On 4/14/16 7:40 AM, Joseph Montibello wrote:
Real use of LCSH
would search the reference vocabulary as well as the preferred term
headings which get into bib records.  Working with LCSH bib headings alone
misses the point of a sophisticated controlled vocabulary, where much of
the terminological and semantic richness for searching is contained in
"see" and "see also" references, complex references and scope and other
kinds of notes.  The controlled vocabulary itself needs to be integrated
into search results so that searches call up not only bib records with a
matching heading but vocabulary records which can expand the user's search
vocabulary and point to related controlled terms outside those generated by
the retrieved bib records' themselves.
Are there discovery systems out there that attempt this? It would be great to use all the 
work that has gone into these vocabs to improve end-user experience, not by telling them 
to click a "see also" link but by doing that work for them in some way.

We tried that in an early version of the U of Calif's MELVYL system (I'm talking early 80's here). The difficulty is in trying to coordinate a keyword search, that can bring up a wide variety of headings in very different "hierarchies", and some direct linking that would make sense to the user. The best we could do was to combine the keywords from the authoritative and non-authoritative headings for retrieval, thus increasing both the desired retrieval but also the false drops. If you could isolate the subject "graphs" and present them it would be cleaner, but in some cases the number of different graphs retrieved would make for a very difficult presentation for the user.

The disconnect between keyword searching and headings is something that needs more analysis.

kc

Joe Montibello, MLIS
Library Systems Manager
Dartmouth College
603.646.9394
joseph.montibe...@dartmouth.edu

--
Karen Coyle
kco...@kcoyle.net http://kcoyle.net
m: +1-510-435-8234
skype: kcoylenet/+1-510-984-3600

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