You limited your search to:
Partner:
UNT College of Information
Department:
Library and Information Science
Decade:
2010-2019
Beyond Searching Metadata
Date: February 2012
Creator: Oyarce, Guillermo A.
Description: This poster discusses information discovery. Electronic theses and dissertation (ETD) collections found in academic library repositories don't necessarily use consistent metadata schemes, which is problematic for resource sharing and information discovery. This poster demonstrates a two-layer solution to address this problem: First, a system to navigate the metadata; the second is a KWIC-type (Keyword in context) interface to examine the information in the documents of the retrieved set.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc78265/
Beyond Size and Search: Building Contextual Mass in Digital Aggregations for Scholarly Use
Date: October 2010
Creator: Palmer, Carole L.; Zavalina, Oksana L. & Fenlon, Katrina
Description: This paper discusses building contextual mass in digital aggregations for scholarly use. Abstract: At present there are no established collection development methods for building large-scale digital aggregations. However, to realize the potential of the collective base of digital content and advance scholarship, aggregations must do more than provide search of sizable bodies of content. Informed by empirical understanding of scholarly information practices, the IMLS Digital Collections and Content project developed an aggregation strategy for building Opening History, one of the largest digital cultural heritage aggregations in the country. The strategy applied policy-driven collecting based on the principle of contextual mass, and conspectus-style evaluation of collection-level metadata to identify strong subject areas within the aggregation. Analysis of density, interconnectedness, diversity, and small/large collection complementary determined subject concentrations and thematic strengths to be prioritized for future collection development and used as organizational structures for browsing and visualization. The approach models how scholars build their own personal research collections, as they follow leads from collection to collection across institutions near and far, and adds value that cannot be achieved through conventional retrieval and browsing at the item-level.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc71795/
Cataloger Tasks: Work In Progress
Date: January 20, 2012
Creator: Miksa, Shawne D.
Description: This presentation discusses cataloging tasks, including Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR), Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD), Functional Requirements for Subject Authority Data (FRSAD), and concepts related to the tasks and decisions involved in cataloging.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc83789/
Collaboration and Crowdsourcing: The Cases of Multilingual Digital Libraries
Date: 2012
Creator: Budzise-Weaver, Tina; Chen, Jiangping & Mitchell, Mikhaela
Description: This article discusses research on collaboration and crowdsourcing. Abstract: Purpose - This study aims to understand key features of existing multilingual digital libraries and to suggest strategies for building and/or sustaining multilingual information access for digital libraries. Design/methodology/approach - A case study approach was applied to examine four American multilingual digital libraries: Project Gutenburg, Meeting of Frontiers, The International Children's Digital Library, and the Latin American Open Archives Portal. This examination used a framework derived from digital library evaluation practice. The missions, goals, funding, partners, users, collections, services, and technologies of these digital libraries were analyzed to present their key multilingual features. The collaboration and crowdsourcing characteristics were highlighted and discussed. Findings - These four multilingual libraries benefit substantially, both in the creation of the library and in its access, from the collaboration of groups domestic and international with different language expertise. For building the multilingual collection and services, some libraries involved both staff and users. For multilingual access to the collection, however, none of the libraries used machine translation or cross-language information retrieval technologies. Research limitations/implications - The four cases are all publicly available digital libraries in the United States. Their features may not be applicable to digital libraries ...
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc96822/
Collection-Level Subject Access in Aggregations of Digital Collections: Metadata Application and Use
Date: 2010
Creator: Zavalina, Oksana
Description: This doctoral dissertation is about collection-level subject access in aggregations of digital collections. Abstract: Problems in subject access to information organization systems have been under investigation for a long time. Focusing on item-level information discovery and access, researchers have identified a range of subject access problems, including quality and application of metadata, as well as the complexity of user knowledge required for successful subject exploration. While aggregations of digital collections built in the United States and abroad generate collection-level metadata of various levels of granularity and richness, no research has yet focused on the role of collection-level metadata in user interaction with these aggregations. This dissertation research sought to bridge this gap by answering the question "How does collection-level metadata mediate scholarly subject access to aggregated digital collections?" This goal was achieved using three research methods: - in-depth comparative content analysis of collection-level metadata in three large-scale aggregations of cultural heritage digital collections: Opening History, American Memory, and The European Library, - transaction log analysis of user interactions, with Opening History, and - interview and observation data on academic historians interacting with two aggregations: Opening History and American Memory. It was found that subject-based resource discovery is significantly influenced by ...
