Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship | Spring 2001 | |||
DOI:10.5062/F49021RX |
URLs in this document have been updated. Links enclosed in {curly brackets} have been changed. If a replacement link was located, the new URL was added and the link is active; if a new site could not be identified, the broken link was removed. |
Denise Beaubien Bennett
Reference Librarian, Engineering Selector, Online Coordinator
Marston Science Library
University of Florida
dbennett@ufl.edu
The IEEE/IEE Electronic Library (IEL), using the Xplore interface, is a publisher-based service that must be managed as an aggregator service since it contains a variety of document formats (journal articles, conference proceedings, industry standards) that receive different levels of bibliographic control in library catalogs. These features require non-standard handling decisions and treatment in library catalogs and other finding aids. Many libraries are linking from catalogs to Xplore journals but not to the conference proceedings. Librarians acknowledge the value of linking from the catalog as well as the high maintenance costs involved. The expanding use of DOI links from indexes to full-text services may alleviate some of these linking concerns.
Any user may browse the table of contents of publications using IEEE Xplore. Access to the search engine and the publication's full text is limited to subscribers. The search engine supports tables-of-contents browsing. The user may select a category of journals/magazines or conferences or standards, and then identify a source by significant keyword. IEEE Xplore also supports searching, via Author search, Basic search (multiple indexes and variables), or Advanced search (command level). IEEE Xplore supports full Boolean searching and truncation using the Verity search engine.
Links from library catalogs to online resources work most successfully when the full-text resource has a stable link to the top level of resource title, whether that title is a journal name or a conference name. The IEL supports a table-of-contents browse feature, but it does not have a top-level page for each journal or conference title.
Oregon State University Libraries would like to hear from libraries that have purchased either the electronic-only or the print+electronic versions of the IEEE Proceedings Order Plan (POP). Are you cataloging the titles in your online catalog? If so, as serials or monographs? How are you determining which titles are available (since they will be becoming available throughout the year) and when are you cataloging them? If you are not cataloging the individual titles, how are you providing access to these titles? |
On January 26, 2001, Denise Bennett posted this message to STS-L.
We will soon subscribe to the IEEE Electronic Library (IEL). We will suddenly have access to the full text of many more conference proceedings, etc. than we've owned in print and cataloged. We are discussing how/whether to treat this sudden influx of new items in our catalog. If you subscribe to IEL, please let me know if you've done anything in your catalog to support description/identification/access to IEL items. First, do any of these statements describe your situation?
If (3), are you creating provisional records or adding full records? Are you adding specific holdings to your records? Are you adding a generic "try IEL" link in any of your records? What are the costs/benefits of enhancing our catalogs when we subscribe to a service such as IEL? How viable and professional is it to assume that our primary users will quickly learn to start out in IEL for their information needs, bypassing our catalogs and other indexes and services? What about non-primary users and non-Engineering reference staff, who are likely to search the catalog for these items -- and, if unsuccessful, conclude we don't have access and possibly go through the ILL process? Many of us have overdosed on the topic of adding journal records to our catalog to represent full text available in our subscribed general-level article services. Are the arguments different with a service such as IEL, which serves a specialized, research-level population with a more stable list of titles? |
Libraries choosing not to add links to local catalogs:
The University of Alabama-Birmingham has the ASPP journals package, and intends to add links as soon as IEEE Xplore creates stable links for the journal titles. Virginia Tech would like to add links someday, but IEEE is deep in the backlog as of early 2001. The Naval Postgraduate School has not added links, although the online catalog contains records for all their print holdings. Iowa State is not adding records for proceedings into the online catalog, because the IEL holdings are sporadic and the number of conferences is overwhelming.
Libraries adding links for journals only:
Lehigh University subscribes to both ASPP and POP online, but has put links in the catalog only for the journals and magazines. Should IEEE or IHS make MARC records of the conference proceedings available to subscribing libraries, Lehigh would consider adding those records.
Libraries with links from INSPEC:
Virginia Tech will soon have direct links to IEE Xplore from their Ovid versions of INSPEC and Compendex, lessening the urgency of adding links to titles within the library catalog. The University of California, San Diego has links from the California Digital Library version of INSPEC to IEEE Xplore.
