Updated EndNote Import Filter available for Melvyl

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008 | Category: General, Bibliographic Services

By Alison Ray, CDL Information Services Analyst

With our latest upgrade to the Melvyl Catalog (http://melvyl.cdlib.org), certain views of the Print/Email record displays changed.  This made the EndNote Import Filter for the Melvyl Catalog unusable.  The technical support team at Thomson Reuters, the producer of the EndNote bibliographic citation software, has corrected the problem with the import filter and has made a new version available from their Import Filters web page.

The import filter is located on this page (http://www.endnote.com/support/enfilters.asp) under Information Provider: University of California, Database: Library Catalog, and the date of the new version is 10/3/2008.

Springer E-Book Trial: Clarification

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008 | Category: General, Collection Development

By Ellen Meltzer, CDL Information Services Manager

In an earlier CDLINFO article (9/12/08), we informed you that “through December 31st 2008, a public trial of all English-language Springer electronic books is available to UC library users via the Springer Link website at http://springerlink.com/home/main.mpx.”  Because of semantic confusion relating to the extent of the coverage, we should have stated that the years included are 2005-2008 only.  Earlier works are not covered.  (Landolt-Bornstein titles are not included in the Springer ebook offering; they are already licensed separately.)

CDL’s Publishing Program’s permanent placements

Monday, October 20th, 2008 | Category: Staff News

By Laine Farley, CDL Interim Executive Director

Catherine Mitchell named Director of Publishing program

CDL is delighted to announce that as of October 13, Catherine Mitchell is the permanent Director of the Publishing program for CDL.  Catherine has held the position on an interim basis since November 2007.  During that time, she has led the group to develop a new services-oriented vision and to launch an ambitious redesign of the eScholarship interface.  She was also the project manager for the Mark Twain project which successfully launched last November.  Catherine’s dedication, deep understanding of scholarly communication, publishing issues, and professionalism are admired by all of us who work with her.  Please join me in congratulating Catherine on her new (old) job!

*  *  *  *  *

Welcome Back, Suzanne Lim

CDL is also delighted to welcome Suzanne Lim back to the CDL. As the Publishing Group Support Programmer, Suzanne will be responsible for the day-to-day maintenance and management of all Publishing Group services and servers. In addition, she will be helping develop the content workflow to support the new eScholarship Repository access interface, now under development. Suzanne’s extensive background as a systems administrator uniquely qualifies her for this role.  She will expand her skills to eventually be able to expand her role to that of XTF programmer.  Please join us in welcoming (back) Suzanne.

Google Book Search Target in UC-eLinks

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008 | Category: General, Bibliographic Services

By Ellen Meltzer, CDL Information Services Manager

Google Book Search has recently been enabled as a target in UC-eLinks, linking to the same content as is in the current Melvyl Catalog.  The CDL will turn this feature on when there is a “full view” and “preview” for Google Book Search, not in the cases where there is metadata only.  For purposes of consistency in the UC-eLinks window, the online link to Google Book Search will appear as the first link in the window, as is the case for all other online items.

This feature was previewed in summer by those on the LINK-L listserv, and was recently reviewed by HOPS.  Below is a preview from our test server, so it looks slightly different from what you’ll see in production:

The feature will be made available to the public on Wednesday, October 15, 2008.

Major Library Partners Launch HathiTrust Shared Digital Repository

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008 | Category: General

By Laine Farley, CDL Interim Executive Director

There’s an Elephant in the Library; Organizers Promise It Will Never Forget

A group of the nation’s largest research libraries are collaborating to create a repository of their vast digital collections, including millions of books, organizers announced today.  These holdings will be archived and preserved in a single repository called the HathiTrust (http://www.hathitrust.org/). Materials in the public domain will be available for reading online.

Launched jointly by the 12-university consortium known as the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) and the 11 university libraries of the University of California system, the HathiTrust leverages the time-honored commitment to preservation and access to information that university libraries have valued for centuries.  UC’s participation will be coordinated by the California Digital Library (CDL), which brings its deep and innovative experience in digital curation and online scholarship to the HathiTrust.

