Authority files: Breaking out of the library silo to become signposts for research information


Autoria(s): van der Graaf, Maurits; Waaijers, Leo
Data(s)

01/02/2014

Resumo

Authority files serve to uniquely identify real world ‘things’ or entities like documents, persons, organisations, and their properties, like relations and features. Already important in the classical library world, authority files are indispensable for adequate information retrieval and analysis in the computer age. This is because, even more than humans, computers are poor at handling ambiguity. Through authority files, people tell computers which terms, names or numbers refer to the same thing or have the same meaning by giving equivalent notions the same identifier. Thus, authority files signpost the internet where these identifiers are interlinked on the basis of relevance. When executing a query, computers are able to navigate from identifier to identifier by following these links and collect the queried information on these so-called ‘crosswalks’. In this context, identifiers also go under the name controlled access points. Identifiers become even more crucial now massive data collections like library catalogues or research datasets are releasing their till-now contained data directly to the internet. This development is coined Open Linked Data. The concatenating name for the internet is Web of Data instead of the classical Web of Documents.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://repository.jisc.ac.uk/6224/1/Authority_files_%2D_Breaking_out_of_the_library_silo.pdf

van der Graaf, Maurits and Waaijers, Leo (2014) Authority files: Breaking out of the library silo to become signposts for research information. [Publication]

Relação

http://repository.jisc.ac.uk/6224/

Tipo

Publication

NonPeerReviewed