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Issues in Metadata Crosswalks: A Case Study of Qualified Dublin Core and Onix


Affiliations
1 Max Mueller Bhavan, New Delhi, India
2 Documentation Research and Training Center, Indian StatisticalInstitute, Mysore Road, 8th Mile, Bangalore 560 059, India
3 Documentation Research and Training Center, Indian Statistical Institute, MysoreRoad, 8th Mile, Bangalore 560 059, Bangalore, India
     

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In the traditional library environment Cataloging in Publication (CIP) is very popular and the library staff can make use of CIP records to generate minimal cataloguing information. With the advent of Internet and the presence of book industry on the Net, the growing importance of metadata has resulted in ONIX (ONline Information eXchange). The benefits of crosswalk between ONIX and Dublin Core are too obvious to be ignored, as it saves the time of cataloguers in generating metadata in Dublin Core for the e-books or even printed books acquired by a library. This paper attempts to investigate the possibility of generating required metadata from available metadata formats, particularly the most popular Dublin Core (DC) from ONIX and presents mapping between ONIX and Qualified Dublin Core.

Keywords

Cataloguing in Publication (CIP), Metadata, Online Information Exchange, Onix, Dublin Core, Qualified Dublin Core, Mapping.
User
About The Authors

Renu Seth
Max Mueller Bhavan, New Delhi
India

A. R. D. Prasad
Documentation Research and Training Center, Indian StatisticalInstitute, Mysore Road, 8th Mile, Bangalore 560 059
India

Devika P. Madalli
Documentation Research and Training Center, Indian Statistical Institute, MysoreRoad, 8th Mile, Bangalore 560 059, Bangalore
India


Notifications

  • Pierre (Margaret St) and LaPlant (William P. Jr). Issues in Crosswalking Content Metadata Standards. http://www.niso.org/press/whitepapers/crsswalk.html
  • Hodge (Gail M). Best Practices for Digital Archiving: An Information Life Cycle Approach. D-Lib Magazine. Vol. 6(1); January 2000. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/january00/ 01hodge.html
  • Godby (Carol Jean); Young (Jeffrey A) and Childress (Eric). Repository of Metadata Crosswalks. D-Lib Magazine. Vol. 10(12); December 2004. http://www.dlib.org /dlib/december04/godby/12godby.html
  • Danskin (Alan). Report on an ONIX UNIMARC crosswalk. http://www.bic.org.uk/ reporton.doc
  • About the Initiative. http://dublincore.org/about/
  • Baker (Thomas). Dublin Core in multiple languages: Esperanto, interlingua, or pidgin? In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Research, Development and Practice in Digital Libraries. 1997. University of Library and Information Science, Tsukuba, Japan. http://www.DL.ulis.ac.jp/ISDL97/proceedings/thomas/thomas.html
  • Powell (Andy) and Johnston (Pete). Guidelines for implementing Dublin Core in XML. 2nd April 2003. http://dublincore.org/documents/dc-xml-guidelines/
  • ONIX for Books. http://www.editeur.org/onix.html
  • ALCTS Task force on ONIX. http://www.libraries.psu.edu/tas/jca/ccda/tf-onix2.html
  • Tripathi (Aditya). Metadata Crosswalks with MarcEdit using XSLT. In DRTC Workshop on Semantic Web. 8th - 10th December 2003. DRTC, Bangalore. http://hdl.handle.net/1849/127
  • Prasad (A R D). Using Multiple Metadata formats in DSpace. In DSpace User Meet. 6-8th July 2005. University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
  • Booknet Canada, Bibliographic Data: ONIX. http://www.booknetcanada.ca/booknet/biblio_ data.shtml
  • ONIX Implementation Tutorial – Introduction. http://abiblion.com/onixtutorial/
  • Brand (Amy); Daly (Frank) and Meyers (Barbara). A guide for Publishers: Metadata demystified. http://www.niso.org/standards/resources/Metadata_Demystified.pdf
  • Baker (Thomas) and Dekkers (Makx). Identifying Metadata Elements with URIs. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/july03/baker/07baker.html
  • Lanzinger (Susan S). Digital Preservation and Metadata: History, Theory, Practice. Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited, 2001.
  • ALCTS report: Task Force on ONIX International. http://www.libraries.psu.edu/tas/jca/ccda/ tf-onix2.html

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  • Issues in Metadata Crosswalks: A Case Study of Qualified Dublin Core and Onix

Abstract Views: 323  |  PDF Views: 3

Authors

Renu Seth
Max Mueller Bhavan, New Delhi, India
A. R. D. Prasad
Documentation Research and Training Center, Indian StatisticalInstitute, Mysore Road, 8th Mile, Bangalore 560 059, India
Devika P. Madalli
Documentation Research and Training Center, Indian Statistical Institute, MysoreRoad, 8th Mile, Bangalore 560 059, Bangalore, India

Abstract


In the traditional library environment Cataloging in Publication (CIP) is very popular and the library staff can make use of CIP records to generate minimal cataloguing information. With the advent of Internet and the presence of book industry on the Net, the growing importance of metadata has resulted in ONIX (ONline Information eXchange). The benefits of crosswalk between ONIX and Dublin Core are too obvious to be ignored, as it saves the time of cataloguers in generating metadata in Dublin Core for the e-books or even printed books acquired by a library. This paper attempts to investigate the possibility of generating required metadata from available metadata formats, particularly the most popular Dublin Core (DC) from ONIX and presents mapping between ONIX and Qualified Dublin Core.

Keywords


Cataloguing in Publication (CIP), Metadata, Online Information Exchange, Onix, Dublin Core, Qualified Dublin Core, Mapping.

References