Academic literature on the topic 'Resource Description and Access (RDA)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Resource Description and Access (RDA)"

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Zabel, Diane, and Liz Miller. "Resource Description and Access (RDA)." Reference & User Services Quarterly 50, no. 3 (March 1, 2011): 216–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/rusq.50n3.216.

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Kincy, Chamya P., and Michael A. Wood. "Rethinking Access with RDA (Resource Description and Access)." Journal of Electronic Resources in Medical Libraries 9, no. 1 (January 2012): 13–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15424065.2012.651573.

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Todd, Chris. "RDA for Cataloguers: Resource Description and Access." ANZTLA EJournal, no. 1 (June 26, 2011): 7–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.31046/anztla.vi1.164.

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Ducheva, Dilyana P., and Diane Rasmussen Pennington. "Resource Description and Access in Europe: Implementations and perceptions." Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 51, no. 2 (May 24, 2017): 387–402. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0961000617709060.

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This research explored the implementations and perceptions of the Resource Description and Access (RDA) cataloguing standard in Europe. It refers to the development and implementation of the standard among Anglo-American libraries and draws comparisons between them. It examines the spread and application of RDA throughout Europe both by analysing the available literature and by conducting interviews with professionals at 12 European national libraries. The results highlight the issues faced by the European institutions and the unique perspectives that emerge from implementing RDA in different languages and cultures. European institutions demonstrate a higher level of involvement and interest in the development of RDA and a stronger desire to work towards RDA interoperability and alignment with the cultural heritage sector. The European implementation drives forward the internationalisation of RDA by actively seeking solutions to the issues in the new standard arising from the cultural and linguistic diversity.
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M. Keenan, Teressa. "Resource description and access: cataloging standards affect reference service." Reference Services Review 42, no. 3 (August 5, 2014): 446–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/rsr-04-2014-0008.

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Purpose – The aim of this paper is to highlight the relationship between cataloging data and reference service and the importance of including reference librarians, in general resource description and access (RDA) training. Design/methodology/approach – A literature review and the author’s experiences related to implementing RDA are presented with minimal cataloging jargon to help librarians better understand the effects of cataloging standards on reference service. Findings – There is a noticeable lack of research and training related to RDA for audiences beyond technical services. More research is needed to determine how users are interacting with the catalog, how bibliographic data is supporting their discovery and access, what, if any, obstacles reference librarians encounter as a result of RDA and how future iterations of RDA may open bibliographic data to communities beyond the library. Originality/value – This paper is one the few that discuss how RDA may affect reference service. It will be useful for providing librarians with a general understanding of the relationship between cataloging and reference and may serve as a starting point for further research.
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Todd, Chris. "RDA for Everyone Else: Resource Description and Access." ANZTLA EJournal, no. 1 (June 26, 2011): 25–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.31046/anztla.vi1.165.

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Snow, Karen. "A Review ofMaxwell's Handbook for RDA: Resource Description & Access: Explaining and Illustrating RDA: Resource Description and Access Using MARC 21." Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 53, no. 1 (December 2014): 116–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01639374.2014.925024.

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Loesch, Martha Fallahay. "Library of Congress Resource Description and Access (RDA) http://www.loc.gov/aba/rda." Technical Services Quarterly 29, no. 2 (March 5, 2012): 167–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07317131.2012.650982.

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Tillett, Barbara B. "The International Development of RDA: Resource Description and Access." Alexandria: The Journal of National and International Library and Information Issues 24, no. 2 (August 2013): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/alx.0004.

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El-Sherbini, Magda, and Megan Curran. "Resource Description and Access “RDA”: New Code for Cataloging." Serials Librarian 60, no. 1-4 (April 11, 2011): 7–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0361526x.2011.556425.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Resource Description and Access (RDA)"

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Wallheim, Henrik. "Katalogen som tolkningsredskap : Bibliografiska relationer i Resource Description and Access (RDA), med särskild hänsyn till operationaliseringsproblem." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för ABM, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-201088.

