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Background
what makes a good use case?
...
- we have good bibliographic data
- we have usage data
- we have information about our faculty (their publications, but also potentially grants, research groups, patents, facilities they use, other research resources, datasets they have produced)
- some amount of organizational and classification data – what's shown up on the reading list for a course, or been included in reference consultations, or has been identified as a classic text in a research guide
- BUT there are companies trying to sell us information they have indexed, gleaned, and sometimes disambiguated
Related Work
- See the BIBFRAME Use Cases
...
As a... | I want to... | Satisfied when... | Comment | Importance (1-5 5=highest) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | As a researcher exploring a new field, or as a reference librarian | I want to find what is being used (read, annotated, bought by libraries, etc.) by the scholarly communities not only at my institution but at others, and especially to find sources used elsewhere but not by my community | I'll be satisfied when the result of a search for a subject or for a particular work makes suggestions for further exploration that are both relevant and surprising | Demonstrates scholarly communities learning from one another across institutions | 5 dw
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2 | As a faculty member preparing the readings for a new course (or refreshing an existing course) | I want to see what works are being used by colleagues in different institutions, by searching for a course subject, or by suggestions based upon a work that I know about. I would like to be able to browse to the other works being used in a particular course, and also to see the works that are on the periphery of the standard works within a subject. | I'll be satisfied when a tool enables me to do this. | ||
3 | As a faculty member or librarian | I want to create a virtual collection using online materials in multiple collections across multiple universities. I need a tool that will let me browse fluid, discovering items that otherwise would have escaped my attention, and easily creating an online exhibition. Information about user interaction with this exhibition – unique visitors, but also which items they click on, in what order, how long they spend with each – should be fed back into the universities' systems to help inform future people browsing the collections. | I will be satisfied when this tool exists, and usage data can be usefully collected from the exhibition. | ||
4 | As a researcher | I want to identify colleagues at my school who have taught at or were graduated from a partner school, and see what work they have done on the topic they pursued at my school after they left my school. | Why would I want this? dw | ||
5 | As a student | I want to browse a geographic map and see annotations automatically added that show me relevant information (library items, archival items). I want to know that new information is added in close to real time. | I will be satisfied when that works | Maps are a gnarly type. And how do we get the geolocated items? And this isn't very fresh. Is there a way to show relations among the pins? Or something? - dw | |
6 | As a university dean | I want to works created by my faculty to be highlighted in the OPAC. This includes works by any author who has ever worked at my college. | I will be satisfied when that information is accessible by the OPAC, although it'd be nice if the OPAC actually used that information. | ||
7 | As a media person looking for a local expert | I would like to see which subject areas the faculty of a university are focused on, by seeing the subjects on which they are publishing and teaching. | |||
8 | As a librarian | I would like to assess the strength of my university library's collection by seeing for every LC subject class how many resources we have, how heavily they're utilized, and how much research is being done by our faculty in those areas. This could highlight potential areas of the collection to enhance or winnow. | I will be satisfied when I have an analytics tool that lets me make such inquiries. | ||
9 | As a researcher working on a particular academic figure | I would like to be to see the works written by the students of a particular figure. E.g., what have the people who took actual classes with Buckminster Fuller written? Then I'd like to see the citations for those students' works clustered by subject area. | This requires data we may not have. - dw | ||
10 | As a researcher working on a particular academic figure | When I search on Buckminster Fuller, I would like results ranked not by relevance but by "community relevance," i.e., by how often those works are used by my university's communities. | I will be satisfied with Stacklife | Doesn't demonstrate linked data - dw | |
11 | As a teacher and as a librarian | I would like to easily create a "shelf" (a list, really) of supplemental readings for my students, and have the relationship among those items – namely, that they all have some reference to the main sources – be fed back into the Library's data set so that others can benefit from my intellectual work of clustering them. I would like the provenance of that clustering maintained. This information could then be presented through a browsable discovery system. | |||
