1 / 16

Modeling augmentations

Modeling augmentations. Maja Žumer University of Ljubljana. Examples of augmentations. Text with illustrations (or illustrations with text) Text with foreword, notes Music and words Music and choreography Not the best term, because it implies that one content part is more important.

hipp
Download Presentation

Modeling augmentations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Modeling augmentations Maja Žumer University of Ljubljana FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  2. Examples of augmentations • Text with illustrations (or illustrations with text) • Text with foreword, notes • Music and words • Music and choreography Not the best term, because it implies that one content part is more important... FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  3. Delsey (1998) • Document part: Examples: physically separate component of a multipart document, accompanying material, issue of a serial • Content part: “Individual component of the intellectual or artistic content of document or document part (article in a serial, chapter/section/part, illustration for a text, sound aspect of a film...)” FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  4. Our augmentation • Content part • segmental (foreword and text) • systemic (words and music) • Dependent (choreography) • Independent (foreword) FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  5. FRBR and parts Whole/part relationship • Work • Expression Complement, supplement (work-to-work, expression-to-expression of different works, expression-to-work) FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  6. Categories of parts in FRBR • Dependent: Component parts of a work that are intended to be used in context of the larger work and depend on the context of the larger work for their meaning • segmental (prefaces, chapters, sections, parts) • systemic (illustrations) • Independent: They do not depend on the context provided by the the larger work for their meaning FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  7. Examples in FRBR • Supplement (referential) • index, concordance, teacher’s guide • Complement (referential) • libretto, choreography • Whole/part • illustration for a text FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  8. Page 70: “There will often be no reason for a dependent part of a work to be separately identified or described in a bibliographic record. In certain instances ... it may be considered useful to identify and describe the component in its own right.” • Added entry • Contents note FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  9. Issues • Is there always the ‘main work’? • Should segmental and systemic parts be modeled differently? • Should dependent and independent parts be modeled differently? • Should the model take into account the context in which the “combination” occured? FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  10. Most manifestations embody more than one expression (work) For example: • text • illustrations • editor’s contribution • layout design • cover design • ... FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  11. Possibilities • Choose the ‘main work’ and treat as a new expression of this work • Treat as embodiment of several expressions FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  12. work T I expression M T I manifestation M FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  13. work T+I+M expression T manifestation FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  14. work expression T I M manifestation FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  15. work expression T I M manifestation FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

  16. Proposal • Embodiment of several expressions • Treat as composite work if necessary • Record all expressions (works) important for the intended user FRBR Workshop May 2, 2005

More Related