Libraries creating separate web pages with links:
The University of Minnesota has placed links in the catalog for journals. For proceedings, the catalog links to a separate web page that has the links plus the subscribed years of coverage.
Libraries choosing to add links, records and/or holdings info to local catalogs:
North Carolina State University has created an ambitious linking project. NCSU chooses to catalog new proceedings additions, and to link proceedings at the document level. A mechanism in Acquisitions will check IEEE Xplore for recent additions. At NCSU, a temporary cataloger works on cataloging enhancements such as this.
The University of Washington's philosophy is to catalog the electronic versions as they have cataloged the print. In print, the University of Washington subscribed to POP. With IEL, they now receive the equivalent of POP Plus. Many new records will be added to the catalog to reflect the "Plus" titles as this project emerges from the backlog.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison has created a seamless view in the public catalog records for journals and proceedings. The patron sees the print location and holdings as well as the online link and holdings. The magic happens through a MARC format holdings record that is attached to the same bibliographic record. For conferences classed as serials, the link points to the top-level conference page in IEEE Xplore, and a note in the record recommends which keywords the patron should input to retrieve those proceedings. For conferences classed as monographs, the link points directly to those proceedings.
The University of Florida has committed to tackling the linking process with results similar to those in the University of Wisconsin-Madison catalog. Initially, links will be added to the existing journal records. The University of Florida shares the challenges of University of Washington; subscribing to the IEL means a sudden influx of POP Plus titles over the previous POP subscription.
Southern Methodist University switched to IEEE Xplore from the earlier, less-manageable IEL user interface. At SMU, the e-journal resources librarian must submit paperwork to request new titles be added to the catalog. Journal links are being added at a slow but steady rate.
The University of California, San Diego is partnering with MIT to catalog the electronic versions of the IEEE proceedings, and to make the records available through OCLC. In the UCSD catalog, existing records for proceedings will have the IEEE Xplore link added. OCLC will spin off separate records for the electronic version only, for the convenience of libraries that wish to download separate records.
North Carolina State University
If title coverage is unstable and issue coverage is spotty, why bother trying to catalog IEEE and IEE conferences? Electronic publication will increase dramatically in the next decade. The dynamic nature of electronic publication will require cataloging departments to create processes to update and maintain the accuracy of holdings to even greater degree. Electronic publication makes it even easier for publishers to create, modify and cancel proceedings of meetings. Conference proceedings coverage, whether in print or electronic format, have always been a special problem in cataloging. Despite the challenge, most catalog departments have represented these holdings. The addition of many more electronic proceedings to the catalog provides an opportunity to re-examine how all proceedings are treated and to make that representation even more accurate. Automating procedures for this to happen will give valuable experience to technical services in working in this new environment. Cataloging electronic proceedings will also maintain the continuity to what has been historically represented in the catalog.
What about preservation of archives? IEEE is considering an archival policy. Electronic storage of large back-files on IEEE servers will require some careful considerations. Balancing the expense and risk of centralization versus the expense and responsibility of local libraries will be the central concern. As technology and electronic publication evolve, answers will begin to emerge. For now the current policy is stated on the IEEE web site is as follows:
"IEEE is committed to providing customers with access to the content to which they subscribe. As we develop a working archival policy, the IEEE will work with customers to determine a solution that meets all needs. Currently, the IEEE is prepared to offer archival content in CD-ROM, magnetic tape or print formats. A nominal fee is associated with the delivery of any archival content."
If remote storage becomes a central value in the competitive marketplace for electronic publication, then IEEE will probably feel more justified in providing the service. If libraries still maintain that their role is preservation, no matter the format, then the library establishment will find ways of providing historic access. Digital Object Identifiers may be part of the solution in keeping track of disparate locations of conference holdings content.
