Journal of Library Automation, vol 1, no 4
LITA | jola0104
Journal of Library Automation
ISSN 0022-2240
Volume 1, Number 4, December 1968
Feature Articles
Conversion of Bibliographic Information to Machine
Readable Form Using On-line Computer Terminals
FREDERICK M. BALFOUR
Bibliographic Retrieval from Bibliographic Input;
The Hypothesis and Construction of a Test
FREDERICK H. RUECKING
Automatic Retrieval of Biographical Reference Books
CHERIE B. WEIL
Compression Word Coding Techniques for Information
Retrieval
WILLIAM R. NUGENT
MARC II and COBOL
HENRIETTE D. AVRAM AND JULIUS R. DROZ
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Feature Articles
Conversion of Bibliographic Information
to Machine Readable Form Using On-line Computer Terminals (p.217-226)
FREDERICK M. BALFOUR
A description of the first six months of a project to convert to machine
readable form the entire shelf list of the Libraries of the State University
of New York at Buffalo. IBM DATATEXT, the on-line computer service which
was used for the conversion, provided an upper- and lower-case typewriter
which transmitted data to disk storage of a digital computer. Output was
a magnetic tape containing bibliographic information tagged in a modified
MARC I format. Typists performed all tagging at the console. All information
except diacriticals and non-Roman alphabets was converted. Direct costs
for the first six months were $.55 per title.
Bibliographic Retrieval from Bibliographic
Input; The Hypothesis and Construction of a Test (p.227-238)
FREDERICK H. RUECKING
A study of problems associated with bibliographic retrieval using unverified
input data supplied by requesters. A code derived from compression of title
and author information to four, four-character abbreviations each was used
for retrieval tests on an IBM 1401 computer. Retrieval accuracy was 98.67%
Automatic Retrieval of Biographical Reference
Books (p.239-249)
CHERIE B. WEIL
A description of one of the first projected attempts to automate a reference
service, that of advising which biographical reference book to use. Two
hundred and thirty-four biographical books were categorized as to type of
subjects included and contents of the uniform entries they contain. A computer
program which selects up to five books most likely to contain answers to
biographical questions is described and its test results presented. An evaluation
of the system and a discussion of ways to extend the scheme to other forms
of reference work are given.
Compression Word Coding Techniques for
Information Retrieval (p.250-260)
WILLIAM R. NUGENT
A description and comparison is presented of four compression techniques
for word coding having application to information retrieval. The emphasis
is on codes useful in creating directories to large data files. It is further
shown how differing application objectives lead to differing measures of
optimality for codes, though compression may be a common quality.
MARC II and COBOL (p.261-272)
HENRIETTE D. AVRAM AND JULIUS R. DROZ
A description of the machine processing of MARC II records using COBOL
for an application of the Library of Congress System 360/30. Emphasis is
on the manipulation by COBOL of highly complex variable length MARC records
containing variable length fields.
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