12 | As a researcher | I would like an alternative to Amazon's "people who read this also read that." The alternative should be focused on finding results relevant to me as a researcher, rather than works a vendor is trying to sell me. In fact, I would like to see side by side lists of Amazon's clusters and my Library's clusters so I can see just how much the Library's kicks Amazon's skinny butt. | 5 dw | ||
13 | As a student in a MOOC | I would like a tool that lets me create a "shelf" of works as I do my research. I'd like to be able to see other student's shelves for a particular assignment, and I'd like to see an aggregated shelf that shows me the most shelved works. I'd like clicking on the items in these shelves to reveal other student shelves on which they appear. I'd also like to be able to see each work in a shelf other books related by subject, | Could be SQL - dw | ||
14 | As a researcher and teacher | I would like to be notified when there are archival items that might bear on a topic I'm researching or teaching. I would like this to work at the component level, not only at the "box" level. | This would require devolving metadata from the box to the component level; Harvard has done work on this and has a set of EAD components - dw | ||
15 | As a librarian | I would like to enter any form of an author's name and have authority control | (I don't understand this - dw) | ||
16 | As a librarian | I would like help building my collection by seeing what is being used by students and faculty, and what's being used at other universities | |||
17 | As a researcher or student | I would like to be able to ask questions about the relationships among library data using something like natural language (although I'd be happy to accept some common sense restrictions) and get back interesting results. For example, "What books were written by Cornell biologists on topics that Harvard and Stanford biologists rarely write books about?" "What books are available about communication technology that don't use 'Communication' in their title or subtitle?" "Create a timeline of science books that charts them by how many of those books have illustrations." "Find all the anthologies that have chapters by both Marshall McLuhan and Neil Postman." "Create a table that shows how many genetics books were published in England per year versus how many were published in the United States." "Find me books about Christian Fundamentalism read (or assigned) in Divinity schools in the 1990s but less so after 2000." "Show me chronologically the usage in medical schools of books under the headings of both vaccination and autism." "Map by publisher location the clustering of books about American slavery since 1640." (Library Graph) | I will be satisfied when there is at least a limited vocabulary and syntax that I can master and get back interesting results. | (We could limit the NLP issue by creating a pick list of operations, relations, and outcomes. Or maybe there's an Open Source NLP library we could use. I dunno. - dw) | 5 dw |
18 | As a researcher or librarian |
| (Explanation needed -dw) | ||
As a librarian working on acquisitions | I would like to find additional materials that build on our current holdings – additional works by the same authors or about the same topics. | I will be satisfied when I have a tool that lets me explore these ways | |||
As a researcher | I would like to be able to build virtual shelves of disaggregated materials. I'd like to be able to use them in classes, and to make them public to provide context to what I'm posting. | ||||
19 | As a researcher or student | I would like intelligent term expansion:
| |||
And a slightly more narrative approach is okay.
see examples of both short and narrative form (pertaining to LibraryCloud, not linked data)
Characterize and prioritize
- order and sequence
- essential vs. edge case (importance/priority)
Examples
Identifying local authors
- When searching a topic in the catalog, identify which publications are by a home institution author
- Scholarly or promotional?
- scholarly – I can search the catalog and find a local author who has written on that topic
- promotional – this is someone who's a Stanford author or who graduated from Stanford
- potentially lots of flavors – have they ever been a professor at Stanford
browse by institution and show where their faculty are focused
- bringing in the subject classification
- Katy Börner map of science visualizations
- what would the use case be --
- being able to assess the collection strengths by subject (including adding classifications to some source data that do not currently have it)
- being able to compare subject coverage and strength to usage of library resources – the stack score, showing what is ignoring
- self-referential use of books reinforcing the head and the tail
- self-citation within the university
- over-reliance on top lists
- I'm trying to put together a reading list and want to see what else is being taught (when don't have access to syllabus data)
- why triples?
