Estudio comparativo del esquema de metadatos Dublin Core y otros estándares para la determinación de la forma de los puntos de acceso en bibliotecas y repositorios digitales
Main Author: | Rocca-Varela, Adriana-Beatriz |
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Format: | Preprint NonPeerReviewed application/pdf |
Bahasa: | es |
Terbitan: |
, 2011
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: |
http://eprints.rclis.org/16480/1/Adriana%20Beatriz%20Rocca_Estudio%20comparativo%20DC%20y%20otros%20estandares%20oct.-dic.2011.pdf http://eprints.rclis.org/16480/ |
Daftar Isi:
- One of the most important aspects on the implementation of institutional digital repositories is to revise the documents that will be published. Dspace is an open source software that will constitute a choice for academic, non-profit, and commercial organizations that are building open digital repositories. It preserves and enables easy and open access to all types of digital content including text, images, moving images, mpegs and data sets. The users can deposit the documents a) by upload or, b) by auto upload. DSpace accepts all manner of digital formats: Documents, such as articles, preprints, working papers, technical reports, conference papers; Books; Theses; Data sets; Computer programs; Multimedia publications; Administrative records; Images; Audio files; Video files; e-formatted digital library collections; Learning objects; Web pages, among others. Each DSpace service is comprised of Communities -groups that contribute content to DSpace- and Communities in turn each have Collections, which contain the content items, or files. In a university environment, for example, Communities might be departments, labs, research centers, schools, or some other administrative unit within an institution. Communities determine their own content guidelines and decide who has access to the community's contributions. Usually the DSpace User Support Manager, works with the head of a community to set up workflows for content to be approved, edited, tagged with metadata, etc. At the beginning of the 90’s, it had appeared the necessity of organize the information of the web and the documents that had supported. That’s in 1995 the origin of the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI). The metainformation scheme has allowed describing a wide variety of internet resources. To make it better, it is necessary to establish an correspondence between the 15 elements of Dublin Core set and the fields and subfields of the MARC21 Formats, the ISBD standards, and specific control documental languages, that could apply to the upload of documents in digital repositories.