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc67618/
Contextual Metadata in Digital Aggregations: Application of Collection-Level Subject Metadata and its Role in User Interactions and Information Retrieval
Date: 2011
Creator: Zavalina, Oksana
Description: This article discusses contextual metadata in digital aggregations. Abstract: A number of digital libraries that aggregate multiple digital collections are now generating subject metadata to describe intellectual content of entire digital collections as integrated wholes and to provide context for individual digital objects within them. However, the utility of this important contextual metadata has not been empirically evaluated. The exploratory study reported in this article examined and compared collection-level subject metadata in three large-scale aggregations of cultural heritage digital collections in the United States and the European Union and analyzed the role of collection-level metadata in information retrieval in digital aggregations based on user search queries derived from transaction logs. A small-scale targeted user study, which combined interviews and observations of users interacting with an aggregation, was undertaken to complement evidence-based content analysis data. The study revealed considerable variability in two indicators: consistency of applying controlled-vocabulary collection-level subject metadata elements beyond topical and value length of metadata elements. Both free-text and controlled-vocabulary subject metadata were found vital in answering search queries of aggregation users. Users also expressed preference for viewing complete structured collection-level metadata records, which include subject metadata. Results of this study prove importance of provision of collection-level metadata ...
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc77125/
Current Quality Assurance Practices in Web Archiving
Date: May 7, 2013
Creator: Reyes Ayala, Brenda
Description: This poster discusses current practices in quality assurance for web archives. The author examined three publicly available documents and contact eight institutions for perspectives on QA. In addition, two interviews were conducted with web archiving staff. This poster presents the results of this research project.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc159526/
Digital Curation and Data Management Capacity Building: Curricula and Workforce
Date: January 2012
Creator: Kim, Jeonghyun; Moen, William E.; Whitworth, Cliff; Wakefield, Jenny S.; Warga, Edward; Helsing, Joseph et al
Description: This poster discusses digital curation and data management capacity building, as part of the iCAMP project. The authors are currently in the stage of identifying competencies that are required for digital curation and data management practice. This poster will present the preliminary competencies the authors developed for the curriculum based on extensive literature review and job posting analysis.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc86823/
Digital Curation in the Academic Library Job Market
Date: October 2012
Creator: Kim, Jeonghyun; Warga, Edward & Moen, William E.
Description: This paper discusses digital curation in the academic library job market. With the increasingly important role librarians play in the fast-paced and data-intensive digital curation movement, there is a need to identify the qualifications and responsibilities expected by employers. An investigation of 110 recent job advertisements was conducted to identify competencies required of individuals working in the digital curation field. The job ads analysis serves as an important indicator of the emerging requirements for a qualified workforce in the field of digital curation in the academic library job market.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc122170/
Digital Information Curation for 21st Century Science and Scholarship: Experience-Based Learning for Information Professionals and Disciplinary Researchers
Date: 2011
Creator: Moen, William E.; Kim, Jeonghyun & Halbert, Martin
Description: This is the narrative for a proposal to the Institute of Museum and Library Services' (IMLS) Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian Program. The proposed initiative's goal is to build capacity in the University of North Texas' (UNT) Library and Information Sciences (LIS) curriculum to increase the number of appropriately trained information professionals and disciplinary researchers and scholars for digital curation and data management responsibilities.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Information
Permallink:digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc86945/