“This effort combines the expertise and resources of some of the nation’s foremost research libraries and holds even greater promise as it seeks to grow beyond the initial partners,” says John Wilkin, associate university librarian of the University of Michigan and the newly named executive director of HathiTrust.  Hathi (pronounced HAH-tee), the Hindi word for elephant incorporated into the repository’s name, underscores the immensity of this undertaking, Wilkin says.  Elephants also evoke memory, wisdom, and strength.

As of today, HathiTrust contains more than 2 million volumes and approximately ¾ of a billion pages, about 16 percent of which are in the public domain. Public domain materials will be available for reading online.  Materials protected by copyright, although not available for reading online, are given the full range of digital archiving services, thereby offering member libraries a reliable means to preserve their collections. Organizers also expect to use those materials in the research and development of the Trust.

Volumes are added to the repository daily, and content will grow rapidly as the University of California, CIC member libraries, and other prospective partners contribute their digitized content.  Also today, the founding partners announce that the University of Virginia is joining the initiative.

Each of the founding partners brings extensive and highly regarded expertise in the areas of information technology, digital libraries, and project management to this endeavor.  Creation of the HathiTrust supports the digitization efforts of the CIC and the University of California, each of which has entered into collective agreements with Google to digitize portions of the collections of their libraries, more than 10 million volumes in total, as part of the Google Book Search project.  Materials digitized through other means will also be made available through HathiTrust.

HathiTrust provides libraries a means to archive and provide access to their digital content, whether scanned volumes, special collections, or born-digital materials.  Preserving materials for the long term has long been a mission and driving force of leading research libraries.  Their collections, accumulated over centuries, represent a treasury of cultural heritage and investment in the broad public good of promoting scholarship and advancing knowledge.  The representation of these resources in digital form provides expanded opportunities for innovative use in research, teaching, and learning, but must be done with careful attention to effective solutions for the curation and long-term preservation of digital assets.

“The CIC Libraries have always worked at a large scale, with big collections, big user communities and high expectations for service.  They are not intimidated by big challenges, and will bring their comfort with this to the development of the shared digital repository,” says Mark Sandler, director of the CIC Center for Library Initiatives.

“The University of California libraries have an unparalleled reputation for innovation in digital library development and inter-institutional collaboration,” says Laine Farley, interim executive director of the California Digital Library.  “Participation in the HathiTrust continues this tradition and will enable UC to provide its students and scholars with access to one of the most significant digital collections ever assembled.” Adds Brian Schottlaender, the Audrey Geisel University Librarian at UC San Diego, “The University of California Libraries are pleased to work collaboratively with our CIC colleagues to build a rich and coherent resource accessible to scholars for the long-term.”

“Researchers will benefit from the expert curation and consistent access they have long associated with the CIC research libraries,” says Michael McRobbie, president of Indiana University.  “Great libraries have long been essential to outstanding scholarship, and the HathiTrust collaboration among the CIC institutions, the University of California and others provides an essential tool for 21st- century scholars.”

“Digitization of print texts has the promise of being transformative of scholarship and of library practice,” says Paul Courant, University of Michigan librarian, dean of libraries, and former provost.  “In both areas, the ability to search many texts and to preserve texts accessibly creates tremendous opportunities for collaboration amongst scholars and universities. HathiTrust has made a good start, and like the elephant for which it is named, we expect that it will prove able to carry and deliver valuable resources with grace and reliability. ”

“Before this collaboration,” Wilkin says, “the collections in each library existed in isolation. Now we are bringing them together, pooling resources and eliminating redundancies, and producing a valuable research tool that will be greater than the sum of its parts.”

The CIC and the University of California each produce an estimated 10 percent of the new Ph.D.’s granted in the United States each year and together serve more than 600,000 students.

The Midwest-based Committee on Institutional Cooperation includes the universities of the Big Ten, plus the University of Chicago. Partner libraries represent Indiana University, University of Illinois, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Iowa, University of Michigan, Michigan State University, University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Ohio State University, Penn State University, Purdue University and University of Wisconsin-Madison.  Combined, they serve more than 385,000 students, employ more than 190,000 faculty and staff, and expend $6 billion in research and development.

