Minutes of the OCLC Enhance and Expert Community Sharing Session
ALA Annual Conference
Friday, 2016 June 24
10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Hyatt Regency Hotel, Orlando, Florida
The ALA Annual 2016 edition of Breaking Through: What’s New and Next From OCLC and the compilation of News From OCLC were distributed. The floor was opened for questions and answers. Questions were answered by Robert Bremer (Senior Consulting Database Specialist, WorldCat Quality), Laura Ramsey (Section Manager, Quality Control), Roy Tennant (Senior Program Officer, OCLC Research Library Partnership), Jay Weitz (Senior Consulting Database Specialist, WorldCat Quality), and Cynthia Whitacre (Manager, WorldCat Quality).
This is a misconception. In reality, the capabilities for editing most PCC records and most LC records are basically the same and have been since about 2002 as part of OCLC’s Database Enrichment (http://www.oclc.org/bibformats/en/quality.html#databaseenrichment). Database Enrichment allows you to make any of the changes in that BFAS chart in the same replace transaction, as long as you limit changes to those that are allowed. As BFAS notes, “Make all Database Enrichments in one editing session. For example, add a call number in the same lock-and-replace session as a contents note.” OCLC’s Expert Community (http://www.oclc.org/support/services/worldcat/documentation/cataloging/guidelines.en.html), which has subsumed essentially all the capabilities of Database Enrichment, Minimal-Level Upgrade, and Regular Enhance since 2009, has been intended to further the ideals of cooperative cataloging within WorldCat without diluting the very definition of a PCC record. In order to maintain the integrity of PCC records, in the sense of having access points backed up by authority records, changing existing 6XX/0, 1XX, and 7XX had to be off limits, in agreement with the PCC. We certainly understand the frustration of seeing errors that may be off-limits, but encourage users to report them to bibchange@oclc.org.
OCLC is a cooperative, so we receive contributions of data at all levels of quality. We need to help each other out by improving records in WorldCat whenever feasible. If there appears to be a library consistently sending seriously poor quality data, please bring them to the attention of Quality Control at bibchange@oclc.org. And if there are egregious situations of a pattern of such data, feel free to contact our Executive Director of Metadata Operations, Global Product Management, Ms. Marti Heyman at heymanm@oclc.org with your concerns. In the meantime, we are constantly adjusting the matching algorithms to address the problems presented by such records as best we can. But we also have to be careful to strike a balance between being too lenient in our matching and being not lenient enough. Every change to these complex algorithms has some impact somewhere else that may be unintended.
The process of removing GMDs began in April 2016 and is ongoing. Records for electronic books were our first specific target because of their prominence. The process includes adding the appropriate 336, 337, and 338 fields whenever we can safely determine them. It’s a slow and careful process that will be going on for quite a while.
Please fix them if you can and/or report them to bibchange@oclc.org.
Yes, FAST headings are updated if the LC subject headings from which they are generated change. Members need not update FAST headings themselves because automated processes in WorldCat will take care of that. If you change some of the subject headings on a record, please delete all the old FAST headings so that they will all be regenerated to reflect your changes. When you derive a new record from an existing one, you may carry over the FAST headings if you don’t change any of the subject headings from which they were generated.
You may find the OCLC Research page on FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology) at http://www.oclc.org/research/themes/data-science/fast.html informative.
It varies, but usually isn’t more than a few weeks.
On the OCLC System Alerts page at http://www.oclc.org/support/systemalerts.en.html, you can sign up to receive e-mail notifications about system outages.
Please correct them if you can or report them to bibchange@oclc.org.
Yes, some instructions on how to do this are in the new “Control Subfields” section of Bibliographic Formats and Standards at http://www.oclc.org/bibformats/en/controlsubfields.html.
When an LC Subject Heading is used in field 655, OCLC prefers that the Second Indicator be coded as “0” for LCSH. For strictly local genre/form terms in field 655, OCLC prefers that the Second Indicator be coded as “4” for “Source Not Specified.” Such preferences are now explicitly stated in BFAS.
Later in 2016 there will actually be a new version of the Connexion client that is part of OCLC’s effort to expand WorldCat support for full Unicode characters and scripts to allow us to better represent international collections. That Connexion client release date isn’t yet set, nor is there any end-of-life for Connexion currently planned.
The OCLC Community Center (https://www.oclc.org/community/home.en.html) is a place for the discussion of many things, but it is OCLC product oriented. Hence, it is a good place to ask about or to suggest particular product enhancements. The OCLC-CAT discussion list remains the place to discuss cataloging issues.
Correct.
The best course of action in cases such as this is to contact bibchange@oclc.org with the details of your situation and we’ll work with you on a solution.
There have been many questions about Unicode expansion but there are few clear answers yet. We have begun to discuss the development of some best practices regarding which characters to use in particular situations, particularly with an eye toward the potential impact on searching and indexing.
The LC/NACO Authority File is under the jurisdiction of the Library of Congress and is dependent on the coordinated capabilities of all of the NACO nodes. That is not the case for bibliographic records in WorldCat.
This really isn’t up to OCLC, but is mandated by MARC 21. So it’s more of a question for the MARC Advisory Committee.
Respectfully submitted by
Doris Seely
University of Minnesota
2016 June 29
With edits by Marti Heyman, Laura Ramsey, Cynthia Whitacre, and Jay Weitz.
OCLC
2016 July 7