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The new cataloging code Resource Description and Access (RDA) provides a system of instructions for recording relationships between related resources by means of a controlled vocabulary of relationship designators. The purpose of this two years master’s thesis in Archive, Library and Museum studies is to examine the construction of this system, as well as its theoretical foundation. One theoretical point of departure is the necessity of operational definitions for consistent identification of bibliographic relationships. Another such point of departure is that the theoretical model on which RDA is based (the FRBR model) is not a complete description of the biblio­graphic universe, but merely a limited representation of a set of assumptions about that universe. The thesis first examines Barbara B. Tillett's and Richard P. Smiraglia's theories and taxonomies of bibliographic relationships. The analysis shows that, in spite of their claims to provide a theoretical basis for consistent treatment of bibliographic relationships, neither Tillett nor Smiraglia offers operationally applicable definitions. The thesis then turns to RDA in order to examine the instructions and the list of relationship designators. After an introductory survey of RDA chapters 24 to 28, the possibility to record relationship designators at different entity levels is discussed. Remarkably, RDA neither provides instructions for how to choose between the entity levels, nor does it point out what this choice signifies. Finally, a selection of relationship designators representing content relationships is examined. The selected designators are analysed and compared to corresponding categories in literary theorist Gérard Genette's attempt to classify intertextual relationships. The analysis shows that though some of the selected designators are satisfactorily operationalized, most are not.
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Corrêa, Rosa Maria Rodrigues [UNESP]. "Catalogação descritiva no século XXI: um estudo sobre o RDA." Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/93699.

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Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:26:45Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2008-02-06Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T18:55:06Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 correa_rmr_me_mar.pdf: 280516 bytes, checksum: 216222ad82d3401a2b10e3a13169b6a9 (MD5)
Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
A informação é essencial neste limiar do Século XXI, assim como sua transmissão. A catalogação descritiva, como área da Biblioteconomia responsável por transmitir as informações contidas em acervos de qualquer natureza, por meio da construção de formas de representação, deve acompanhar a evolução das necessidades dos usuários. Esta constatação preocupa especialistas da área. A padronização, na representação das informações e documentos é imprescindível e também o objeto de trabalho da catalogação descritiva como forma de garantia do intercâmbio de registros bibliográficos. A preocupação cresce com a rapidez com que as informações são geradas e disponibilizadas em diferentes formas. Este trabalho propõe-se a analisar o estado da arte do esquema Resource Description and Access (RDA) elaborado pela International Federation of Libraries Associations (IFLA), para uso de catalogadores e bases de dados bibliográficos. A análise baseia-se em pesquisas bibliográficas on-line. A evolução da catalogação e seus códigos de regras; a influência das tecnologias nos meios de comunicação, especificamente na troca de informações bibliográficas; a compatibilidade de conceitos visando a comunicação eficiente entre máquina, catalogador e informações codificadas para atendimento dos usuários foram utilizadas para a construção da parte histórica do trabalho. O estudo do RDA foi elaborado reunindo-se as necessidades informacionais, a catalogação descritiva e o novo esquema para compreender sua abrangência e a sua possível aceitação internacional, como uma forma de possibilitar o controle bibliográfico e ampliar o acesso e uso das informações disponíveis nos mais diversos ambientes informacionais. O RDA, por ser um esquema em fase de elaboração somente pode ser analisado do ponto de vista teórico. Nossa análise verificou que o RDA é um esquema eficaz, por aliar a teoria à prática.
Information and its transmission are essentials at the threshold of the XXI century Descriptive cataloging being an area of the Library Science is responsible for transmitting information existing inside of holdings of all types. This is made by building forms of representation and must follow the evolution of the needs of users. This affirmation worries specialists of the area. Standardization is indispensable in the representation of information and documents and it is also the aim of descriptive cataloging work; it is a grant for the exchange of bibliographic records. The worry increases as fast as the creation of new information available in different forms. The goal of this work is to analyze the state-of-the art of the standard “Resource Description and Access (RDA)” developed by the International Federation of Libraries Associations (IFLA) for catalogers and workers in bibliographic database. This work is founded in on-line bibliographic researches. The building of the historic of this work was based in the following factors: evolution of cataloging and its codes of rules; influence of technology in the communication media specifically in the exchange of bibliographic information; compatibility of concepts to reach an efficient communication between machine, cataloger and coded information to attend the user. This study of RDA was elaborated getting together the informational needs, the descriptive cataloging and the new standard, in order to understand its scope and if it is possible the international acceptance of it, as a form of bibliographic control as well as a way to enlarge the access and use of information available in the most different informational environments. Since RDA is a standard that is being developed, it may only be studied at the theoretical point of view. We verified that RDA is an effective standard since it links theory and practice.
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Hasenyager, Richard Lee Jr. "Convenience to the Cataloger or Convenience to the User?: An Exploratory Study of Catalogers’ Judgment." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2015. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc799476/.

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This mixed-method study explored cataloger’s judgment through the presence of text as entered by catalogers for the 11 electronic resource items during the National Libraries test for Resource Description and Access (RDA). Although the literature discusses cataloger’s judgment and suggests that cataloging practice based on new cataloging code RDA will more heavily rely on cataloger’s judgment, the topic of cataloger’s judgment in RDA cataloging was not formally studied. The purpose of this study was to study the differences and similarities in the MARC records created as a part of the RDA National Test and to determine if the theory of bounded rationality could explain cataloger’s judgment based on the constructs of cognitive and temporal limits. This goal was addressed through a content analysis of the MARC records and various statistical tests (Pearson’s Chi-square, Fisher’s Exact, and Cramer’s V). Analysis of 217 MARC records was performed on seven elements of the bibliographic record. This study found that there were both similarities and differences among the various groups of participants, and there are indications that both support and refute the assertion that catalogers make decisions based on the constructs of time and cognitive ability. Future research is needed to be able to determine if bounded rationality is able to explain cataloger’s judgment; however, there are indicators that both support and refute this assertion. The findings from this research have implications for the cataloging community through the provision of training opportunities for catalogers, evaluating workflows, ensuring the proper indexing of bibliographic records for discovery, and recommended edits to RDA.
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van, Rensburg Rachel Janse. "Resource Description and Access (RDA): continuity in an ever-fluxing information age with reference to tertiary institutions in the Western Cape." University of the Western Cape, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6380.

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Magister Library and Information Studies - MLIS
Although Resource Description and Access (RDA) has been discussed extensively amongst the ranks of cataloguers internationally, no research on the perceptions of South African cataloguers was available at the time of this research. The aim of this study was to determine how well RDA was faring during the study's timeframe, to give a detailed description regarding cataloguer perceptions within a higher education setting in South Africa. Furthermore, to determine whether the implementation of RDA has overcome most of the limitations that AACR2 had within a digital environment, to identify advantages and/or perceived limitations of RDA as well as to assist cataloguers to adopt and implement the new standard effectively. The study employed a qualitative research design assisted by a phenomenological philosophy to gain insight into how cataloguers experienced the implementation and adoption of RDA by means of two concurrent web-based questionnaires. The study concluded that higher education cataloguing professionals residing in the Western Cape were decidedly positive towards the new cataloguing standard. Although there were some initial reservations, they were overcome to such an extent that ultimately no real limitations were identified, and that RDA has indeed overcome most of the limitations displayed by AACR2. Many advantages of RDA were identified, and participants expressed excitement about the future capabilities of RDA as it continues toward a link-data milieu, making library metadata more easily available.
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Janse, van Rensburg Rachel. "Resource Description and Access (RDA): continuity in an ever-fluxing information age with reference to tertiary institutions in the Western Cape." University of the Western Cape, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6267.

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Magister Library and Information Studies - MLIS
Although Resource Description and Access (RDA) has been discussed extensively amongst the ranks of cataloguers internationally, no research on the perceptions of South African cataloguers was available at the time of this research. The aim of this study was to determine how well RDA was faring during the study's timeframe, to give a detailed description regarding cataloguer perceptions within a higher education setting in South Africa. Furthermore, to determine whether the implementation of RDA has overcome most of the limitations that AACR2 had within a digital environment, to identify advantages and/or perceived limitations of RDA as well as to assist cataloguers to adopt and implement the new standard effectively. The study employed a qualitative research design assisted by a phenomenological philosophy to gain insight into how cataloguers experienced the implementation and adoption of RDA by means of two concurrent web-based questionnaires. The study concluded that higher education cataloguing professionals residing in the Western Cape were decidedly positive towards the new cataloguing standard. Although there were some initial reservations, they were overcome to such an extent that ultimately no real limitations were identified, and that RDA has indeed overcome most of the limitations displayed by AACR2. Many advantages of RDA were identified, and participants expressed excitement about the future capabilities of RDA as it continues toward a link-data milieu, making library metadata more easily available. As this research has revealed a distinctly positive attitude from cataloguers' two main matters for future research remains, being: ? Why South African participants in this study voiced almost no perceived limitations to RDA as a cataloguing standard. Future research might be able to relay information regarding this trend, especially in the light that it was not a global phenomenon. ? A deeper look might have to be taken at how participants' experienced RDA training as this phenomenon might be closely linked to the reasons why the participants did not mention more limitations.
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Bee, Guido. "Inhaltserschließung – Neues in der DNB." Universitätsbibliothek Chemnitz, 2011. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:ch1-qucosa-64844.

