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Dublin Core Metadata Element Set. Diana Hyle Kate Wise Marina Vildoso Anthony Vu Kristin Wright David Vermooten. What Dublin Core is not. Irish Rap Singers. A Short History. Originally conceived at the 2 nd International WWW Conference in 1994 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Dublin Core Metadata Element Set
Diana HyleKate WiseMarina VildosoAnthony VuKristin WrightDavid Vermooten
What Dublin Core is not . . .
Irish Rap Singers
A Short History
Originally conceived at the 2nd International WWW Conference in 1994
Launched in Dublin, Ohio at the OCLC/National Center for Supercomputing Applications joint workshop in 1995 (where it draws its name from)
Created for the cataloging of electronic documents
The Red Tape of DC
The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI) was formed from and informal group of research and practitioners.
Its basic function is to govern the standards of DC in the various international regions and promote its use.
The DCMI provides standards to facilitate the finding, sharing and management of information.
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative
What is it good for anyway? Describing digital materials
such as video, sound, image, text, and web pages.
Dublin Core is most often expressed in XML (eXtensible Markup Language).
Dublin Core has the distinction of being the only widely accepted metadata format that is almost completely customizable.
Dublin Hard-core
There 15 +1 basic elements (which follow) These elements may be expanded by
repeating elements with qualifiers.
Dublin Hard-Core, cont’d
Title A name given to the resource, typically the title
Subject The topic of the resource, usually expressed as
keywords, phrases, or using some kind of controlled vocabulary
Description An “account” of the resource; can include an
abstract, a table of contents, a graph, etc.
Cont’d Source
Information about “where it came from”, i.e., if a website, is it part of another website? Or did part of the electronic resource originate with a physical source (scan of a book, etc)?
Language The language of the
intellectual content of the resource – French, English, etc.
Cont’d
Relation A related source, title, or version to the resource
Coverage The extent or scope, including time period,
jurisdiction, spatial location, etc.
Cont’d Creator
The one responsible for the whole shooting match. This may be a person, organization, or service.
Publisher The entity responsible for making the resource available.
Contributor An entity responsible for making significant intellectual
contributions to the resource, but which is secondary to the creator
Cont’d
Rights Rights held in and over a resource
Date The date of an event in the lifecycle of the
resource (such as date of creation or revision) Resource Type
The nature or genre of a resource Best practices controlled vocabulary
Cont’d Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Formatting controlled vocabulary
Identifier A string or number
that uniquely identifies the resource
New Kid on the Block
In 2004, a 16th element was added called “Audience” This is the target audience of resource, or the
intended user of the resource. i.e. elementary, high school, etc.
Beads, Bangles, and Lucky Charms – Qualifying the Elements Myriad qualifiers are available to resolve
abiguity Not necessarily guaranteed to be translatable in a
pure DC->____ crosswalk Examples of clarification:
Coverage.spatial Coverage.temporal Coverage jurisdiction
Meet Dublin’s Dad, MARC
007 c ‡b o ‡d c ‡e g ‡f a 040 B@L ‡c B@L ‡d OCLCQ 020 1573822620 020 9781573822626 028 02 385034-CD1 ‡b SmartSaver/Broderbund
028 02 385034-CD2 ‡b SmartSaver/Broderbund
082 _4 006.6
049 KEEM 245 00 Learn Microsoft PowerPoint 2002 and Microsoft Word 2002 ‡h [electronic resource] : ‡b for Windows
95/98/Me/XP. 246 3_ Microsoft Word 2002
246 18 Learn Microsoft PowerPoint 2002 and Word 2002
260 Novato, CA : ‡b SmartSaver/Broderbund, ‡c c2002. 300 2 computer optical discs : ‡b sd., col. ; ‡c 4 3/4 in. 500 Title from container insert. 505 00 ‡g Disc 1: ‡t Learn Microsoft Word 2002 -- ‡g Disc 2: ‡t Learn Microsoft PowerPoint 2002.
538 System requirements: 233 Mhz or higher, Windows 95/98/Me/XP, 800 x 600 16 bit display, 64MB RAM or better, sound card, 50MB of free hard disk space, 4x CD-ROM or DVD drive.
630 00 Microsoft PowerPoint (Computer file)
630 00 Microsoft Word.
650 _0 Word processing.
650 _0 Computer graphics.
710 2_ Brøderbund.
Dublin ExposedTitle Learn Microsoft PowerPoint 2002 and Microsoft Word 2002 • for Windows 95/98/Me/XP. Title.alternative Learn Microsoft PowerPoint 2002 and Word 2002 Identifier.ISBN 1573822620 Identifier.ISBN 9781573822626 Type.AACR2-
gmd [electronic resource] :
Contributor.nameCorporate
Brøderbund.
Coverage
Date.issued.MARC21-Date
2002
Description.note Title from container insert.
Description.tableOfContents
Disc 1: • Learn Microsoft Word 2002 -- • Disc 2: • Learn Microsoft PowerPoint 2002.
Format.extent 2 computer optical discs : • sd., col. ; • 4 3/4 in. Language.ISO6
39-2 eng
Publisher.place Novato, CA : Publisher SmartSaver/Broderbund, Relation.require
s System requirements: 233 Mhz or higher, Windows 95/98/Me/XP, 800 x 600 16 bit display, 64MB RAM or better, sound card,
50MB of free hard disk space, 4x CD-ROM or DVD drive. Rights
Source.URI
Subject.class.DDC
006.6
Subject.titleUniform.LCSH
Microsoft PowerPoint (Computer file)
Subject.titleUniform.LCSH
Microsoft Word.
Subject.topical.LCSH
Word processing.
Subject.topical.LCSH
Computer graphics.
Dublin Core – Anyway you want it, that’s the way you need it DC is customizeable with the 15 core
elements functioning as a common ground minimum for translation purposes: Anything that can translate DC can have at least a
degree of understanding of a resource from pulling the common DC core elements and crosswalking them.
WordPerfect .txtWord .txtIn both cases, you loose some formatting, but keep the core, key information.
Resources Brown, J. and Luedke, K. (n.d.) Dublin Core: a meta future.
Accessed July 19, 2007 from http://studentaccess.emporia.edu/~jbrown/DublinCorePrep.ppt#257,1,DublinCore
Taylor, A. G. (2004). The Organization of Information, 2nd ed. Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited, Inc.
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (2006). Dublin Core Metadata Element Set, Version 1.1. Accessed July 19, 2007 from http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/
Weibel, S. and Miller, E. (2000). An introduction to Dublin Core. Accessed July 19, 2007 from http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2000/10/25/dublincore/index.html
Hillman, D. (2005) Using Dublin Core – The elements. Accessed July 19, 2007 from http://dublincore.org/documents/usageguide/elements.shtml
Smiraglia, R. P. (2005) Metadata: A cataloger’s primer. Binghampton, NY: The Haworth Information Press.
Questions, Comments, Concerns?