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LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29

LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

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Page 1: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR

2010-09-29

Page 2: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

reading International Federation of Library Association

“Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised 2008

The version I used is on the course resource page http://wotan.liu.edu/home/krichel/cou rses/lis512 under the external_doc folder.

You don’t need to read the 142 pages. Just refer to it to potentially clarify what I discuss here.

Page 3: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

not looked at here

Some of the content relates to tasks that a user will

perform on a retrieval system.

Thus there is some “modelling” of what a user does.

This part is off-topic for us since it deals with information

retrieval.

Page 4: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

step 1

Step 1: What do we describe in the bibliographic

universe? What are the things that are of interest to

bibliographic data?

What we describe is called an entity by FRBR. In fact it

is an entity set. The vocabulary is wrong but it is

convenient.

Example entities are “work” and “event”.

Page 5: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

step 2

Once we know what entities we describe we can do two things. The order of the two does not matter. The two are

1: For each entity, what about it do we describe? Example: title of a work, start time and end time of an event.

2: What are relationships between entities? Example: a work “is about” an event.

--see next two slides--

Page 6: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes to entities

• Once we know what entity we are describing, we can define what we want to describe about it.

• The data elements we enter information about are called attributes.

• For example if the entity is a course, it could be the title of the course, the course number, etc…

Page 7: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

relationship between entities

• If I have two entities, I can define relationships between them.

• Say if I have a course entity, and a person entity, I can define a relationship that a person is a student in a course, or a person is an instructor for a course.

• Entities and relationships form an entity-relationship model.

Page 8: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

entity groups

FRBR groups entities into groups. The groups are numbered

Group 1: work, expression, manifestation, item Group 2: person, corporate body Group 3: concept, object, event, place

Page 9: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 1: work

The work is a distinct artistic and intellectual creation. It is an abstract entity.

It is difficult to precisely define what a work is. Borders of works may be culturally diverse.

Examples: Shakespeare’s Hamlet Bruckner’s fifth symphony Homer’s Iliad

Page 10: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 1: expression

An expression is an intellectual or artistic realization of the work in the form of alpha-numeric, musical or chorographical notation, regardless of physical form that would not alter the contents.

Examples: the original text of Hamlet a version of Bruckner’s fifth symphony a Russian translation of the Iliad

Page 11: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 1: manifestation The manifestation is the particular physical form of

the expression a recorded performance of Hamlet a published score of a version of the fifth symphony of

Bruckner a translation of the Iliad published in Russian

Difference between manifestations depend on physical form and intellectual contents.

Page 12: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 1: item

This is a single physical copy of the manifestation a DVD of a particular performance of Hamlet a physical copy of a score of a version of Bruckner's

fifth symphony a copy of the Russian translation of the Iliad on a

web site.

Page 13: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 2: person

A person is an individual person. It does not matter whether they are alive or not. The main interest in persons is with their

relationship with the work.

Page 14: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 2: corporate body

A corporate “Corporate Body” is a group of persons, an organization, or a group of organizations acting as a unit.

Usually the group has to have a name, even though they may have gathered only once for, say, a meeting.

Whether a corporate body is defunct or not does not matter.

Page 15: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 3: concept

A concept is an abstract notion or idea. The concept does not need to be precise. Bibliographic records are interested in concepts

because they may be the subject of a work.

Page 16: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 3: object

An object is a material thing. Whether the object actually exists is not of

concern. We are interested in objects because they can

be the subjects of works. Example in the FRBR document: Apollo 11

Page 17: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 3: place

A place is a geographical location.

The place includes geographical location, be they

terrestrial or not, and geo-political jurisdictions e.g.

the Holy See.

Page 18: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 3: event

• An event is an action or occurrence. • The entity defined as an event encompasses a

comprehensive range of actions and occurrences that may be the subject of a work: historical events, epochs, periods of time, etc.

Page 19: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

aggregate entities

• Many entities can be aggregates of other entities.

• The USA (place) has 50 states, each of them entities of type place.

• The Torah (work) has five books. Each is of type work.

Page 20: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a work

title form date (of creation) other distinguishing characteristics (enabling

distinction from other works with same title) intended termination intended audience context

Page 21: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a work

• context (at creation time)• [for musical works]– medium of performance – numeric designation– key

• [for cartographical works]– coordinates – equinox

Page 22: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of an expression

• title • form • date • language • other distinguishing characteristic • extensibility • revisability

Page 23: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of an expression

• extent • summarization of content • context • critical response • use restrictions

Page 24: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of expressions

• [for a serial expression]– sequencing pattern – expected regularity of issue – expected frequency of issue

• [for musical expressions]– type of score – medium of performance

Page 25: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of expression

• [for cartographic images or objects]– scale – projection – presentation technique– representation of relief– geodetic, grid, and vertical measurement

Page 26: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of expressions

• for images – recording technique – special characteristics – technique

Page 27: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a manifestation

• title • statement of responsibility • edition/issue designation • place of publication/distribution • publisher/distributor • date of publication/distribution • fabricator/manufacturer • series statement

Page 28: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a manifestation

• form of carrier • extent of the carrier • physical medium • capture mode • dimensions of the carrier • manifestation identifier

Page 29: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a manifestation

• source for acquisition/access authorization • terms of availability • access restrictions• [for printed books]– typeface – type size

• [for hand-printed books]– foliation– collation

Page 30: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a manifestation

• [for sound recordings]– playing speed – groove width – kind of cutting – tape configuration – kind of sound – special reproduction characteristic

Page 31: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a manifestation

• [for serials]– publication status – numbering

• [for microfilm and visual projections]– color – reduction ratio– polarity – generation – presentation format

Page 32: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a manifestation

• [for electronic resources]– system requirements – file characteristics

• [for remote electronic resources]– mode of access – access address

Page 33: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of an item

• item identifier • fingerprint • provenance • marks/inscriptions • exhibition history • condition • treatment history • scheduled treatment • access restrictions

Page 34: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a person

• name of the person e.g. “P.D.Q. Bach”• dates of the person e.g. “1742 to 1817”• title of the person e.g. “very reverend”• other designation associated with the person

e.g. “junior”

Page 35: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of a corporate body

• name of the corporate body • number associated with the corporate body • place associated with the corporate body • date associated with the corporate body • other designations associated with the

corporate body

Page 36: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

attributes of concept / object / place / event

• These three entities each just have one single, the “term”.

• The term for the concept / object / place / event is the word, phrase, or group of characters used to name or designate the concept / object / place / event.

Page 37: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

primary relationships in group 1

A work “is realized through” an expression. An expression “is a realization” of a work. An expression “embodied in” a manifestation. A manifestation “is an embodiment” of an

expression. A manifestation “is exemplified by” an item. An item “exemplifies” a manifestation.

Page 38: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

group 1 to group 2 relationships

A work “is created by” a person or corporate body (P/CB).

An expression “is realized by” a P/CB. A manifestation “is produced by” a P/CB An item “is owned by” a P/CB

Page 39: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

subject relationships

• any entity in group one can have a subject relationship with any entity, be it in group 1, 2 or 3.

• A work can be about – another work– a person– a place / event etc…

Page 40: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

relationships within group 1

• Relationships within group one are a bit more difficult.

• Whole to part relationships hold for all entities in group one and they are easy to understand.

Page 41: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

work to work relationships

is a successor to | has a successor supplements | has a supplement complements | has a complement has a summary | is a summary of has an adaption | is an adaptation of has a transformation | is a transformation of imitation | is an imitation of has part | is a part of

Page 42: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

expression to expression relationships, same work

• has an abridgement | is an abridgement of• has a revision | is a revision of • has a translation | is a translation of• [for musical works]– has a transcription | is a transcription of – has an arrangement | is an arrangement of

Page 43: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

expression to expression, different work

• has a successor | is a successor to • has a supplement | supplements • has a complement | complements • has a summary | is a summary of • has an adaptation | is an adaptation of • has a transformation | is a transformation of • has an imitation | is an imitation of

Page 44: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

expression (of different work) to work

• Such relationships are used when we have a relationship between expressions, but we are not sure what expression of the work we are looking at.

• an expression “has a successor” in a work • an expression “is a successor to” a work• an expression “has a supplement” in a work• an expression “supplements” a work

Page 45: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

expression (of different work) to work

• an expression “has a complement” in a work• an expression “complements” a work• an expression “has a summary” in a work• an expression “is a summary” of a work• an expression “has an adaptation” in a work• an expression “is an adaptation” of a work• an expression “has a transformation” of a work• an expression “is a transformation of” a work • an expression “has an imitation” in a work• an expression “is an imitation of” a work

Page 46: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

manifestation to manifestation relationships

• These hold for manifestations of the same expression

• has a reproduction | is a reproduction of • has an alternate | is an alternate to • is part of | has part

Page 47: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

manifestation to item

• a manifestation “has a reproduction” in an item

• an item “is a reproduction” of a manifestation

Page 48: LIS512 lecture 2: FRBR 2010-09-29. reading International Federation of Library Association “Fundamental Requirements for Bibliographic Records”, revised

item to item (same manifestation)

• has reconfiguration | is a reconfiguration of • has reproduction | is a reproduction of • is part of | has part