The University of California system includes ten research universities at Berkeley, Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, Merced, Riverside, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, and Santa Cruz plus the systemwide California Digital Library, with more than 220,000 students, 170,000 faculty and staff, and more than 1.5 million alumni living and working around the globe.  The University of California Libraries together comprise the largest single university library system in the world.

Next Generation Melvyl Pilot – Request Delayed; October Enhancements

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008 | Category: General, Bibliographic Services

By Ellen Meltzer, CDL Information Services Manager

Request Delayed
One of the most significant remaining challenges in the Next Generation Melvyl Pilot supported by WorldCat Local (WCL) is the integration with Request (ILL).  Request is dependent on a major re-architecture of WorldCat Local.  The development of that re-architecture has taken longer than expected and Request is now targeted for public release in spring 2009.

The Executive Team and University Librarians are evaluating the impact this delay will have on the timetable for making a decision about moving Next Generation Melvyl from pilot to production.

October Update
On Sunday, October 5, new functionality was brought into WCL.  The following notes, written by OCLC’s Bob Schulz, Laura Endress, and Bob Robertson-Boyd, describe these changes.

Enhancement:  Add format and language facets to editions pages to assist in discovering items in large edition sets.

Enhancement:  Improved material type handling and display

  • Display literary form and literary text
  • Suppress redundant types
      For eTypes, do not show secondary type of com or Sound effect
      For eBooks, do not show secondary type of bks
      For eAudiobook or eMusic, do not show secondary type of rec or "Audio book, etc." or "Music"
      For eSerials, do not show secondary type of ser
      For eVideos, do not show secondary type of vis
      • Old Display: eBook : Computer file
      • New Display: eBook
      • Old Display: Downloadable audiobook : Audio book, etc. : Sound effect  Computer File  Sound Recording
      • New Display: Downloadable audiobook

Enhancement:  Correct duplicate display of personal names, countries, and titles as subjects.  Instead of subfields 1-3 for 600 fields, display these: 1-4,13-20,22,24-26

Related Subjects:

Shakespeare, William, | Shakespeare, William, | Shakespeare, William, | Shakespeare, William

      New Display:
Related Subjects:

Shakespeare, William, — 1564-1616 — Criticism and interpretation — History — 20th century. | Shakespeare, William, — 1564-1616 — Appreciation. | Shakespeare, William, — 1564-1616 — Technique. | Shakespeare, William, — 1564-1616 — Dramatic production.

      http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51959498
      Old Display: Canada.Canada. Canada. Canada.
      New Display: Canada. – Treaties, etc, — 1992 Oct. 7. Canada. — Treaties, etc, – 1993
      Sept. 13. Canada. — Treaties, etc. — (1992 Oct. 7) Canada. — Treaties, etc. — (1993 Sept. 13)

Related Subjects:

Bible. | Bible. | Bible.

      New Display:
Related Subjects:

Bible. — O.T. — Hosea. | Bible. — O.T. — Joel. | Bible. — O.T. — Amos.

Enhancement:  Remove links to add or edit Notes and Tables of Contents from Details tab.

Much of what was being received through those mechanisms was “spam,” when they were used at all, and there were security concerns with being able to edit other user’s entries.  All data that has been contributed will be stored and displayed; only the option to edit or add more data has been removed.  There are plans to replace some of this content creation functionality with better services in future installs.

Former Contributors to Melvyl Cease Contributing Records

Friday, October 10th, 2008 | Category: General, Bibliographic Services

By Ellen Meltzer, CDL Information Services Manager

Three former Melvyl Catalog library contributors have ceased contributing records to Melvyl:

  • The California Historical Society (CHS), whose last records were loaded 7/23/07
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), last records loaded 10/16/07
  • The UC Berkeley Law Library, last records loaded 10/19/07

These libraries were formerly Research Libraries Information Network (RLIN) contributors whose RLIN record output ceased when the Research Libraries Group (RLG) merged with OCLC.  Solutions to continuing to load current records into Melvyl were prohibitively expensive, so record loading for these institutions has ceased.