Some publishing peculiarities of the service. The rapidity of electronic publishing has impacted the timing at which conferences appear in the citation databases, the IEEE Xplore database and the online catalog. For instance, UCSD reports that many items are available through IEEE Xplore before they are indexed in INSPEC, which is not surprising due to the added value of the indexing in INSPEC. Science & Engineering reference staff and ILL staff at UCSD have acclimated to checking IEEE Xplore directly for known items. IEEE has recently stepped up this pace with more efficient procedures. Titles will be shipped to IEEE as close as possible to the conference ending date thus assuring the IEEE Xplore database as the final authority for the most recent publications. The online catalog and citation databases will lag behind in representing this access. IEEE IEL has always been ahead of INSPEC. When a publication gets into the IEL production queue, IEEE creates a "skeletal" bibliographic record and the corresponding PDF file. When the full INSPEC record arrives in two to four months, IEEE replaces the skeletal record. This ensures that users get access to the content faster than if they waited for complete INSPEC indexing.
Processing Costs
The creation of original records for inclusion into the online catalog has not always been obvious and easily measured when working with incomplete and semi-structured information. These cost estimates get even fuzzier when one takes in account the differences in catalog systems and local cataloging practices. Electronic holdings and format information has been treated in different ways depending on the local conditions. A good way to view the costs of processing electronic publications is in terms initial and ongoing costs associated with any particular solution. The use of preexisting infrastructure, procedures, and standards can be a way of keeping costs down, because it leverages current human resource skills and systems.
In the case of IEEE Xplore/IEL publications use of pre-existing MARC record sets can save much time in original cataloging work, manual entry or updating of lists, especially if bulk add and deletes capability is possible. Although these record sets are still being created (OCLC is working with the University of California, San Diego cataloging department to provide record sets for purchase) the existence of the resource will provide library system programmers with many options in getting IEEE electronic publications represented in the catalog.
Without the use of MARC records, catalog departments will have to depend on parsable lists or manual entry to modify or add records to the catalog. IEEE is providing some electronic lists that can be manipulated by catalog programmers. IEEE will list all conference proceedings in a given year, the package plan they will be in and shipment date for the print edition (Phase one will be available in May 2001). A link called "Loaded Online Into IEEE Xplore" will provide more services on the IEEE publications web site later this year in phase two. In the meantime, PDF files and downloadable customizable spreadsheet will be located at: {http://www.ieee.org/products/onlinepubs/prod/pop_titles.html}
Parsing these lists (pulling out relevant information such as the ISBN that can be used match OCLC MARC records) can be accomplished by using conventional Unix utility programs. The process involves:
These steps will require a skilled programming time and effort. Manual entry in the creation of original records or manual modification of existing records is probably the most time consuming and expensive solution.
No matter what decision is made regarding the enhancements in the web online catalog to support IEEE electronic publications, the publishing world will continue to explore ways of integrating electronic literature. Ambitious reference citation linking agreements between publishers, aggregators and library service providers will force individual libraries to either broaden the purpose of the online catalog or provide access to the systems that will support these initiatives.
Some have disputed the need to catalog and link from the catalog. Baruth (2000) has argued that the inevitability of changes in scholarly communication points to umbrella software that synthesizes the searches from a variety of disparate databases. She has argued that the online catalog and the technical services behind it are not up to the challenge of incorporating all the new literature that will be available electronically. She sees that the tremendous duplication will as be very inefficient and that consortia with central databases or electronic subscription management services would provide better service.
Despite consortium agreements and central services, local control and representation is still highly valued. As the general serials collection, e-books and other scholarly literature becomes networked, libraries will probably respond with some kind of pointer to these resources. Many feel that the prominence and central locus of the online catalog in libraries provides the natural platform in which to provide access to the full text. If not, users will have to search disparate citation and publisher databases. This answers the question whether links from indexing and abstracting services such as INSPEC and Compendex relieve the responsibility to have links in catalogs. If one of the main values of library catalogs is as an authority for local ownership and access then providing these records is clear.
The main value of the system is that publishing entities involved in the exchange of content can share central directories that automatically redirect users to the current location of the content. DOI links are used in the CrossRef service. This service links reference citations within journal articles directly to the full-text publisher of those citations. Currently, ScienceDirect, Web of Science, Cambridge Scientific are listed as participants in CrossRef. The INSPEC abstracting service is listed as a "partner" with ScienceDirect; IEE and IEEE are listed as participating publishers. IEEE currently cannot use the CrossRef service for conference articles because of inconsistent conference metadata. Currently, a metadata standards committee at CrossRef is working out the issues.
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Special Thanks to the List Respondents: