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Extended-Linking Services: towards a Quality Web

Extended-Linking Services: towards a Quality Web. Eric F. Van de Velde California Institute of Technology evdv@library.caltech.edu. Software: H. Van de Sompel (British Library) P. Hochstenbach (U. of Ghent) O. Beit-Arie (Ex Libris (USA), Inc.). CIT Implementation: B. Coles J. McDonald

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Extended-Linking Services: towards a Quality Web

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  1. Extended-Linking Services: towards a Quality Web Eric F. Van de Velde California Institute of Technology evdv@library.caltech.edu

  2. Software: H. Van de Sompel (British Library) P. Hochstenbach (U. of Ghent) O. Beit-Arie (Ex Libris (USA), Inc.) CIT Implementation: B. Coles J. McDonald Demonstration Extended-Linking Services: SFX

  3. Extended-Linking Services: OpenURL What is an OpenURL? Why do we need OpenURL? Who works on OpenURL? An Existing Commercial Service Standardization

  4. What is an OpenURL? • Transportable Metadata Format • Transportable • Between information services • Metadata • Initial Focus: bibliographic • Down the road: any information society • Format • Embedded in HTTP GET or POST request

  5. Caveat………. • Concrete examples for illustration only† • Standardization has barely started. • Vocabulary may change. • NOTHING is final. †Adapted from OpenURL Syntax Description, Draft May 16th 2000, Herbert Van de Sompel, Patrick Hochstenbach, and Oren Beit-Arie.

  6. OpenURL Draft Example 1 • http://serv.uni.edu/rmenu?id=doi:123/3456 • http://serv.uni.edu/rmenu The resolver that takes OpenURL as input. The resolver is NOT part of the OpenURL. Resolver actions are NOT part of the OpenURL. The resolver may be proprietary. • id=doi:123/3456 OpenURL (before escape encoding) of an Object that has a Digital Object Identifier.

  7. OpenURL Draft Example 2 • …?id=oai:arXiv:physics/0003005 &id=pmid:202123 OpenURL of Object with • Open Archives Identifier (LANL arXiv) and • PubMed Identifier.

  8. OpenURL Draft Example 3 • …?issn=1234-5678&date=1998&volum e=12&issue=2&spage=134 OpenURL of Journal Article • In journal with ISSN 1234-5678 • Published in 1998 • Volume 12 • Issue 2 • Starting Page 134

  9. Caveat………. • Concrete examples for illustration only† • Standardization has barely started. • Vocabulary may change. • NOTHING is final. †Adapted from OpenURL Syntax Description, Draft May 16th 2000, Herbert Van de Sompel, Patrick Hochstenbach, and Oren Beit-Arie.

  10. Why do we need OpenURL? • Persistent Links • Embraces DOIs: • Provides alternate resolution of DOIs.† • Allows for other persistence mechanisms • For example, OpenURL resolver database may keep track of ownership and location at a coarse-grain (publisher/journal) level. †Open Linking in the Scholarly Information Environment Using the OpenURL Framework, Herbert Van de Sompel and Oren Beit-Arie, D-Lib Magazine, Vol. 1, Nr. 3, March 2001.

  11. Why do we need OpenURL? • Multiple Links per Object • With OpenURL input, resolver may produce a menu of services. • For example: • From journal-article citation to: • Full text • A&I service • Web search engine • From book citation to: • Book reviews • On-line bookstore

  12. Why do we need OpenURL? • Context-Sensitive Links • Resolver may know the user. • Resolver may process the OpenURL information in a manner appropriate to the user’s context. • For example: • From journal-article citation to: • Appropriate copy • Local document-delivery system • From book citation to: • Local holdings (OPAC)

  13. Why do we need OpenURL? • Log of User Actions • User jumps from one resource to another. • Resolver may keep track of user actions. • At end of session, resolver may produce a log according to user specifications. • For example: • Create a bibliographic database.

  14. Who works on OpenURL? • NISO Committee AX • First meeting was June 28th and 29th. • Subscribe to the OpenURL listserv at: http://library.caltech.edu/OpenURL

  15. OpenURL: Major Issues • Scholarly Information Society, extensible • Structure: • Referenced Item • Information Service • Resolver • Requester • ServiceType • Referring-Entity • By Value and/or By Reference • Encoding, Terminology, Versioning

  16. The Quality Web • High-Quality Metadata • Finely Targeted Services • Goal: • Take users to information and related services fast, reliably, and narrowly. • Question: • How does this “managed approach” compare to automatic approaches? • No guarantee for success!

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