For all 3 institutions, their earlier records are still searchable in Melvyl, while later records are available in OCLC WorldCat products: the Next Generation Melvyl Pilot, FirstSearch WorldCat, Worldcat.org, and Calcat.org.

LBNL’s OPAC can also be searched directly for availability information at:
http://www-library.lbl.gov/library/public/tmLib/catalogs/LibOPAC.htm while UC Berkeley Law Library users can also go directly to their local LawCat: http://lawcat.berkeley.edu/.  Records for the California Historical Society can be searched in the California Libraries Catalog.

Melvyl Help has been updated with this information.  For further information, contact Rebecca Doherty (rebecca.doherty@ucop.edu).

Maureen Burns joins Digital Special Collections

Monday, October 6th, 2008 | Category: Staff News

By Rosalie Lack, CDL Digital Special Collections Director

Maureen Burns (Humanities Curator, UCI Visual Resources Collection) will be joining the CDL 25% time, for a 5-month assignment beginning October 1, 2008 and extending through February 28, 2009. As you all know, Lena Zentall recently left the UC Image Service project to take a position with the Bibliographic Services group. Maureen has generously agreed to step in and give us a hand during this transition period. She will be providing support and management assistance for the UC Image Service. Maureen will be working remotely from UCI.

CDL greatly appreciates having Maureen’s expertise available for this program and we look forward to many more UC Shared Images success stories in the coming months.

New UC Shared Images Collections are Now Available via ARTstor

Friday, October 3rd, 2008 | Category: General, Digital Special Collections

By Jan Eklund, Curator of Visual Resources, History of Art Department, UCB and Jackie Spafford, Visual Resources Curator, UCSB

Select art and architecture images from UC Berkeley and UC Santa Barbara image collections are now available in ARTstor to all 9 ARTstor-participating UC campuses.  These collections are listed on the ARTstor home page (http://library.artstor.org) under Institutional Collections.

UC Berkeley Visual Resources Collection

The UC Berkeley Visual Resources Collection is comprised of 33,747 images from the History of Art Visual Resources Collection and the College of Environmental Design Visual Resource Center.  This collection, which contains images that span world art from the earliest cave paintings at Lascaux to contemporary art and architecture, complements the 1,000,000 images already in ARTstor.  The UC Berkeley Visual Resources Collection is particularly strong in Roman architecture, wall painting, and mosaics from southern Italy, European Renaissance and Baroque architecture, painting and prints, Chinese painting, Indian art, and 20th century European and American art and architecture.

In addition, a UC Berkeley-only Instructional Collection has also been established for images that are licensed or otherwise restricted to the Berkeley campus.

UCSB Visual Resources Collection

The first installment to the UC Santa Barbara Visual Resources Collection is comprised of the following images:

  • 19th century American art (primarily Homer and Eakins, including many studies and sketches, and photographs of their studios and students) [210 images]
  • 18th century British painting (Gainsborough, Reynolds, Fuseli, Barry) [166 images]
  • German Expressionist painting (Beckmann, Dix)  [60 images]
  • Richard Neutra’s Kaufmann House in Palm Springs, post-renovation [24 images]
  • Other miscellaneous materials (e.g. 18th century Italian souvenirs from the Grand Tour)

Apart from the Kaufmann House images all of the contributions to this online collection were digitized in-house, on the VRC’s digital copystand, and all were requests for recent and current courses.

Background

This new content is the result of the collective effort of CDL’s UC Image Service, the CDL Advisory Group known as the Shared Metadata Working Group (SMWG), and Image Curators from 9 UC campuses (a.k.a. “Sliders”).  The SMWG developed a contributor’s roadmap called the Metadata Submission Guidelines (MSG) to help image managers format and map data from their local collection databases to the ARTstor Core elements.

The long-term objective of the UC Image Service is to create an online collection of images for teaching and learning comprised of content from 9 campus collections plus the licensed content managed by CDL.  These collections add unique images to the core ARTstor collections and address the immediate teaching needs of faculty.  Sharing locally created digital images systemwide will eliminate redundancy of effort, focus collection development attention on content unique to each campus, and reduce overall costs.

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