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Access points for intellectual entities

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Access points for intellectual entities Authority control Technical Processes in Bibliographic Control 1. Description 2. Name access 3. Subject analysis 4. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Access points for intellectual entities


1
Access points for intellectual entities
  • Authority control

2
Technical Processes in Bibliographic Control
  • 1. Description
  • 2. Name access
  • 3. Subject analysis
  • 4. Record formatting
  • 5. Record organization

3
Access Points
  • Surrogate (i.e., catalog) record content created
    by professional and supervised paraprofessional
    catalogers.
  • Rules based (AACR2) Main and added entries are
    created for each catalog record representing the
    books, recordings, and other type of information
    packages that are in a library collection.
  • Sources are consulted for surrogate record
    content
  • Data taken from the information package in hand
  • Data taken from authority files
  • Name authority files
  • Title authority files

4
Cutter Revisited
  • 1. TO ENABLE A PERSON TO FIND A DOCUMENT OF WHICH
  • THE AUTHOR, OR
  • THE TITLE, OR
  • THE SUBJECT IS KNOWN
  • 2. TO SHOW WHAT THE LIBRARY HAS
  • BY A GIVEN AUTHOR
  • ON A GIVEN SUBJECT
  • IN A GIVEN KIND OF LITERATURE
  • 3. TO ASSIST IN THE CHOICE OF A DOCUMENT
  • BIBLIOGRAPHICALLY (E.G. EDITION, FORMAT, ETC.)
  • AS TO ITS CHARACTER (I.E. LITERARY OR TOPICAL)
  • Access points serve first two

5
Access Points
  • Critical in the language transformation in
    retrieval process such that the process is
    designed to allow retrieval of data or documents
    in response to a query.
  • Elements of the process are
  • 1) Susceptible person with inquiry
  • 2) Expression of inquiry in system's language
    (i.e., transformation of the signal)
  • 3) Set of retrieved signals (i.e.,
    transformation of the signal)
  • Stages in the process are
  • 1) inquiry formulation
  • 2) signal retrieval
  • 3) utilization
  • Access points represent intellectual entities in
    the bibliographic universe (as opposed to the
    physical entities that are represented by
    descriptions)
  • Ultimately, what are access points? (index
    entries)

6
Access Points Two Aspects
  • Choice is decision about what access points are
    needed
  • 2. Form is decision about the authorized form in
    which they will be made. Crucial aspect of
    authority control

7
AACR2R, part 2 Rules for Choice and Form of
Entry
  • 21. Choice
  • 22. Headings for persons
  • 23. Geographic names
  • 24. Corporate bodies
  • 25. Uniform titles
  • 26. References

8
Main and Added Entries in Card Catalogs
  • Main entry is also known as the primary access
    point.
  • In the days of card catalogs, the main entry
    contained the full bibliographic record
  • Author main entry was the convention
  • Title main entry was used for information
    packages without authors
  • Other added entries, such as titles and
    subjects, had abbreviated bibliographic
    information on the cards in their card catalog
    drawers.

9
Choice of Access Points
  • Chapter 21 of AACR2 is concerned with how to
    choose the elements of a description that will be
    made searchable AKA Access Points
  • General Rule
  • 21.1A -- Personal authorship -- enter works by
    one or more persons under the heading for
    personal author.
  • 21.1B2 -- Corporate Body -- may be chosen as the
    main entry for an item if it falls into one or
    more of 6 categories.

10
Current Main Entry Controversy
  • In an OPAC, there is only one card, i.e., the
    record in the database, so in theory, we no
    longer need to distinguish main entry and added
    entries.
  • However, author main entry continues to be
    convivial with print bibliographies and with the
    need for sorting and displaying retrieved records
    in an online catalog.
  • RDA has reassessed

11
Choice of Main Entry Author
  • Main entry for person or body responsible for the
    intellectual content
  • Catalogers use the author as main entry for works
    by a single author.
  • For works with unknown authorship title main
    entry.
  • For works by multiple authors with synchronous
    (i.e., the same kind of) responsibility for work,
    then employ rule of three
  • Three or few authors First author is main entry
  • Four or more authors Title is main entry

