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A Whirlwind Tour Through Part of the Metadata Landscape Jenn Riley Metadata Librarian IU Digital Library Program.

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Presentation on theme: "A Whirlwind Tour Through Part of the Metadata Landscape Jenn Riley Metadata Librarian IU Digital Library Program."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Whirlwind Tour Through Part of the Metadata Landscape Jenn Riley Metadata Librarian IU Digital Library Program

2 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20062 Many definitions of metadata “Data about data” “Structured information about an information resource of any media type or format.” (Caplan) “Any data used to aid the identification, description and location of networked electronic resources.” (IFLA) …

3 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20063 Refining a definition Other characteristics Structure Control Origin Machine-generated Human-generated In practice, the term often covers data and meta-metadata

4 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20064 Some uses of metadata By information specialists Describing non-traditional materials Cataloging Web sites Navigating digital objects Managing digital objects over the long term Managing corporate assets By novices Preparing Web sites for search engines Describing Eprints Managing personal CD collections

5 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20065 Metadata and cataloging Depends on what you mean by: metadata, and cataloging! But, in general: Metadata is broader in scope than cataloging Much metadata creation takes place outside of libraries Good metadata practitioners use fundamental cataloging principles in non-MARC environments Metadata created for many different types of materials Metadata is NOT only for Internet resources!

6 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20066 Creating metadata HTML tags Spreadsheets Databases XML Library catalogs Digital library content management systems ContentDM Greenstone

7 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20067 Types of metadata Descriptive metadata Administrative metadata Technical metadata Preservation metadata Rights metadata Structural metadata

8 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20068 How metadata is used

9 4/26/06 L520 Spring 20069 Descriptive metadata Purpose Description Discovery Some common general schemas MARC MARCXML MODS Dublin Core LOTS of domain-specific schemas

10 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200610 MODS “Metadata Object Description Schema” Developed and maintained by the Library of Congress For encoding bibliographic information Influenced by MARC, but not equivalent Usable for any format of materials Quickly gaining adoption

11 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200611 Dublin Core (1) 15-element set “Core” across all knowledge domains No element required All elements repeatable Extensible 1:1 principle

12 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200612 Dublin Core (2) Two “flavors” Unqualified Qualified Additional elements Element refinements Encoding schemes (vocabulary and syntax) All qualifiers must follow “dumb-down” principle Unqualified DC required for sharing metadata via the Open Archives InitiativeOpen Archives Initiative

13 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200613 Comparing descriptive metadata formats MARC [example]example MARCXML [example]example MODS [example]example Dublin Core [example]example Record format Binary (ISO 2709) XML RDF, XML, HTML, et al. Field labels Numeric Text Reliance on AACR Strong ImpliedNone Common method of creation By specialists By derivation By specialists and by derivation By novices and by specialists

14 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200614 How do I pick a metadata format? Genre of materials being described Format of materials being described Nature of holding institution Robustness needed for the given materials and users What others in the community are doing Describing original vs. digitized item Relationships between records Plan for interoperability, including repeatability of elements More information on handouthandout

15 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200615 Levels of control Data structure standards (e.g., MARC) Data content standards (e.g., AACR2r) Very few metadata standards include a counterpart to the AACR “chief source of information”

16 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200616 When there’s no data content standard…

17 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200617 Vocabulary encoding schemes TGM I TGM II TGN GeoNet AAT LCSH LCNAF DCMI Type MIME Types …etc.

18 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200618 Syntax encoding schemes ISO8601 W3CDTF URI AACR2r …etc.

19 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200619 Technical metadata One type of administrative metadata For recording technical aspects of digital objects Of use for long-term maintenance of data Some examples: NISO Z39.87: Data Dictionary – Technical Metadata for Digital Still Images & MIX NISO Z39.87: Data Dictionary – Technical Metadata for Digital Still ImagesMIX Schema for Technical Metadata for Text

20 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200620 Structural metadata For creating a logical structure between digital objects Multiple copies/versions of same item Multiple pages within item Multiple sizes of each page Meaningful groups of content METS is the current primary schema METS

21 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200621 Thinking about shareable metadata Metadata is a view of the resource Records to be shared will be different than records in your local environment Standards promote interoperability Appropriate formats Appropriate content Appropriate context

22 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200622 Crosswalks (1) For transforming between metadata formats Usually refers to transforming between content standards rather than structure standards, but not always Mapping from more robust format to less robust format effective; mapping from simpler format to more robust format less so Good practice to create and store most robust metadata format possible, then create other views for specific needs

23 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200623 Crosswalks (2) Can be in many formats Logical sets of rules [example]example Actual code [example]example Often need to tweak a generic crosswalk for a specific implementation Accommodating local practice Adding institution-specific information Adding context not available locally

24 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200624 So why should I care about metadata? Metadata issues are right now an essential part of librarianship Cataloging librarians – it’s increasingly becoming your job Reference librarians – metadata schema affect search strategies, and you’ll have patrons who want to know about metadata Collection development librarians – we’re increasingly purchasing data rather than physical objects, and this data needs to be managed Archivists & special collections librarians – emerging metadata standards are specifically designed for your materials and needs Administrators – you need to fit metadata work in the appropriate places in your organization; your staff will need training Public librarians – must both make use of and provide metadata for your place in the Web environment Corporate librarians– you often deal with non-MARC environments School librarians – integration of library materials into instruction

25 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200625 Qualifications of a metadata librarian Experience with many different metadata standards Thorough knowledge of cataloging practice, including subject analysis Can use various XML technologies: XSLT, XPath, DTDs, XML Schema Experience with file formats for still images, audio, video, and other objects needing management Familiarity with one or more scripting/programming languages; Perl is useful Subject expertise where required Good at writing detailed documentation Likes to learn on the job Excellent communication skills …etc.

26 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200626 What does a metadata librarian do? Create metadata (including in MARC) Write procedures, policy, and templates for others creating metadata Develop long-term metadata strategy Write rules/code for mapping between metadata formats Collaborate with subject/format specialists Perform technical support for metadata creation tools Represent metadata issues on group projects/committees Learn more about everything Teach others about metadata Librarian stuff! Professional development, service, faculty governance …etc.

27 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200627 Continuing education Professional literature in many areas Digital libraries Cataloging Subject-specific Mailing lists in these same areas Conferences Digital Library Federation JCDL ALA (LITA, ALCTS) Talk to people!

28 4/26/06 L520 Spring 200628 Further information jenlrile@indiana.edu These presentation slides: http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/~jenlrile/presentations/slis/06spring/l520/l520.ppt Metadata librarians listserv: http://metadatalibrarians.monarchos.com Priscilla Caplan: Metadata Fundamentals for all Librarians, 2003


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