Purdue University
Collecting Virtual And Augmented Reality In The Twenty-First Century Library, Matthew Hannah, Sarah Huber, Sorin Adam Matei
Matei Interdisciplinary Research Collaboratory
In this paper, we discuss possible pedagogical applications for virtual and augmented reality (VR and AR), within a humanities/social sciences curriculum, articulating a critical need for academic libraries to collect and curate 3D objects. We contend that building infrastructure is critical to keep pace with innovative pedagogies and scholarship. We offer theoretical avenues for libraries to build a repository 3D object files to be used in VR and AR tools and sketch some anticipated challenges. To build an infrastructure to support VR/AR collections, we have collaborated with College of Liberal Arts to pilot a program in which Libraries and CLA …
Analogies And Comparisons For Stm Data Bodies, 2019 ExoAnalytic Solutions, Inc.
Analogies And Comparisons For Stm Data Bodies, Phillip M. Cunio, Brien Flewelling
Space Traffic Management Conference
Space Traffic Management (STM) has already demonstrated its potential to be extremely data-intensive. The large number of objects on orbit today, if observed constantly throughout their lifetimes, could produce a staggeringly large number of observations that might in turn generate large numbers of orbits. Orbit data with a lengthy time history can be used to produce estimates of maneuver frequency, susceptibility to natural forces such as drag, and (if combined with photometric data) assessments of behavioral patterns of life.
A future of mega-constellations and a growing number of nations and organizations with assets on orbit would make it likely that …
Astria Ontology: Open, Standards-Based, Data-Aggregated Representation Of Space Objects, 2019 The University of Texas at Austin
Astria Ontology: Open, Standards-Based, Data-Aggregated Representation Of Space Objects, Jennie Wolfgang, Kathleen Krysher, Michael Slovenski, Unmil P. Karadkar, Shiva Iyer, Moriba K. Jah
Space Traffic Management Conference
The necessity for standards-based ontologies for long-term sustainability of space operations and safety of increasing space flights has been well-established [6, 7]. Current ontologies, such as DARPA’s OrbitOutlook [5], are not publicly available, complicating efforts for their broad adoption. Most sensor data is siloed in proprietary databases [2] and provided only to authorized users, further complicating efforts to create a holistic view of resident space objects (RSOs) in order to enhance space situational awareness (SSA).
The ASTRIA project is developing an open data model with the goal of aggregating data about RSOs, parts, space weather, and governing policies in order …
2019 State Of The Library, 2019 Santa Clara University
2019 State Of The Library, Jennifer Nutefall, Lev Rickards, Nicole Branch
State of the Library
Agenda
Jennifer Nutefall, University Librarian
- Budget & Library staffing
- Space changes
- Open Access & Social Justice
Lev Rickards, Associate University Librarian for Collections and Scholarly Communication
- Support for Open Access
- Allocating the Collections & Access Budget
- Archives & Special Collections
Nicole Branch, Associate University Librarian for Learning and Engagement
- Assessment Projects
- New Initiatives
- Instruction
A Visual Interactive Analytic Tool For Filtering And Summarizing Large Health Data Sets Coded With Hierarchical Terminologies (Viads)., 2019 Touro University California
A Visual Interactive Analytic Tool For Filtering And Summarizing Large Health Data Sets Coded With Hierarchical Terminologies (Viads)., Xia Jing, Matthew Emerson, David Masters, Matthew Brooks, Jacob Buskirk, Nasseef Abukamail, Chang Liu, James J. Cimino, Jay H. Shubrook, Sonsoles De Lacalle, Yuchun Zhou, Vimla L. Patel
Faculty Publications & Research of the TUC College of Osteopathic Medicine
BACKGROUND: Vast volumes of data, coded through hierarchical terminologies (e.g., International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision-Clinical Modification [ICD10-CM], Medical Subject Headings [MeSH]), are generated routinely in electronic health record systems and medical literature databases. Although graphic representations can help to augment human understanding of such data sets, a graph with hundreds or thousands of nodes challenges human comprehension. To improve comprehension, new tools are needed to extract the overviews of such data sets. We aim to develop a visual interactive analytic tool for filtering and summarizing large health data sets coded with hierarchical terminologies (VIADS) as an online, and publicly …
The Rise Of Open Scholarly Data And Possible Implications, 2019 Singapore Management University
The Rise Of Open Scholarly Data And Possible Implications, Aaron Tay
Research Collection Library
In this talk I cover the rise of open scholarly metadata thanks to efforts to create open infrastructure by non profits such as Crossref, Datacite, ROR as well as efforts from organizations such as JISC CORE, Opencitations, I4OC (Initative for open citations) to harvest and extract scholarly data. I talk about how libraries have benefited from all this data (most of which is available via APIs) and how Lens.org has brought most of this data together to create a compelling open service.