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Wiesenmüller, Heidrun. "Das neue Zusammenrücken von Formal- und Sacherschließung." Universitätsbibliothek Chemnitz, 2011. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:ch1-qucosa-64619.

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Während Formal- und Sacherschließung in der angloamerikanischen Tradition als etwas Zusammengehöriges betrachtet werden, besteht im deutschen Bibliothekswesen eine klare, zumeist auch personelle Trennung zwischen den beiden Bereichen. Jüngere Entwicklungen der internationalen Standardisierung könnten hier zu einem Umdenken führen: Das theoretische Modell "Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records" (FRBR) hat eine neue Sicht auf das so genannte "bibliographische Universum" eingeläutet, das auch die Sacherschließung mit einbezieht. Auch "Resource Description and Access" (RDA), der Nachfolger von AACR2, versteht sich nicht mehr nur als ein Regelwerk für die Formalerschließung. Ganz konkrete Schritte für ein stärkeres Miteinander bringt das Projekt "Gemeinsame Normdatei" (GND) mit der Zusammenführung der Schlagwortnormdatei (SWD), der Personennamendatei (PND) und der Gemeinsamen Körperschaftsdate (GKD). Im Vortrag werden diese Entwicklungen näher beleuchtet und Überlegungen zu den damit verbundenen Chancen und Problemen angestellt.
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Auer, Sören. "Von Open Access zu Open Knowledge - wie wir Informationsflüsse der Wissenschaft in der Digitalen Welt organisieren können." Technische Informationsbibliothek TIB, 2019. https://monarch.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A35998.

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Trotz eines verbesserten digitalen Zugangs zu wissenschaftlichen Publikationen in den letzten Jahren bleiben die Grundprinzipien der wissenschaftlichen Kommunikation unverändert und sind weiterhin weitgehend dokumentenbasiert. Die dokumentorientierten Arbeitsabläufe in der Wissenschaft haben die Grenzen der Angemessenheit erreicht, wie die jüngsten Diskussionen über das ungebremste Wachstum wissenschaftlicher Literatur, die Mängel des Peer-Review und die Reproduzierbarkeitskrise zeigen. Open Access ist eine wichtige Voraussetzung diesen Herausforderungen zu begegnen, aber auch nur der erste Schritt. Wir müssen die wissenschaftliche Kommunikation stärker wissensbasiert organisieren, indem wir wissenschaftliche Beiträge und verwandte Artefakte durch semantisch reichhaltige, vernetzte Wissensgraphen ausdrücken und miteinander vernetzen. In diesem Vortrag werden wir mit der Open Research Knowledge Graph Initiative erste Schritte in diese Richtung vorstellen.
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Malz, Angela. "Jahresbericht 2015 / Universitätsbibliothek Chemnitz." Universitätsbibliothek Chemnitz, 2016. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:ch1-qucosa-211202.

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Santos, Osório Miguel Soeiro dos. "Resource Description and Access (RDA): análise do posicionamento institucional e profissional em Portugal." Master's thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10362/18918.