- opens it up to many forms of analysis and/or visualization
- being able to use the same approach and format across universities
archival use cases
- searching the discovery interface and finding primary source data applicable for teaching a class that don't currently know exists
- use the description and/or reading list of a course to find related archival materials
- stronger linkage between Stanford authors writing in Dutch history and their research descriptions in the 18th century and digital collections or archives
- doing better than folksonomies and plain text strings
- cross referencing what holdings are, what's circulating, what faculty are publishing, what's taught in courses
- to affect acquisitions decisions
generational impact factor – what have the students of a person working in this domain published?
library workflow use cases
- enter any form of an author's name and have authority control
- CuLLR broadening – virtual library or unit/subject library use case – curatorial
- identify the shelf of engineering reference handbooks
- tagging for a reading list (not classification)
- acquisitions support – helping selectors find additional materials building on current holdings
- additional works by the same authors, about the same topics in the same time period or place
- building virtual collections based on disaggregated materials
search inference
- aliasing of terms through language
- term expansion that is more entity-based
- using linked data to power "see also" panes
- examples where string comparison is not enough (e.g., jaguar)
- weeding out false matches
- end user tool
find books about Islam read in divinity schools in the 1990s but not now
all the books used in medical schools under the headings of vaccination and autism
work-based discovery
breaking apart composite works rather than the bibliographic entity
TOC of a FestSchrift
Musical
I want to find a chart to "something's gotta give" that wasn't
Beethoven's 6th bagatelle
find the Youtube performances of that bagatelle
hitting IMDB or Amazon to make our media collections better used
other movies that Paul Walker was in
finding the most popular thing for wildly underspecified searches
bringing in stackscore
authority-driven resolution
- example?
- what can you integrate that you can't integrate now
usage data
- library usage data is too sparse – aggregate from multiple libraries
- interesting differences among institutional usage data
- consider these 4 works which are read heavily at Cornell but not in the top 20 at Harvard
- citation count vs. usage count (is there enough at the monograph level? no, but can't really get into article-level usage, just at the journal level)
- a report of subject strength compared to usage by subject
- what are the requirements for making circulation data more useful while respecting privacy – can we do web-scale analysis on the amount we do have
- e.g., religious studies, where aggregating data makes it less risky
crowd-sourcing
- solicit feedback (as on Google graph) from users where the linkages suggested are not appropriate (or are the sources uncertain enough that researchers will reject the whole effort out of hand)
- Google did it with Freebase to identify entities
a graph search engine based on the Facebook model
- all the books co-authored by David who have been cited by authors with expertise in discipline
- SNAC approach in archival materials – establishing step relationships between people in archival collections
- finding all the books by Buckminster Fuller read by divinity students
- finding the chain of publications going back in time through citations
- Tom - there are citation mapping services and we're poor at doing them because we don't have the data
- Lee Giles at Penn State as citation mapping data in CS
killer demo – I start a search with a known item (Origin of Species) and takes advantage of the linked data graph to brings back:
- a better relevance ranked set
- a more diverse set ranked across different entities
- the best books by Darwin or by colleagues (related to the author)
- related by subject or species
- related by place
- reviews
- being used in courses
- most used overall
very dynamic sources
- books most relevant to the trending topics in the NY Times
...
- : http://bibframe.org/documentation/bibframe-usecases/
See W3C Library Linked Data Incubator Group: Use Cases: http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/XGR-lld-usecase-20111025/
and final report: http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/XGR-lld-20111025/
Goals
We need to choose a key set of use cases that address the challenges articulated in the grant proposal for the project. Here are some specific points that we want to make sure that the use cases address:
- Pragmatic value. They have real value to our core constituencies: librarians, researchers, teachers, students, etc. E.g., they help a researcher discover resources, or help a librarian make better acquisition decisions. Such values might be aiding discovery or getting more value from existing resources.
Community added-value. They leverage the unique value that librarians and scholars add to materials when they select, annotate, or reference the resources.
- Cross-institutional data. They clearly demonstrate the value in combining data from our three different institutions - ideally in a way that shows how that value will grow as more institutions join in.
