Dissertação
Dados abertos conectados a partir de catálogos online de bibliotecas
Fecha
2021-12-01Registro en:
2228700101393589
Autor
Vanessa Marta de Jesus
Institución
Resumen
Over the years, advances have been developed for the exchange of information
between bibliographic records that make up online library catalogs, such as the creation of
the Z39.50 protocol and the Open Archives Initiative - Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAIPMH)
and the MARC format, which binds the registration exchange. In this scenario, it
becomes possible to import data and reuse records from other libraries, in a collaborative
way, reducing costs and rework in the cataloging process. A new possibility for incremental
innovation in the library scenario is open data, the main focus of this master's research,
whose research environment is the online library catalogs. Connected data can be
understood as a set of nodes, which comprises a union of various data and links which can
be considered as known. Its standards allow the publication of data in such a way that it can
be read by people and processed by machines. They make it possible for the institution's
collection to be accessible to anyone through interoperability, contributing to different
systems selected on the Web to search for information. The current library catalogs have
limitations considering the Web context. In this scenario, the general objective of this
research is to map the challenges found in the implementation of available data practices
connected in libraries to make their catalogs available online on the Web. As a methodology,
the research is characterized as applied and exploratory, using bibliographical and
documentary research. The research technique adopted is Bardin's content analysis,
comprising the phases of elaboration of records for initial analysis of the texts, creation of
categories for data categorization, grouping of data in the categories created and analysis
and interpretation of data. As a result, it was found that the challenges achieved refer to the
metadata format, licenses, provenance and quality, identifiers, formats, vocabularies, access,
preservation, data enrichment. The barriers observed were related to scarce financial
resources, lack of qualified human resources, low level of awareness among the
community/librarians and dependence on the foreign market for software acquisition. It is
concluded that technology is not the main obstacle for publishing connected data from library
catalogs, although changing the current metadata model adopted is not an easy task and
there are many challenges to overcome. It was observed, however, that the challenges exist
not for lack of requirements, but for the complexity involved in the process of publishing open
data connected from online catalogs, combined with the lack of qualified personnel to
perform the function, the scarcity of financial resources and the need to raise awareness
among staff about the benefits arising from the adoption of open data connected by libraries.