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O presente trabalho de investigação foi desenvolvido por forma a dar cumprimento à componente não léctiva do Mestrado em Ciências da Informação e Documentação, da Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas da Universidade Nova de Lisboa, na área de especialização de Biblioteconomia. A dissertação analisa e evidencia o posicionamento institucional e dos profissionais ID, acerca da implementação em Portugal do Resource Description and Access. Numa primeira fase procede-se à revisão da literatura que serve de base ao desenvolvimento de conceitos a explorar durante a investigação. São exploradas publicações científicas que permitem identificar as propostas do RDA, bem como os sítios em linha das principais organizações que têm levado a cabo a construção e implementação do RDA. Seguidamente, procede-se à enunciação da abordagem metodológica, onde se definem os objectivos da investigação e se explicitam os métodos e técnicas utilizadas durante a investigação. A opção estabelecida para a investigação teve como base uma abordagem metodológica qualitativa, baseada na análise empírica da documentação, e em entrevistas semiestruturadas. Posteriormente, são analisados e interpretados os dados coligidos, resultantes das entrevistas necessárias à condução do trabalho. A análise é realizada a dois grupos (institucional e profissional) participantes nas entrevistas, procurando-se interpretar e inferir as considerações tecidas pelos participantes e que foram objecto de codificação e categorização. A análise do conhecimento, das características e da categoria implementação, permite uma fundamentação do posicionamento institucional e dos profissionais ID acerca da implementação do RDA em Portugal. Em último lugar procede-se à conclusão do trabalho de investigação, onde se verifica que o RDA é considerado um código de catalogação apreciado pela sua estrutura conceptual alinhada com os FRBR, mas que até agora, não tem sido suficientemente analisado, discutido e difundido para que se possam avaliar as suas propostas e obter um posicionamento claro e objectivo relativamente à sua implementação em Portugal.
This research work was developed in order to comply with the non-teaching component of the Masters in Information and Documentation Sciences, in Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, with regards to the Library expertise area. The dissertation examines and highlights the institutional and ID professionals positioning, about the implementation in Portugal of the Resource Description and Access (RDA). Initially it proceeds to the literature review that underpins the development of concepts to explore during the investigation. Scientific publications are exploited, which allow the identification of the RDA proposals, as well the online sites of major organizations that have carried out the construction and RDA implementation. It then continues with the formulation of the methodological approach, defining the objectives of research and explaining the methods and techniques used during the investigation. The option set for research was based on a qualitative methodological approach, empirical analysis of the documentation, and semi-structured interviews. Subsequently, data collected from the required interviews to conduct work is analyzed and interpreted. The analysis is performed on two groups (institutional and professional) participating in interviews, seeking to interpret and infer the considerations made by the participants, which have been coded and categorized. The analysis of knowledge, characteristics and the implementation category, allows a reasoning of the institutional and professional ID positioning, about the RDA implementation in Portugal. We finally reach the research work conclusion confirming that RDA is considered a cataloging code prized for its aligned conceptual framework with FRBR. So far, RDA hasn’t been sufficiently analyzed, discussed and disseminated in order to evaluate its proposals and get an objective and clear position, related to its implementation in Portugal.
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Books on the topic "Resource Description and Access (RDA)"

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1960-, Moore Susan M., and Larsgaard Mary Lynette 1946-, eds. RDA and cartographic resources. Chicago: ALA Editions, an imprint of the American Library Association, 2015.

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The RDA primer: A guide for the occasional cataloger. Santa Barbara, Calif: Linworth, 2010.

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B, Tillett Barbara, ed. Shigen no kijutsu to akusesu: Rinen to jissen = RDA : resource description & access. Tōkyō-to Bunkyō-ku: Jusonbō, 2014.

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Wiesmüller, Heidrum. Basiswissen RDA: Eine Einführung für deutschsprachige Anwender. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2015.

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Sue, Batley, ed. Practical cataloguing: AACR, RDA and MARC21. New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers, 2012.

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Kungnip Chungang Tosŏgwan (Seoul, Korea). RDA, saeroun tojŏn kŭrigo kwaje: Ilsi, 2013. 11. 1. (kŭm) 14:00-17:30, changso, Kungnip Chungang Tosŏgwan Tijit'ŏl Tosŏgwan Taehoeŭisil (B3F). Sŏul-si: Kungnip Chungang Tosŏgwan, 2013.

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Hart, Amy. RDA made simple: A practical guide to the new cataloging rules. Santa Barbara, California: Libraries Unlimited, an imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2014.

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Cataloging and classification: An introduction. 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1994.

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Access, Resource Description &. Rda: Resource Description and Access. Amer Library Assn Editions, 2010.