12
Choice of Main Entry Author (cont.)
  • For works by multiple authors with asynchronous
    (i.e., different kinds of) responsibility for
    work. Examples
  • Later editions of work may have different authors
  • With certain types of information packages there
    may be obvious differences in author
    contributions
  • Main entry choices in asynchronous cases
  • Use original author as main entry for new
    editions of works (except if new edition is
    changed significantly)
  • Use original author as main entry for translated
    works
  • Judgment call for artist/writer relationships
  • Art book with captions Artists name is main
    entry
  • Art accompanies text writers name is main
    entry

13
21.1B2 Corporate Author Categories
  • a) The work deals with the body itself, such as a
    financial report or operations report, staff
    listing, or a catalog of the bodys resources.
  • b) Certain legal, governmental, or religious
    types of works listed in the rule
  • laws decrees of the chief executive that have
    force of law administrative regulations
    constitutions court rules treaties, etc. court
    decisions legislative hearings religious laws
    (e.g. canon law) liturgical works

14
21.1B2 Corporate Author Categories
  • c) Those that record the collective thought of
    the body
  • reports of commissions or committees, official
    position statements, etc.
  • d) Those that report the collective activity of a
    conference (e.g. proceedings , collected
    papers), an expedition (e.g. results of
    exploration, investigation), or of an event
    falling within the definition of a corporate body
    -- provided that the conference, etc. is
    prominently named in the item

15
21.1B2 Corporate Author Categories
  • e) Those that result from the collective activity
    of a performing group as a whole where the
    responsibility of the group goes beyond that of
    mere performance, execution, etc.
  • Includes sound recordings, films,
    videorecordings, and written records of
    performances.
  • f) Cartographic materials emanating from a
    corporate body other than a body that is merely
    responsible for their distribution and
    publication

16
21.1B3
  • If a work falls outside the categories, treat it
    as if no corporate body was involved.
  • Added entries are made for prominently named
    corporate bodies.

17
Choice of Main Entry Title
  • For truly anonymous works.
  • For works with more than three responsible
    authors with none having primary responsibility.
  • For works by multiple authors that are compiled
    by an editor.
  • For works by corporate authors.
  • For works accepted as sacred scripture by a
    religious body

18
21.26 Spirit Communications
  • Any guesses?

19
Added Entries
  • Other access points in addition to main entry.
  • Serve as additional ways to access an information
    package, e.g.
  • Performers of musical compositions
  • Subject of information package (e.g., dogs)

20
Encoding Main and Added Entries
  • Main entries use MARC tag 1XX
  • 100 is main entry personal name (why not author
    name???)
  • 110 is main entry corporate name
  • 111 is main entry meeting name
  • 130 is main entry uniform title
  • Added entries are scattered across the rest of
    the MARC tags
  • 6XX contains subject added entries
  • 7XX contains additional added entry options,
    including personal, corporate and meeting names
    as well as uniform titles

21
Headings for Persons
  • Once you decide (via the Chapter 21 rules) that
    entries are to be made for a person or persons,
    you must then choose the form that the name will
    appear in.

22
The Problem
  • Proliferation of the forms of names
  • Different names for the same person
  • Different people with the same names
  • Examples
  • from Books in Print (semi-controlled but not
    consistent)
  • ERIC author index (not controlled)

23
Goethe
24
John Muir
25
Pauline Cochrane nee Atherton
26
Pauline Cochrane nee Atherton
27
Form of Entry
  • Two aspects of Form
  • Which name is to be used?
  • Which form of the name?

