From a librarian’s perspective, we know searching is messy – a researcher can’t 
hope to find the perfect subject heading that will reveal all their related 
content in one term.  Searching is exploring through overlapping terms, and 
compiling a bibliography from the pearls found in the process. This interface 
makes clearer what the related terms may be, given a borad term like practical 
theology.  And it’s so nice that it combines the classification structure with 
the subject headings.

Cindy Harper
@vts.edu<http://vts.edu>

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries 
[mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU<mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU>] On Behalf Of 
Kent Fitch
Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2016 8:17 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU<mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU>
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] LCSH, Bisac, facets, hierarchy?
About ten years ago, I was wondering how to make the structure in LCSH, or at 
least how it was encoded in MARC subject tags more useful, so when implementing 
a prototype for a new library catalogue at the National Library of Australia, I 
tried using the subject tag contents to represent a hierarchy, then counted the 
number of hits against parts of that hierarchy for a given search and then 
represented the subject tags in a hierarchy
with hit counts.   One of the motivations was to help expose to the
searcher how works relevant to their search may have been 
LCSH-subject-catalogued.

I'm a programmer, not a UI person, so the formatting of theresults were fairly 
primitive, but that prototype from ten years ago ("Library Labs") is still 
running.

For example, search results for /ancient egypt/

http://ll01.nla.gov.au/search.jsp?searchTerm=ancient+egypt&keywords=0.5&keywordWildcard=0.05&titlePhrase=12.0&authorPhrase=9.0&subjectPhrase=9.0&genrePhrase=9.0&titleWords=4.0&authorWords=3.0&subjectWords=3.0&genreWords=3.0&titleExact=18.0&authorExact=15.0

/computer art/

http://ll01.nla.gov.au/search.jsp?searchTerm=computer+art&keywords=0.5&keywordWildcard=0.05&titlePhrase=12.0&authorPhrase=9.0&subjectPhrase=9.0&genrePhrase=9.0&titleWords=4.0&authorWords=3.0&subjectWords=3.0&genreWords=3.0&titleExact=18.0&authorExact=15.0

/history of utah/

http://ll01.nla.gov.au/search.jsp?searchTerm=history+of+utah&keywords=0.5&keywordWildcard=0.05&titlePhrase=12.0&authorPhrase=9.0&subjectPhrase=9.0&genrePhrase=9.0&titleWords=4.0&authorWords=3.0&subjectWords=3.0&genreWords=3.0&titleExact=18.0&authorExact=15.0

This prototype also explored a subject hierarchy which had been of interest to 
the NLA's Assistant Director-General, Dr Warwick Cathro, over many years, the 
RLG "Conspectus" hierarchy, which I guess was not unlike BISAC in its aims.  It 
is shown further down the right-hand column.

Both the subject hierarchy and Conspectus were interesting, but neither made it 
into the eventual production search system, Trove, implemented at the NLA, in 
which subject faceting or hierarchy is absent from results
display:

http://trove.nla.gov.au/book/result?q=ancient+egypt
http://trove.nla.gov.au/book/result?q=computer+art
http://trove.nla.gov.au/book/result?q=history+of+utah

The "Library Labs" prototype is running on a small VM, so searching may be 
slow, and it hasnt been updated with any content since 2006..  But maybe the 
way it attempted to provide subject grouping and encourage narrowing of search 
by LCSH or exploring using LCSH rather than the provided search terms may 
trigger some more experiments.

Kent Fitch

On Thu, Apr 14, 2016 at 3:11 AM, Mark Watkins 
<m...@thehawaiiproject.com<mailto:m...@thehawaiiproject.com>>
wrote:

> <head starting to swim> :)
>
> sounds like there is a lot of useful metadata but somewhat scattered
> amongst various fields, depending on when the item was cataloged or tagged.
> Which seems to correspond to anecdotal surfing of the Harvard data.
>
> I guess my new task is to build something that aggregates and
> reconciles portions of LCSH, LCFGT, and GSAFD :).
>
> Thanks for the additional perspective!
>

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