Thanks, Jon. I have seen the Variations work and also talked to Jenn Riley 
about it. It has definitely influenced me, although we are going in a slightly 
different direction and moving images have some different needs from music.

One thing about Variations that struck me is this paragraph from the usability 
testing report 
(http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/projects/vfrbr/projectDoc/usability/usabilityTest/ScherzoUTestReport.pdf):

"There was an assumption among the development team that works would be a 
window for organizing and narrowing results in a way that users searching for 
scores and recordings would find useful. One of the main ideas behind FRBR is 
that the work, or the intellectual entity that is produced by people and is 
packaged in many forms, is the core information – Scherzo’s interface reflected 
that organization. 4 (See Appendix E, Fig. 14 for Scherzo’s search results 
page.) But the participants tended to latch on to a person’s name and search 
for that name in a particular role. The reasons for this are not completely 
clear and further discussion follows, but it is worth bearing this finding in 
mind. Additionally, from the search results page, work results were clicked 
only 14 times in comparison to items in recordings & scores , which were 
clicked 65 times. Regardless of how the FRBRized data is organized on the back 
end, the interface needs to reflect the way users want to search, and that 
might not mean with search results organized by work."

Does this mean that a work-focused approach is not actually what users want or 
need? Does it mean that the work-centered approach needs to be implemented 
differently in the user interface? Are these results somehow specific to music? 
Do they reflect users' familiarity with the typical library catalog and the 
strategies they've become accustomed to using?

It does suggest to me that there should be more studies on how users interact 
with FRBRized data (and not just the clustering that so many discovery 
interfaces do now, but real FRBR-based data) and how FRBRized data is best 
presented.

Kelley

On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 11:35 AM, Dunn, Jon William Butcher 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Kelley,

If you haven't already, you might want to look at the music score and sound 
recording FRBRization work done on the Variations-FRBR project here at Indiana 
University. I'm not sure how directly useful this would be for your work with 
moving images, but there may be some useful mapping ideas:

FRBR XML schemas: 
http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/projects/vfrbr/schemas/1.1/index.shtml

MARC->FRBR mapping specifications: 
http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/projects/vfrbr/projectDoc/metadata/mappings/spring2010/vfrbrSpring2010mappings.shtml

Java FRBRization code and documentation: 
http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/projects/vfrbr/projectDoc/index.shtml

Jon

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