Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

October 22, 2010

Rethinking Library Linking: Breathing New Life into OpenURL

Filed under: Cataloging,Indexing,OpenURL,Subject Identity,Topic Maps — Patrick Durusau @ 7:26 am

Rethinking Library Linking: Breathing New Life into OpenURL Authors: Cindi Trainor and Jason Price

Abstract:

OpenURL was devised to solve the “appropriate copy problem.” As online content proliferated, it became possible for libraries to obtain the same content from multiple locales: directly from publishers and subscription agents; indirectly through licensing citation databases that contain full text; and, increasingly, from free online sources. Before the advent of OpenURL, the only way to know whether a journal was held by the library was to search multiple resources. An OpenURL link resolver accepts links from library citation databases (sources) and returns to the user a menu of choices (targets) that may include links to full text, the library catalog, and other related services (figure 1). Key to understanding OpenURL is the concept of “context sensitive” linking: links to the same item will be different for users of different libraries, and are dependent on the library’s collections. This issue of Library Technology Reports provides practicing librarians with real-world examples and strategies for improving resolver usability and functionality in their own institutions.

Resources:

OpenURL (ANSI/NISO Z39.88-2004

openURL@oclc.org archives

Questions:

  1. OCLC says of OpenURL

    Remember the card catalog? Everything in a library was represented in the card catalog with one or more cards carrying bibliographic information. OpenURL is the internet equivalent of those index cards.

  2. True? 3-5 pages, no citations, or
  3. False? 3-5 pages, no citations.

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