28
Problems with Personal Names
  • Pseudonym or pen name
  • Initialized first name
  • Omitted first name
  • Non-roman alphabets
  • Married name vs. maiden name
  • Compound surname
  • Names with nobility
  • Changed names

29
Patterns of Chinese Names
  • Lin Yu-tang
  • Ching-chun Hsieh
  • Nelson Chou
  • Jack Kai-tung Huang
  • Nancy Ou-lan Hu Chou
  • Surname first
  • Surname last
  • Chinese first name dropped
  • English first name adopted without dropping
    Chinese first name
  • Womans married name with English first name

30
PETER BROWN IN CLIO
  • 29 headings
  • 9 cross-references
  • 18 different people
  • 73 titles
  • 3 incorrect (two on order records)

31
The Many Faces of Peter Brown
  • Brown, Peter, 1925-
  • Brown, Peter, 1948-
  • Brown, Peter Hume, 1849-1918
  • Brown, Robert Lamont Brown, 1935-
  • Book of Kells, Chaucer
  • Medieval manuscripts, Chaucer
  • Medieval church, early Scotland
  • St. Augustine, Roman Church, women in early
    Christianity

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Form Which Name?
  • Overriding principle is to use the form that is
    commonly known to the library's users
  • Name by which a person is commonly known
  • Guiding principle from Panizzi forward, viewed
    differently in each application.
  • From Cutter through ALA 1949 determined to be
    name as found in reference sources
  • In AACR2 determined to be name as found on chief
    sources
  • Thus
  • Jimmy Carter not James Earl Carter
  • E. E. Cummings not Edward Estlin Cummings

34
22.1B
  • Determine the name by which a person is commonly
    known from the chief sources of information of
    works by that person, issued in his or her
    language. If the person works in a non-verbal
    context (e.g., a painter, a sculptor) or is not
    primarily known as an author, determine the name
    by which he or she is commonly known from
    reference sources issued in his or her language
    or country of residence or activity

35
Form Which Name?
  • Change of name
  • Always entered under latest name
  • Arlene G. Taylor not Arlene Taylor Dowell
  • Pseudonyms
  • Use pseudonym if only one pseudonym used for all
    works
  • e.g. Ford Madox Ford (real name Ford Madox
    Hueffer)
  • If more than one pseudonym, use name used on work
    for "separate bibliographic entities"
  • e.g. Charles Dodgson and Lewis Carroll
  • Contemporary authors use all pseudonyms

36
FORM WHICH FORM OF NAME?
  • General rule if a persons name consists of
    several parts, select as the entry element that
    part of the name under which the person would
    normally be listed in authoritative alphabetic
    lists in his or her language or country of
    residence

37
Entry element Surname
  • Compound surnames
  • Hyphenated surnames
  • Other compound surnames
  • Nature uncertain
  • Surnames with prefixes
  • Different rules for different languages/nationalit
    ies

38
Entry Element Surname
  • Structure of personal name heading is usually
    family name (surname) followed by forenames
    usually followed by DOB/DOD.
  • Heading should be structured as it would appear
    in the telephone directory of the persons home
    country
  • In Brazil, the last name of a compound surname is
    used
  • In Argentina, the first name of a compound
    surname is used

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Additions to names
  • Titles of nobility or Honor
  • Saints
  • Royalty
  • Popes, Bishops, etc.
  • Dates
  • Distinguishing terms

41
Married name vs. Maiden Name
  • Good example
  • Elizabeth Taylor

42
MARC Authority Record
  • 040 DLC b eng c DLC d DLC d Uk
  • 100 1 Taylor, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Hilton, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Wilding, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Todd, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Fisher, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Burton, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Jenkins, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Taylor, Elizabeth Rosemond, d 1932- w
    nna
  • 400 1 Taylor, Liz, d 1932-
  • 400 1 Warner, Elizabeth, d 1932-
  • 670 Her Nibbles and me ... 1946
  • 670 Kelley, K. Elizabeth Taylor, the last
    star, c1981 b t.p. (Elizabeth Taylor) CIP
    galley (married John Warner 12/4/76 Liz)
  • 670 Elizabeth Taylor, 2000 b p. 310 (became
    Dame Commander of the Order of the British
    Empire, Spring 2000)

43
Other Names
  • Geographic names (atlases in English)
  • Thus Munich not München
  • Name changes, etc.
  • Corporate names (official name in pubs.)
  • Subordinate vs. direct order
  • Thus Library of Congress not United States.
    Congress. Library.
  • Uniform titles Title chosen for cataloging
    purposes when a work has appeared under varying
    titles.
  • Individual works
  • Collective works (Bible)