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Joint Steering Committee for the Development of RDA. RDA: Resource Description and Access. Facet Publishing, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Resource Description and Access (RDA)"

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Assumpção, Fabrício Silva, José Eduardo Santarem Segundo, and Plácida Leopoldina Ventura Amorim d. Santos. "RDA Element Sets and RDA Value Vocabularies: Vocabularies for Resource Description in the Semantic Web." In Communications in Computer and Information Science, 147–58. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-24129-6_13.

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Marwedel, Peter. "System Software." In Embedded Systems, 203–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-60910-8_4.

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AbstractIn order to cope with the complexity of applications of embedded systems, reuse of components is a key technique. As pointed out by Sangiovanni-Vincentelli (The context for platform-based design. IEEE Design and Test of Computers, 2002), software and hardware components must be reused in the platform-based design methosdology (see p. 296). These components comprise knowledge from earlier design efforts and constitute intellectual property (IP). Standard software components that can be reused include system software components such as embedded operating systems (OSs) and middleware. The last term denotes software that provides an intermediate layer between the OS and application software. This chapter starts with a description of general requirements for embedded operating systems. This includes real-time capabilities as well as adaptation techniques to provide just the required functionality. Mutually exclusive access to resources can result in priority inversion, which is a serious problem for real-time systems. Priority inversion can be circumvented with resource access protocols. We will present three such protocols: the priority inheritance, priority ceiling, and stack resource protocols. A separate section covers the ERIKA real-time system kernel. Furthermore, we will explain how Linux can be adapted to systems with tight resource constraints. Finally, we will provide pointers for additional reusable software components, like hardware abstraction layers (HALs), communication software, and real-time data bases. Our description of embedded operating systems and of middleware in this chapter is consistent with the overall design flow.
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Vass, Johanna. "Resource Description and Access (RDA): Eszköz a könyvtárak jövőbeli információközvetítő feladatainak ellátásához." In Valóságos könyvtár – könyvtári valóság: Könyvtár- és információtudományi tanulmányok 2016, 271–79. Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem Bölcsészettudományi Kar Könyvtár- és Információtudományi Intézet, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21862/vkkv2016.271.

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Trombone, Antonella. "Analisi della struttura e del modello concettuale di RDA – Resource description and access." In 1. Seminario Nazionale di Biblioteconomia, 287–91. Ledizioni, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.ledizioni.1611.

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Tillett, Barbara B. "Keeping Libraries Relevant in the Semantic Web with RDA: Resource Description and Access ☆ First appeared in Serials, November 2011 issue, Volume 24, No. 3, doi: 10.1629/24266." In Library and Information Science, 29–41. Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/s1876-0562(2013)0000007006.

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Jain, Amit, and Csilla Farkas. "Ontology-Based Authorization Model for XML Data in Distributed Systems." In Digital Rights Management, 210–36. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2136-7.ch012.

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This research work proposes a Semantic-Aware Authorization Framework, called SAAF, for applying syntax independent authorization on eXtensible Markup Language (XML) documents. Our model supports secure data sharing in an open environment without the need for a centralized authority and supports application flexibility. We propose the use of data and application semantics, expressed as Resource Description Framework (RDF) ontologies, to specify security requirements for XML documents. XML documents are associated with their semantics (RDF ontologies) via mappings. The authors use these mappings and the corresponding RDF authorizations models to generate access control permissions for the mapped XML documents. The SAAF ensures the preservation of authorization permissions on XML data even if the syntax and the structure of the data are changed. Their method also aids the detection and removal of inconsistent authorizations on structurally different but semantically similar XML data.
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"E-Journals and the Development of Resource Description and Access." In E-Journals Access and Management, 225–48. Routledge, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203887370-22.

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Herrmann-Fankhänel, Anja. "Utilization of Online Platforms by Social Entrepreneurs for Social Sustainable Development." In Strategic Marketing for Social Enterprises in Developing Nations, 75–102. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7859-8.ch004.