- Leverage existing data and services. They leverage existing efforts in this space, specifically including VIAF, SNAC, BIBFRAME, and existing faculty profiling systems like CAP, Profiles, and VIVO, as well as existing LOD collections.
- Integration into the Web. They show how research libraries can integrate with existing popular and useful Web sites and services, e.g., Wikipedia.
- Cross-discipline. They show examples from a variety of disciplines.
- Help core missions. They demonstrate value for teaching and learning; scientific research; research in the humanities; and archival research.
- Multi-data. They cover a broad range of scholarly information resource types: articles, monographs, images, datasets, archival materials, cultural materials, etc.
- Unusual data. They show how non-traditional data (from the point of view of libraries and related projects) can be useful.
- Media "photogenic": They clarify to the mainstream media the value of LOD and this project, and excite that media about the prospects
- They show interesting ways to use the aggregated data for analysis or visualization.
- They take advantage of data on how the materials are being used. (??)
We do also need to be careful about not putting in effort in areas where other projects are already working or areas that don't leverage the unique attributes of library data sources. Here are some non-goals:
- We need to be careful about depending on external, non-institutional sources of linked data.
Clustering use cases
The purpose of this table is to group use cases into 5 clusters (columns) to help identify a small set of exemplar implementable use cases that can be the focus of engineering work. Good candidates to exemplar or to be merged to form an exemplar are marked "top".
Goal | bib+curation | bib+faculty | leverage external authorities | leverage deeper graph via queries or patterns | leverage usage data | no cluster |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
use cases by cluster in priority groupings | top: 3, 11, 24, 35 | | challenges: 18 | top: 6, 9 | top: 22, 23 | med: 19, 25, 28, 42 | challenges: 5, 21, 32 | low: 15 | top: 12, 38 | med: 29 | challenges: 14, 17, 41 | low: 39 | top: 1 | med: 16 | challenges: 10,26 | challenges: 30,31,33,34,37, 27 | low 2,4,7,8,13,40 |
pragmatic | 3 (build virtual collection) | (Find unexpected resources through OPAC searches), (Topical intersections of related authors) | 41 (Exploring the contemporary context of an historical source) | 16 (Be guided in collection building by usage) | ||
community added-value | 35 (Finding selected or highlighted works) | 1 (Research guided by community usage) | ||||
cross-institutional data | 3 (build virtual collection) | 5, 22, 32 (Info-rich maps), (Find unexpected resources through OPAC searches) | 38 (Identifying related works) | 16 (Be guided in collection building by usage) | 31 (Compare course usage to holdings) | |
leverage existing external authorities | 23, 19, 25, 42, 21, 15 (Pivot on works to explore more contexts), (Acquire related works), (Work-based discovery) (Topical intersections of related authors), (Intelligent term expansion) | 38 (Identifying related works) | 8 (Be guided in collection building by usage) | |||
leverage researcher networking data | 6 (Highlight my faculty's work) | 23 (Pivot on works to explore more contexts) | 7 (Find an expert) | |||
leverage existing sources of LOD | 22, 23, 42 (Info-rich maps), (Find unexpected resources through OPAC searches), (Topical intersections of related authors) | 38, 41 (Identifying related works), (Exploring the contemporary context of an historical source) | ||||
integration out into the Web | 22, 19 (Find unexpected resources through OPAC searches),(Acquire related works) | |||||
cross-discipline | ||||||
help core missions | 12, 14, 38 (Find associated works more relevant than Amazon does),(Create lists and learn from others' in my class), (Identifying related works) | |||||
multi-data | ||||||
highlight unusual data | 5 (Info-rich maps) | 12, 14 (Find associated works more relevant than Amazon does), (Be notified when new archival components are uncovered) | 1, 16 (Research guided by community usage),(Be guided in collection building by usage) | |||
media "photogenic" | 22, 42 (Find unexpected resources through OPAC searches),(Topical intersections of related authors) | 12, 17, 41 (Find associated works more relevant than Amazon does), ( | ||||
interesting analysis or visualization | 11 (Build lists and make that metadata reusable) | 38, 17 (Identifying related works),(Use NLP to explore the Library Graph) | ||||
take advantage of usage data | (Research guided by community usage),, (Be guided in collection building by usage),(Assess influence by community usage),(See usage faceted by funder) |