44
Forms of Headings Geographic Area Headings
  • Use the English form of the name of a place if
    there is one in general use. Determine this from
    gazetteers and other reference sources published
    in English-speaking countries. In case of doubt,
    use the vernacular form.
  • If the name of a place changes, use as many of
    the names as required.
  • Add to the name of a place (other than a country
    or a state, etc., listed in 23.4C1 or 23.4D1) the
    name of a larger place as instructed in
    23.4C-23.4F.
  • Do not make any addition to the name of a state,
    province, territory, etc., of Australia, Canada,
    or the United States.

45
Problems with Corporate Names
  • Name change
  • Names in different languages
  • Variant names
  • Brief form of names
  • Subordinate and related bodies

46
Subordinate and related bodies
  • Enter subordinate bodies directly under their own
    name unless its name is one of the following
    types
  • A name containing a term that by definition
    implies that the body is part of another
  • A name containing a word that normally implies
    administrative subordination, provided that the
    name of the higher body is required to identify
    it.
  • A name that is general in nature or that does no
    more than indicate a geographic, chronological or
    numbered or lettered subdivision of the parent
    body
  • A name that does not convey the idea of a
    corporate body
  • A name of a university faculty, school etc that
    simply indicates a field of study
  • A name that includes the entire name of higher
    body.

47
Forms of Names for Corporate Bodies (English)
  • Administration
  • Administrative ... (e.g., administrative office)
  • Advisory ... (e.g., advisory panel)...
  • Agency
  • Authority
  • Board
  • Branch
  • Bureau
  • College (of a university)
  • Commission
  • Committee
  • Department
  • Division
  • Group (e.g., working group)
  • Office
  • Panel
  • School (of a college or university)
  • Secretariat
  • Section
  • Service
  • Task Force
  • Working party
  • NOT
  • Council
  • Program
  • Project

48
Forms of Names for Corporate Bodies (French)
  • Administration
  • Agence
  • Bureau
  • Cabinet
  • Comite
  • Commissariat
  • Commission
  • Delegation
  • Direction
  • Groupe de
  • Inspection
  • Mission
  • Office
  • Secreteriat
  • Service

49
Forms of Names for Corporate Bodies (Spanish)
  • Administracion
  • Agencia
  • Asesoria
  • Comisaria
  • Comision
  • Comite
  • Coordinacion
  • Delegacion
  • Diputacion
  • Direccion
  • Directoria
  • Fiscalia
  • Gabinete
  • Gerencia
  • Grupo de
  • Jefatura
  • Junta
  • Negociado
  • Oficina
  • Secretaria
  • Secretariado
  • Servicio
  • Superintendencia

50
Uniform Titles
  • Uniform titles are the means for bringing
    together all catalog entries for a work when
    various manifestations (editions, translations,
    etc) have appeared under various titles.
  • Need to use Uniform titles varies with the
    catalog and even with the particular work.

51
Uniform Titles Examples
  • A work by Dickens with the title The adventures
    of Oliver Twist
  • 100 1 a Dickens, Charles, d 1812-1870.
  • 240 1 a Oliver Twist
  • 245 14a The adventures of Oliver Twist / c
    Charles Dickens
  • Bible. O.T. or N.T. individual book or group
    of books. language. version. year.
  • 130 0 a Bible. p N.T. p Luke. l English. f
    1995.
  • 130 0 a Bible. p O.T. p Song of Solomon. l
    Spanish. f 1998

52
Why So Many Rules?
  • Not so difficult 66 of all authors write only
    one book in one edition. But the remaining 34
    can be very difficult--changing names,
    variations, translations, different alphabets,
    etc.

