Title: Threats or Opportunities?
1Threats or Opportunities?
- Resources in the New Information Landscape
William E. Moen ltwemoen_at_unt.edugt Texas Center for
Digital Knowledge School of Library and
Information Sciences University of North Texas
2Two areas of professional responsibility
- Connect users to information
- Instruct users to use tools and resources
- Both of these require awareness and knowledge of
- Available resources
- Information organization practices
- Tools to access those resources
- Standards and technologies used by the tools
- How the tools work
3What/how to expose? How to find?
4Evolving information landscape
- Order of the book is over
- Fewer formal structures that serve as
gatekeepers, filters, etc. for whats available - Does not mean authoritative and credible
information is not available - Maybe its in different places
- Maybe it looks a bit different
- Our users are finding it so what is our role?
5The librarys diminishing market share
- Think in terms of value-added services
- What value do we add that save potential users
time, money, effort, etc? - We have valuable resources but are users using
them? - Library catalog is being bypassed
- Large allocation of budget for commercially
provided resource (licensed databases, etc.) - We make users use our systems that are not easy
to use - Think of the various interfaces of the licensed
databases - Are we driving them away?
6Exposing/Finding Option 1
7What happens if Google
- Acquires or licenses for global access key
commercial information resources - Indexes the resources
- Provides single, easy to use search interface to
all those resources - Charges 10/month for users to have access to all
of that - Who will use our hard-to-use resources with all
those different interfaces?
8The Networked Information Landscape According to
Google
Digitized Books
Open Web
Google
Licensed Databases
WorldCat
Digital Repositories
9Exposing/Finding Option 2
10New resources and tools
- Repository applications
- Metadata harvesting and building collections
- Metasearch to reduce access barriers
11What are repositories?
12Repository types
- Digital repository (sort of a generic term)
- Image repository
- (e.g., http//pro.corbis.com/)
- Learning objects repository
- (e.g., http//careo.ucalgary.ca/cgi-bin/WebObjects
/CAREO.woa?themecareo) - Data repository
- (e.g.,http//www.public.asu.edu/huanliu/DHub/bioi
nformatics.html) - Institutional repository
- (e.g., http//txspace.tamu.edu/)
- Differentiated by
- Types of objects
- Types of metadata
- Purpose
13Repositories The technical side
- Database component
- Metadata component
- Search and browsing component
- Web interface component
- Submission component
- Administration component
-
14Institutional repositories
- A repository application
- Preserve and provide access to the intellectual
output of an institution - Crow, Raym. The Case for Institutional
Repositories A SPARC Position Paper. 2002 - A set of services that a university offers to the
members of its community for the management and
dissemination of digital materials created by the
institution and its community members - Lynch Clifford A. Institutional Repositories
Essential Infrastructure for Scholarship in the
Digital Age. 2003 - Characterized by
- Organizational commitment to long-term
stewardship - Open access
15Characteristics of IRs
- Institutionally defined rather than subject-based
repository - Web-based system for storage of and access to
scholarly material - Long-term stewardship of intellectual assets
- Support the process of scholarly communication
- Open and interoperable
- Mark Ware Consulting Ltd. Pathfinder Research on
Web-based Repositories Final Report.2004
16Potential contents for IRs
- Pre-prints and post-prints
- Technical reports, working papers
- Theses dissertations
- Books or chapters of books
- Conference proceedings
- Presentations
- Sound and video files
- Digital research materials( e.g. simulations,
code)
17Cornell Repository
18Texas AM Repository
19Texas AM
20Texas AM
21Metadata The key
- Boundaries between information communities are
porous - The world will not be made up of MARC
- Many metadata schemes
- To describe and manage resources
- Provide structured representations of the
resources that can be processed by machines - Serving needs of different information
communities - Typically using Extended Markup Language (XML)
- Syntax for encoding metadata for exchange and
reuse
I've often said librarians should like any
metadata they see. (R. Tennant)
22Dempseys acronymic density or
this is the present future!!
- Metadata schemes
- DC, MODS, CDWA, VRA, etc.
- Metadata content standards
- AACR, CCO, DACS, etc.
- Metadata encoding standards
- MARC, XML, RDF, etc.
- Metadata container/wrapper standards
- METS, MPEG, etc.
- Discipline specific metadata schemes
- GILS, CSDGMI, GEM, IEEE-LOM, etc.
- Other schemes of interest
- TEI, EAD, etc.
23Extending the visibility OAI-PMH
- Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata
Harvesting - http//www.openarchives.org/
- http//www.openarchives.org/OAI/openarchivesproto
col.html - Defines a protocol for harvesting metadata from
repositories - Partitions the world into
- Data providers
- Service providers
- Uses Dublin Core Metadata Element Set as standard
metadata representation for exchange - Uses XML for exchanging the metadata records
24OAI architecture
25Harvesting metadata
From http//www.oaforum.org/tutorial/
26OAIster
- A union catalog of digital resources
- Contains nearly 11,000,000 records describing
freely-available and restricted-access digital
resources - Uses the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for
Metadata Harvesting - Harvests the descriptive metadata (records) and
makes those searchable - Currently harvesting from over 700 digital
repositories
27OAIster results library reference services
28Metasearch (or federated search)
- Single search interface
- Concurrent searching of two or more resources
- Uses various technologies
- Standards such as Z39.50 information retrieval
protocol Search and Retrieve Web Service - Proprietary Connectors (e.g., WebFeat, Muse
Global) - Screen scraping (not a good idea!)
- Helps users get started discovering resources
29Exposing/Finding Option 3
30Exposing/Finding Option 4
31Exposing/Finding Option 5
32Index Data Master Key (prototype)
- Enables efficient metasearching of hundreds of
databases at the same time - Uses Z39.50, SRU/W, or proprietary protocols
- Open-source-based alternative to proprietary,
closed-source metasearch alternatives. - Supports
- on-the-fly merging
- relevance-ranking
- sorting by arbitrary data elements
- facets for limiting result sets by subject,
author, etc. - Current demo searches open web resources
- OAIster
- Open Directory
- Wikipedia
- Open Content Alliance
- Can be used for metasearching of catalogs,
commercial dbs, etc.
33MasterKey
34Challenges and opportunities
- A good reference librarian
- Assesses resources
- Knows how to access the resources
- Understands how the resources are organized
- Helps users understand information needs
- Helps users learn to assess and access
- And now needs to
- Understand new technologies underlying important
new resources - Understand new organizational schemes (i.e.,
metadata beyond MARC) - Provide new value-added services to use new
resources - Help build new virtual collections to serve users
35References
- Institutional Repositories. Roy Tennant. 2002
- http//libraryjournal.reviewsnews.com/index.asp?l
ayoutarticlePrintarticleIDCA242297publication
libraryjournal - Institutional Repositories Essential
Infrastructure for Scholarship in the Digital
Age. Clifford A. Lynch. 2003 - http//www.arl.org/newsltr/226/ir.html
- OAI-Protocol for Metadata Harvesting
- http//www.openarchives.org/
- http//www.openarchives.org/OAI/openarchivesproto
col.html - OAI for Beginners - the Open Archives Forum
online tutorial - http//www.oaforum.org/tutorial/
- OAIster.org
- http//www.oaister.org/
- Index Data Master Key
- http//mkey.indexdata.com/demo/
- Z39.50 and Search and Retrieve Web Service
(SRU/SRW) - http//www.loc.gov/z3950/agency/
- http//www.loc.gov/standards/sru/
For a copy of this presentation, go to
http//www.unt.edu/wmoen