This project may be of interest to some on this list as an experiment to 
explore extracting structured data from free text in MARC. You also have a 
chance to help make it easier to find film and video in libraries if you're 
willing to take a few minutes to participate.

OLAC (http://www.olacinc.org/) is working on project to try to make the process 
of finding film and video in library catalogs better. Please help us by 
annotating some film and video credits at http://olac-annotator.org/. It only 
takes a few minutes to make a contribution. We are challenging OLAC members to 
do annotate three credits per day this week to see how many we can get done. 
Please join us in this endeavor. We are especially looking for people who know 
languages other than English to help us translate credits in languages from 
Chinese to Spanish to Urdu. Full announcement below. Please share this 
information with anyone you think might be interested.

Kelley

*******

The OLAC Movie & Video Credit Annotation Experiment (http://olac-annotator.org) 
is part of a larger project to make it easier to find film and video in 
libraries and archives. In the current phase, we're trying to break existing 
MARC movie records down and pull out all the cast and crew information so that 
it may be re-ordered and manipulated. We also want to make explicit connections 
between cast and crew names and their roles or functions in the movie 
production. Adding these formal connections to movie records will allow us to 
provide a better user experience. For example, library patrons would be able to 
search just for directors or just for cast members or only for movies where 
Clint Eastwood is actually in the cast rather than all the movies that he is 
connected with. Libraries would have the flexibility to create more 
standardized and readable displays of production credits, such as you see at 
IMDb (see http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1205489/ -- not that we necessarily want 
IMDb's display, but that we would have much more flexibility in designing 
displays) , rather than views like a typical library catalog (such as 
http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b3958782).

We therefore want to convert our existing records into more structured sets of 
data. Eventually, we intend to automate most of this conversion. For now, we 
need help from human volunteers, who can train our software to recognize the 
many ways names and roles have been listed in library records for movies. Give 
us a hand at http://olac-annotator.org. For an explanation with more library 
jargon thrown in, see http://olac-annotator.org/#/more.

The OLAC Movie & Video Credit Annotation Experiment was conceived by Kelley 
McGrath, developed by Chris Fitzpatrick and funded by a Richard and Mary 
Corrigan Solari Library Fellowship Incentive Award from the University of 
Oregon Libraries.


Kelley McGrath
Metadata Management Librarian
University of Oregon Libraries
541-346-8232
kell...@uoregon.edu

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