{"title":"命名关联数据环境中的授权工作","authors":"Patricia Lampron, Melanie Wacker","doi":"10.1080/19386389.2019.1661109","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Linked data and the semantic web have been the focus of library metadata research for years, in particular, the question of how cultural heritage and library communities can leverage this technology to enhance their metadata and build relationships across the web to their materials. One area of library metadata that stands to benefit from linked data, name authority work, is addressed in this special issue of the Journal of Library Metadata. For a very long time, library metadata was contained in the catalog, with a specific set of rules to organize library materials, allowing for multiple points of access. Name authority files have long been central to these catalogs and to the libraries’ mission to provide efficient access to the resources that they hold by enabling researchers to easily retrieve materials by or about the same entity. In the United States, libraries have heavily relied on the Library of Congress/NACO Name Authority File (LCNAF) (http://id. loc.gov/authorities/names) to provide them with the necessary controlled access points and cross-references to fulfill that need. Given the never-ending amount of materials that libraries acquire, that is a tall order, particularly with the evolution of digitized and born digital materials and their newly adopted and developed repositories. Many cultural heritage institutions, including libraries, have long resorted to creating local authority files or to leaving names “uncontrolled” (meaning not represented in the authority file at all) for all or some of their collections in order to avoid time and expense. This left a lot of valuable locally created information siloed or inaccessible. Linked data provides the opportunity to build stronger connections between people and library resources, places, and other people. Local authority files might be enhanced by utilizing external name authority thesauri such as the Virtual International Authority File (VIAF), LCNAF, ORCID, etc. Designing applications that allow users to explore name authority metadata both from within and outside the local name authority file can help to provide rich","PeriodicalId":39057,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Library Metadata","volume":"2 1","pages":"137 - 140"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-04-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Name Authority Work in the Linked Data Environment\",\"authors\":\"Patricia Lampron, Melanie Wacker\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/19386389.2019.1661109\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Linked data and the semantic web have been the focus of library metadata research for years, in particular, the question of how cultural heritage and library communities can leverage this technology to enhance their metadata and build relationships across the web to their materials. 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Given the never-ending amount of materials that libraries acquire, that is a tall order, particularly with the evolution of digitized and born digital materials and their newly adopted and developed repositories. Many cultural heritage institutions, including libraries, have long resorted to creating local authority files or to leaving names “uncontrolled” (meaning not represented in the authority file at all) for all or some of their collections in order to avoid time and expense. This left a lot of valuable locally created information siloed or inaccessible. Linked data provides the opportunity to build stronger connections between people and library resources, places, and other people. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
多年来,关联数据和语义网一直是图书馆元数据研究的焦点,特别是文化遗产和图书馆社区如何利用这一技术来增强他们的元数据,并在网络上建立与他们的资料之间的关系。图书馆元数据中受益于链接数据的一个领域,即名称权威工作,将在本期《图书馆元数据杂志》中讨论。很长一段时间以来,图书馆元数据都包含在目录中,使用一组特定的规则来组织图书馆资料,允许多个访问点。长期以来,名称权威文件一直是这些目录的核心,也是图书馆使命的核心,即通过使研究人员能够轻松地从同一实体或大约同一实体检索材料,从而提供对其所拥有资源的有效访问。在美国,图书馆严重依赖于国会图书馆/NACO名称授权文件(LCNAF) (http://id)。Loc.gov/authorities/names)为他们提供必要的受控访问点和交叉引用,以满足这一需求。考虑到图书馆获取的材料数量是无穷无尽的,这是一个艰巨的任务,特别是随着数字化和数字化材料的发展,以及它们新采用和开发的存储库。长期以来,包括图书馆在内的许多文化遗产机构都采取了为所有或部分藏品创建地方当局档案或将名称“不受控制”(意思是根本没有在当局档案中出现)的方式,以避免时间和费用。这使得许多有价值的本地创建的信息被孤立或无法访问。关联数据提供了在人与图书馆资源、地点和其他人之间建立更强联系的机会。本地权威文件可以通过使用外部的名称权威词典,如虚拟国际权威文件(Virtual International authority File, VIAF)、LCNAF、ORCID等来增强。设计允许用户从本地名称授权文件内部和外部探索名称授权元数据的应用程序可以帮助提供丰富的资源
Name Authority Work in the Linked Data Environment
Linked data and the semantic web have been the focus of library metadata research for years, in particular, the question of how cultural heritage and library communities can leverage this technology to enhance their metadata and build relationships across the web to their materials. One area of library metadata that stands to benefit from linked data, name authority work, is addressed in this special issue of the Journal of Library Metadata. For a very long time, library metadata was contained in the catalog, with a specific set of rules to organize library materials, allowing for multiple points of access. Name authority files have long been central to these catalogs and to the libraries’ mission to provide efficient access to the resources that they hold by enabling researchers to easily retrieve materials by or about the same entity. In the United States, libraries have heavily relied on the Library of Congress/NACO Name Authority File (LCNAF) (http://id. loc.gov/authorities/names) to provide them with the necessary controlled access points and cross-references to fulfill that need. Given the never-ending amount of materials that libraries acquire, that is a tall order, particularly with the evolution of digitized and born digital materials and their newly adopted and developed repositories. Many cultural heritage institutions, including libraries, have long resorted to creating local authority files or to leaving names “uncontrolled” (meaning not represented in the authority file at all) for all or some of their collections in order to avoid time and expense. This left a lot of valuable locally created information siloed or inaccessible. Linked data provides the opportunity to build stronger connections between people and library resources, places, and other people. Local authority files might be enhanced by utilizing external name authority thesauri such as the Virtual International Authority File (VIAF), LCNAF, ORCID, etc. Designing applications that allow users to explore name authority metadata both from within and outside the local name authority file can help to provide rich