53
Authority Control
  • The process of maintaining consistency of usage
    for access points
  • The method for the enforcement of
    standardization of access points
  • Create syndetic structure (a network of
    references). Record variations of the name with
    SEE and SEE ALSO references

54
SYNDETIC STRUCTURE
  • Means Connective and is derived from classical
    Greek
  • Conceived by Charles Cutter who defined syndetic
    catalog as that kind of dictionary catalog which
    binds its entries together by means of
    cross-references so as to form a whole.
  • Great cocktail party term

55
Authority Control
  • Catalogers decision concerning authorship I
    know who the author is (from the information
    package in hand), but what personal name data do
    I enter into the surrogate record?
  • Authority work involves the determination of
    authorized forms for entities known by variant
    forms, e.g.,
  • Author name changes over time (e.g., pseudonyms)
  • Variant spellings of personal names that
    proliferate over time
  • Title changes of a work over time
  • Authority records are maintained for personal
    names and some titles at the Library of Congress
    in various files.

56
Why Authority Control?
  • To fulfill Cutters 2nd Objective (The
    Collocating Objective)
  • Author criterion
  • Title criterion
  • To deal with the problem of natural language
    variation
  • Variation in how individuals label themselves
    (or have been labeled) over time (e.g.,
    pseudonyms and variant spellings (see Khaddafi
    as authorities search))
  • Variation in how titles change over time (e.g.,
    new editions or sacred works)
  • To enable consistent data entry into cataloging
    and metadata records over time.

57
Authority Work
  • Includes the research work and intellectual
    effort involved in creating and updating
    authority records
  • Determines if a relationship exists between names
    or subject heading terms
  • Establishes and links the names that could refer
    to the same person
  • Establishes relationships between subject heading
    terms
  • Includes recording the authority data of
    preferred form, variants, history, scope, and
    links to other authority records

58
Steps of Authority Work
  • Researching for variants
  • Choosing one among many
  • Analyzing parts of the term
  • Adding, omitting or modifying the term
  • Handling special language cases
  • Linking the used and the unused
  • Document the process

59
Authority Record
  • Result of authority work
  • A record which shows a heading in the form
    established for use in the catalog
  • Lists cross-references to be made to and from the
    heading
  • Cites the sources consulted in establishing the
    heading

60
Bibliographic vs. Authority Record
  • Bibliographic record
  • Contains the description of an item
  • Contains the entries in their official form
  • Authority record
  • Records the official form used for an entry
  • Records alternative and unused forms
    (cross-references)
  • Records source of form decisions

61
Authority Files
  • An authority file consist of authority records.
  • Catalogers and other metadata record creators use
    authority files for certain data entry tasks.
  • Authority files are also an integral part of
    integrated library systems
  • Common authority files
  • LC Name Authority File maintained
    collaboratively (NACO) according to AACR2 (more
    info on next slide)
  • Getty Vocabularies artist geographical names
  • International Standard Archival Authority Record
    corporate bodies, persons families

62
Four Functions of Authority Files
  • Authority function support consistency of
    headings
  • Finding function provide links from variants and
    other authorized headings
  • Information function show usage and scope of
    headings
  • Maintenance function support manual and
    automatic error detection and correction

63
Advantages of Authority Control
  • Collecting, recording and maintaining
    authoritative forms of headings
  • Linking variant forms of headings together
  • Providing consistency and verification upon
    creating bibliographic records
  • Automatic verification
  • Global change and correction
  • Shared authority files
  • Linkage between authority files and bibliographic
    records

64
Functional Purposes of Authority Work
  • To meet Cutters first objective (the finding
    objective)
  • To find a book when one of the following is
    known
  • Author (must distinguish between/among persons or
    entities with the same name)
  • Title (must normalize titles that have
    proliferated over time)
  • Subject (must normalize natural language
    variation over time)
  • To meet Cutters second objective (the
    collocating objective)
  • To show what the library has
  • By an author (collocation using author criterion)
  • On a subject (collocation using subject criterion)

65
IMPORTANT ELEMENTS IN THE MARC AUTHORITY FORMAT
  • 1XX Authorized name access point
  • 4XX SEE reference
  • 5XX SEE ALSO reference
  • X00 Personal name
  • X10 Corporate name
  • X11 Conference name
  • 670 Source found
  • 675 Source not found

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