Use Cases (suggestions, in draft form)
(title) | As a... | I want to... | In order to ... (Benefit) | Comment | Cluster | Comments | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Research guided by community usage | As a researcher exploring a new field, or as a reference librarian | I want to find what is being used (read, annotated, bought by libraries, etc.) by the scholarly communities not only at my institution but at others, and especially to find sources used elsewhere but not by my community | I'll be satisfied when the result of a search for a subject or for a particular work makes suggestions for further exploration that are both relevant and surprising | Demonstrates scholarly communities learning from one another across institutions This divides up by subject; others are possible | 5.1 usage
| H5 C5 S0 + value of non-traditional data + cross-lib
|
2 | Compose a syllabus | As a faculty member preparing the readings for a new course (or refreshing an existing course) | I want to see what works are being used by colleagues in different institutions, by searching for a course subject, or by suggestions based upon a work that I know about. I would like to be able to browse to the other works being used in a particular course, and also to see the works that are on the periphery of the standard works within a subject. | I'll be satisfied when a tool enables me to do this. | raises the question of alignment of subject terms - library resources use LCSH but (often in unique combination) but few other resources do. OCLC Fast may help. jcr Also, lib materials often have multiple subject headings. Could do textual analysis perhaps. There's work to do here. It may be considered arbitrary. | no cluster | H0 C0 S0 - we don't have the data to do this |
3 | Build a virtual collection | As a faculty member or librarian | I want to create a virtual collection using online materials in multiple collections across multiple universities. I need a tool that will let me browse fluid, discovering items that otherwise would have escaped my attention, and easily creating an online exhibition. Information about user interaction with this exhibition – unique visitors, but also which items they click on, in what order, how long they spend with each – should be fed back into the universities' systems to help inform future people browsing the collections. | Heavily focused on the UI. How central should that be to the use cases. How much should people be able to say about the collection itself and not just its items. Or info about the items but specific to the collection. | 1.1 bib+curation | H5 S5 C5 + cross institution + pragmatic value | |
4 | Follow up on a colleague | As a researcher | I want to identify colleagues at my school who have taught at or were graduated from a partner school, and see what work they have done on the topic they pursued at my school after they left my school. | Why would I want this? dw seems far afield. Out of scope. | no cluster | H0 C0 S0 | |
5 | Info-rich maps | As a student | I want to browse a geographic map and see annotations automatically added that show me relevant information (library items, archival items). I want to know that new information has been added in close to real time. | I will be satisfied when that works | Maps are a gnarly type. And how do we get the geolocated items? And this isn't very fresh. Is there a way to show relations among the pins? Or something? - dw May be possible to do autotagging by place names but may not be reliable, and are we tagging author origin, publisher, aboutness? jcr Perhaps restrict their viewing to a geo location. We'd need a gazetteer. Nasty data Not linked data base | 3.3 leveraging authorities | H4 C4 S0 If we have the data. (Harvard does.) Also, scale it back. + cross-instit. + unusual data |
6 | Highlight my faculty's work | As a university dean | I want to works created by my faculty to be highlighted in the OPAC. This includes works by any author who has ever worked at my college. | I will be satisfied when that information is accessible by the OPAC, although it'd be nice if the OPAC actually used that information. | requires a commitment to maintain information on departed faculty in other systems of record, or taking on that task in the library. jcr we'd be ok with just current data good one integrates person data, so good
| 2.1 bib+person | S5 H4 C4 Not very dramatic and may already have been done, but worth supporting |