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Socially sustainable development can be driven by individuals, entrepreneurs, growing start-ups, and international companies. As social entrepreneurs, people opt for a form of organization that contributes to social improvement through entrepreneurial means. The question is: How do they do it? The resource dependence approach (RDA) assumes that all decisions and activities of a (social) enterprise are based on information about its environment. Therefore, the four key components of the social enterprise (individual, organization, social innovation, market orientation) must be appropriate. In this chapter, therefore, social enterprises are outlined as active participants and shapers of the economy and society. Since an active improvement with regard to socially sustainable development is focused by the social enterprises in Africa, a description of the social enterprise's environment is also given within the framework of topical focuses. The goal is to derive recommendations about action for social enterprises to achieve their goals.
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Stratogiannis, Dimitrios G., Georgios I. Tsiropoulos, John D. Kanellopoulos, and Panayotis G. Cottis. "4G Wireless Networks." In Wireless Technologies, 1–32. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61350-101-6.ch101.

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Fourth generation (4G) wireless networks aim at supporting various multiservice applications over IP architectures which satisfy enhanced users demands through innovative services of increased Quality of Service (QoS). QoS can be assured through independent optimal design of network components or by optimizing interoperability. The supported services impose also their classification into IP network service models and their specifications description. The integration of different wireless access technologies into the 4G network architecture leads to a heterogeneous network environment that raises several issues. An overview of various approaches employed to provide QoS in 4G networks concerning their architectures, different access technologies interoperability and resource management techniques are investigated in this chapter. Dynamic resource allocation, admission control, QoS provision using mobile management and pricing policies are presented. Concluding, in the demanding 4G environment under variable network conditions, appropriate schemes and architectures may provide a robust network management tool for QoS provision and efficient resource utilization.
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Stratogiannis, Dimitrios G., Georgios I. Tsiropoulos, John D. Kanellopoulos, and Panayotis G. Cottis. "4G Wireless Networks." In Wireless Network Traffic and Quality of Service Support, 347–77. IGI Global, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-771-8.ch014.

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Fourth generation (4G) wireless networks aim at supporting various multiservice applications over IP architectures which satisfy enhanced users demands through innovative services of increased Quality of Service (QoS). QoS can be assured through independent optimal design of network components or by optimizing interoperability. The supported services impose also their classification into IP network service models and their specifications description. The integration of different wireless access technologies into the 4G network architecture leads to a heterogeneous network environment that raises several issues. An overview of various approaches employed to provide QoS in 4G networks concerning their architectures, different access technologies interoperability and resource management techniques are investigated in this chapter. Dynamic resource allocation, admission control, QoS provision using mobile management and pricing policies are presented. Concluding, in the demanding 4G environment under variable network conditions, appropriate schemes and architectures may provide a robust network management tool for QoS provision and efficient resource utilization.
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Conference papers on the topic "Resource Description and Access (RDA)"

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Banane, Mouad, and Abdessalam Belangour. "Shared Models and Open Infrastructures for the smart City Internet of Things based on the Semantic Web." In International Conference on the 4th Game Set and Match (GSM4Q-2019). Qatar University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.29117/gsm4q.2019.0033.

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Contemporary cities face many challenges: energy, ecological, demographic or economic. To answer this, technological means are implemented in cities through the use of sensors and actuators. These cities are said to be smart. Currently, smart cities are operated by actors who share neither their sensor data nor access to their actuators. This situation is called vertical: each operator deploys its own sensors and actuators and has its own IT infrastructure hosting its applications. This leads to infrastructure redundancy and ad-hoc applications to oversee and control an area of the city. A trend is to move towards a so-called horizontal situation via the use of an open and shared mediation platform. Sensor data and access to the actuators are shared within this type of platform, allowing their sharing between the different actors. The costs of infrastructure and development are then reduced. This work is part of such a context of horizontalization, within an open and shared platform, in which we propose: 1) a layer of abstraction for control and supervision of the city, 2) a competition control mechanism handling conflict cases based on the RDF (Resource Description Framework) semantic Web standard, 3) a coordination mechanism promoting the reuse of actuators using ontology, 4) an implementation of our work by a proof of concept. The abstraction we propose is based on models from reactive systems. They aim to be generic and represent the invariant of the smart city: the physical elements. They allow applications to control and supervise the city. To facilitate the development of applications we standardize the interface of our models. Since these applications may have real-time constraints, especially those that have control objectives, we propose to take advantage of the distributed architecture of this type of platform. Given the sharing of the actuators, we have identified that conflicts can arise between applications. We propose a mechanism of competition control to deal with these cases of conflicts. We have also identified that a coordination mechanism must be offered to applications wishing to perform atomic control operations. Such a mechanism promotes the reuse of the actuators present in the city. Finally, we implemented our proposals around a proof of concept, including several use cases, to demonstrate our work.
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Xie, Maoyuan, Zhifeng Yun, Zhou Lei, and Gabrielle Allen. "Cluster abstraction: towards uniform resource description and access in multicluster grid." In Second International Multi-Symposiums on Computer and Computational Sciences (IMSCCS 2007). IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/imsccs.2007.79.

