On Tue, 29 Sep 2009, Cindy Harper wrote:

I've been thinking about the role of libraries as promoter of authoritative
works - helping to select and sort the plethora of information out there.
And I heard another presentation about social media this morning.  So I
though I'd bring up for discussion here some of the ideas I've been mulling
over.

[trimmed]

Is anyone else thinking about these ideas?  or do you know of projects that
approach this goal of leveraging librarian's vetting of authoritative
sources?

I don't know of any projects that specifically do what you've mentioned, but for the last few years, we've been mulling over how to store various lists and catalogs so that we could present interesting intersections of them.

In my case, I deal with scientific catalogs, so it's stuff like "when was RHESSI observing the same area as TRACE?" or "When was there an X-class flare within 2 hours of a CME?" or even lack of intersections "When were there type-II radio bursts without a CME or flare within 6 hours?"

For the science catalogs, we specifically don't want to just make some sort of single ranking from each list, and it's not really easy to merge the catalogs into some form of union catalog as they're cataloging different concepts.

... and I think that there's use in library searches to keep the catalogs different, particularly when you're bringing up authority (which then gets to reputation, etc.).

I'm not sure how many other people out there would try to search for Hugo award winning novels that weren't on the New York Times best seller list, so it might not be as useful for general patron use ... unless you could give it your *own* catalog (AFI top 100 movies ... that I don't already own)


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Joe Hourcle
Solar Data Analysis Center
Goddard Space Flight Center

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