The Cataloging Norms Interest Group will meet in the Boston Convention & 
Exhibition Center, Room 107AB, 10:30-11:30 AM, on Saturday, January 9. 
The meeting will include the following three presentations:

Enhancing Access to Pacific-Language Resources at the University of Hawaii at 
Manoa and in OCLC WorldCat  / Michael Chopey, Catalog Librarian, University of 
Hawaii at Manoa Libraries With funding from an NEH grant, UHM’s Cataloging 
Department and Pacific Collection are working collaboratively to enhance more 
than 10,000 bibliographic records in our local Voyager catalog and in OCLC 
Worldcat, primarily with Ethnologue (ISO 639-3) language codes, which in many 
cases are much more specific than the collective MARC language code (ISO
639-2) that the cataloging community normally uses. This presentation will 
outline the planning, workflow, benefits, and future directions of this 
project, including how the metadata created for this project will be reused and 
made available outside of the MARC catalog environment, and a comprehensive 
crosswalk of codes and languages names using linked open data from the Library 
of Congress's linked data identity server
(http://id.loc.gov/) and the Open Language Archives Community 
(http://www.language-archives.org/).

Bridging the Gap between Metadata Librarians and Art Conservators / Peggy 
Griesinger, Metadata & Cataloging Librarian George Mason University Libraries 
This talk will discuss the challenges and benefits of collaborating with art 
conservation professionals at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) to design a 
metadata profile for the digital conservation of their audiovisual-based 
artworks. Throughout this project in my role as metadata librarian, I was 
required to quickly familiarize myself with specialized topics in art 
conservation and audiovisual preservation, two areas with which I had very 
little prior experience, in order to design an accurate metadata profile for 
the project. I also needed to translate specialized metadata concepts into a 
form that non-LIS professionals, such as conservators and museum 
administrators, could understand. This talk will discuss the process of quickly 
gaining low-level expertise in unfamiliar domains as well as how to impart 
knowledge of complex metadata concepts (including XML, controlled vocabularies, 
and metadata
standards) in a form that is understandable and practically useful to non-LIS 
professionals.

Where's the data? / Andrea Payant, Data Management Cataloger,  Betty Rozum, 
Data Services Coordinator & Undergraduate Research Librarian, Liz Woolcott, 
Head of Cataloging and Metadata Services, Utah State University At Utah State 
University, a pilot project is under development to evaluate the benefits of 
tracking data sets and faculty publications using the online catalog and the 
Library’s institutional repository. 
With federal mandates to make publications and data open, universities look for 
solutions to track compliance.  At Utah State University, the Sponsored 
Programs Office follows up with researchers to determine where data has been or 
will be deposited, per the terms of their grant. 
Interested in making this publicly discoverable, the Library, Sponsored 
Programs, and Research Office are working together to pilot a project that 
enables the creation of publicly accessible MARC and Dublin Core records for 
data deposited by USU faculty. This project aims to make data sets, as well as 
publications, visible in research portals such as WorldCat, as well as through 
Google searches.  This presentation will describe the project and anticipated 
benefits, as well as outline the roles of the cataloging staff and data 
librarian, and the involvement of the Research Office.

Susan Matveyeva and Robert Rohrbacher, Co-Chairs, Cataloging Norms IG
--
Robert J. Rohrbacher
Metadata Librarian for Social Sciences and Government Documents Metadata Dept.
Stanford University Libraries
phone: 650-725-7992
fax: 650-725-1120
[email protected]


Reply via email to