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    The New Context for Bibliographic Control In the New Millennium

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    Author
    Lynch, Clifford
    Issue Date
    2000
    Submitted date
    2005-04-02
    Keywords
    Cataloging
    Knowledge Organization
    Bibliometrics
    Information Seeking Behaviors
    Digital Libraries
    Local subject classification
    information finding
    bibliographic control
    new millennium
    metadata
    surrogates
    user behavior
    
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    Citation
    The New Context for Bibliographic Control In the New Millennium 2000,
    Publisher
    the Library of Congress
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105464
    Abstract
    Information finding is changing in a world of digital information and associated search systems, with particular focus on methods of locating information that are distinct from, but complementary to, established practices of bibliographic description. A full understanding of these developments is essential in re-thinking bibliographic control in the new millennium, because they fundamentally change the roles and importance of bibliographic metadata in information discovery processes. There are three major approaches to finding information: through bibliographic surrogates, that represent an intellectual description of aspects and attributes of a work; through computational, content-based techniques that compare queries to parts of the actual works themselves; and through social processes that consider works in relationship to the user and his or her characteristics and history, to other works, and also to the behavior of other communities of users.
    Type
    Conference Paper
    Language
    en
    Collections
    DLIST

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