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McKay, Elspeth, Trang Thomas, and Jenny Martin. "The Human-Computer Interaction Gearing Up for Work." In InSITE 2004: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/2754.

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Looking for work is complex. It involves a synthesis of decisions relating to many separate jobseeking tasks, requiring discrimination of how an individual’s skills match the job description, whether the salary offered is acceptable, location of the work and the logistics of arranging suitable transport. These job-seeking tasks are even more difficult for the disabled, and despite the Web Access Initiative (WAI), there are no Web-enabled work searching systems designed as vocational rehabilitation tools. An opportunity exists among the educational technologists to devise a customizable learning platform that can supply a much needed life-long learning resource. It is becoming increasingly obvious that a range of computer supported collaborative learning (CSCL) systems may provide a ubiquitous approach to fulfilling the desire for reskilling the general population. This paper describes a research project in progress, designed to provide an interactive Web-enabled work searching resource for those undergoing vocational rehabilitation.
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Sur, Shakya, Ahmed Mahmoud, Ali Ebrahimi Khabbazi, Elan Pavlov, and Amy M. Bilton. "Computational Modeling and Field Evaluation of an Innovative Solar Updraft Aeration System for Aquaculture in the Developing World." In ASME 2016 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2016-59572.

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Throughout the Asia Pacific region, fish farming is a vital and growing source of food security and economic activity. Since 1970, aquaculture has maintained an average annual growth rate of 8.7% in the region. Currently, almost 90% of global aquaculture production currently takes place in Asia Pacific and over 20 million people are employed in the sector. This growth has been associated with a large increase in family-run backyard aquaculture and integrated agriculture-aquaculture reservoirs in areas like rural Vietnam. However, yields in those rural ponds have typically been low. This is largely due to lack of aeration systems, which introduce oxygen into the pond water and allow for greater stocking densities, healthier fish, and greater yields. Aeration systems typically are not employed in these remote communities due to high capital costs, lack of access to reliable electricity, and prohibitive maintenance costs. To address this need, a low-cost solar-thermal aeration system for implementation in resource-constrained settings was devised. The system consists of a metallic solar collector and a heat transfer column, which induces convective circulation in the water by dissipating heat to the cooler, deeper layers of the pond. As a result of the circulation produced by the device, oxygen generated by phytoplankton at the top of the pond is distributed throughout the water column, preventing oxygen losses to the atmosphere due to surface supersaturation and increasing the overall pond oxygen content. This paper presents the system models developed to validate the concept, including a Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) model and a diel Dissolved Oxygen (DO) simulation model. These models, when used in conjunction, can estimate the increase in DO to be expected by the introduction of passive aeration device. These models were tailored to represent two target test ponds in Bac Ninh, Vietnam. To calibrate the models, instrumentation measured relevant parameters including DO and water temperatures at various depths, wind speed, ambient air temperature, and solar irradiance. A description of the mechanical design, construction and installation of two full-scale prototypes is then discussed, and field results for the first month post-implementation are analyzed. The model and experimental results indicate that the device can improve the DO content at deep levels of the ponds (i.e. oxygen-depleted regions) and has the potential to improve aquaculture productivity in resource-constrained settings.
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Reports on the topic "Resource Description and Access (RDA)"

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Shkodin, Andrey. Sets of exercises for education workers in the Far North. Science and Innovation Center Publishing House, April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/shkodin.0418.15042021.

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Complexes of exercises for educational workers of the Far North is an electronic resource developed specifically for pedagogical workers living in the Far North. The selection and description of exercise complexes was developed on the basis of a study of the peculiarities of living in the Far North, common diseases characteristic of the inhabitants of the Far North and the peculiarities of the profession of a teacher. Access to the electronic resource is free, hosted on the google cloud service and youtube video hosting, contains video resources and comments on use. Available through a browser, no additional software required.
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