** Please excuse cross posting**

Please join the ALCTS CRS Holdings Information Committee at ALA Midwinter in 
Philadelphia:

Saturday, January 25th from 3:00-4:00 pm in the Pennsylvania Convention Center, 
Room 203 B.



BIBFRAME and the future of holdings information

Our first speaker, Rebecca Guenther, will discuss the BIBFRAME initiative and 
the effects it will have on the communication of holdings information. The 
Bibliographic Framework Initiative (BIBFRAME) is an effort to provide a 
foundation for the future exchange of bibliographic description. It develops a 
model and ontology for describing bibliographic data, addressing both future 
data exchange and a transition path for existing MARC 21 bibliographic data. 
The Framework is a Linked Data Model that defines information entities - 
relating to bibliographic description, holdings, and authority. The intention 
is to enable the rich metadata available in libraries and other cultural 
heritage institutions to be part of the global web of data. BIBFRAME is in 
development and at this time the holdings focus is on the "obtain" function of 
bibliographic data, rather than prediction. This presentation will summarize 
the BIBFRAME Data Model in general and how holdings information fits into it by 
using BIBFRAME Annotations and RDF Classes HeldMaterial and HeldItem. It will 
illustrate various common scenarios and describe the properties in the BIBFRAME 
vocabulary relevant to holdings.

Rebecca will be followed by Diane Hillmann, who will discuss her research and 
share her thoughts on the future of holdings data. Of all the MARC 21 formats, 
Holdings was the one most clearly designed for machine manipulation. It is 
granular, flexible, and intended to be used at either a detailed or summary 
level. It has sometimes frightened potential users because it looks complex 
(even where it isn't), and in its "native" form is not particularly human 
friendly. Some of the complexity arises because there are both display and 
prediction aspects in the encoding, and not all library systems have developed 
predictive serial check-in systems supported by MARC Holdings. Some of the 
bibliographic metadata efforts now going forward ignore the existing MARC 
Holdings, sometimes in favor of simpler solutions based on the perception of 
the waning need for predictive check-in for digital subscriptions. Not much 
effort has been expended to bring the MARC Holdings format forward into the 
discussions about changing requirements and re-use of existing standards. As 
part of this presentation, Diane will review the effort to put the MARC21 
Bibliographic Format into a very granular RDF expression, creating the 
possibility of lossless mapping. In this context, what can be done to follow 
that model for MARC Holdings, and what would that look like?"



Rebecca Guenther has 35 years of experience in national libraries, primarily 
working on library technology standards related to digital libraries. Most of 
her professional life has been at the Library of Congress in the Network 
Development and MARC Standards Office developing national and international 
standards related to metadata. In addition she is an adjunct professor in NYU's 
Moving Image Archiving and Preservation Program and at Rutgers School of 
Communication and Information and consults on metadata issues.


Diane Hillmann is currently Director of Metadata Initiatives for the 
Information Institute of Syracuse. She was formerly Research Librarian, Cornell 
University Library and Director of Library Services and Operations of the 
National Science Digital Library (NSDL). She is active in the library standards 
community, having served several terms on the MARC Standards Advisory Committee 
(MARBI) as a liaison from the law library community and as a LITA 
representative. She currently represents the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative on 
the ALA Committee on Cataloging: Description and Access (CC:DA) discussing the 
new Resource Description and Access (RDA) standard [RDA]. In addition, she 
serves as the Standards Coordinator for the Library Information Technology 
Association (a division of the American Library Association) and was recently 
appointed to the NISO Content and Collection Management Topic Committee.



We look forward to seeing you there!



Violeta Ilik on behalf of the ALCTS CRS Holdings Information Committee

Violeta Ilik | Assistant Professor
Office of Scholarly Communication
Texas A&M University Libraries
5000 TAMU | College Station, TX 77843

Tel. 979.862.4661 Email: vilik at library.tamu.edu

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