7 | Find an expert | As a media person looking for a local expert | I would like to see which subject areas the faculty of a university are focused on, by seeing the subjects on which they are publishing and teaching. | subject terms used by the media are notoriously different from those used by academics, so requires interpretation and/or mapping, as well as having generalization/granularity issues. jcr faculty profiling info - too close to what VIVO et al do. Maybe looking for a topic, come up with results, and find people. If you a topic, can you suggest a reference librarian. | no cluster | H0 C0 S0 Isn't this a faculty profiles/ faculty/finder? Already done? | |
8 | Assess strength by subject | As a librarian | I would like to assess the strength of my university library's collection by seeing for every LC subject class how many resources we have, how heavily they're utilized, and how much research is being done by our faculty in those areas. This could highlight potential areas of the collection to enhance or winnow. | I will be satisfied when I have an analytics tool that lets me make such inquiries. | note comment above that non-library resources are rarely if ever tagged with LC terms. jcr cross ref. to #29-31
| no cluster | H0 C0 S0 not LD enough |
9 | Identify who an author influenced | As a researcher working on a particular academic figure | I would like to be to see the works written by the students of a particular figure. E.g., what have the people who were advised by Buckminster Fuller written? Then I'd like to see the citations for those students' works clustered by subject area. | great genealogies in math and CS. But would have to link their identities to the ones that we have. | 2.2 bib+person | S5 H0 -No data. | |
10 | Assess influence by community usage | As a researcher working on a particular academic figure | When I search on Buckminster Fuller, I would like results ranked not by relevance but by "community relevance," i.e., by how often those works are used by my university's communities. | I will be satisfied with Stacklife | Doesn't demonstrate linked data, and similar to a couple of others - dw Population across the three institutions is big enough. | 5.3 usage | S0 H3 This is an application of #1. + cross-institutional |
11 | Build lists and make that metadata reusable | As a teacher and as a librarian | I would like to easily create a "shelf" (a list, really) of supplemental readings for my students, and have the relationship among those items – namely, that they all have some reference to the main sources – be fed back into the Library's data set so that others can benefit from my intellectual work of clustering them. I would like the provenance of that clustering maintained. This information could then be presented through a browsable discovery system. WHAT RELATIONSHIP? | You'd have to log in. (Shelf.io does that) A top priority for Stanford and something they want to get out of this grant Privileged or not privileged? My personal list or public? Great area to explore A third party app might do this, with the three systems incorporating
| See #3 & #24 | 1.1 bib+curation | H4 S5 Lists are a subset of virtual collections (#3) |
12 | Find associated works more relevant than Amazon does | As a researcher | I would like an alternative to Amazon's "people who read this also read that." The alternative should be focused on finding results relevant to me as a researcher, rather than works a vendor is trying to sell me. In fact, I would like to see side by side lists of Amazon's clusters and my Library's clusters so I can see just how much the Library's kicks Amazon's skinny butt. | Could use data from Fac. finder, items put on reserve, lib guides, lists and collections | 4.1 deeper graph | S0 H5 + Great for the media + Discovery tool + Shows use of new data | |
13 | Create lists and learn from others' in my class | As a student in a MOOC | I would like a tool that lets me create a "shelf" of works as I do my research. I'd like to be able to see other student's shelves for a particular assignment, and I'd like to see an aggregated shelf that shows me the most shelved works. I'd like clicking on the items in these shelves to reveal other student shelves on which they appear. I'd also like to be able to see each work in a shelf other books related by subject, | Could be SQL - dw | no cluster | S0 H0 Version of virtual collections (#3) and lists (#11) | |
14 | Be notified when new archival components are uncovered | As a researcher and teacher | I would like to be notified when there are archival items that might bear on a topic I'm researching or teaching. I would like this to work at the component level, not only at the "box" level. | This would require devolving metadata from the box to the component level; Harvard has done work on this and has a set of EAD components - dw | 4.3 deeper graph | S0 H4 + Discovery + Unusual data (Harvard has componentized EADs. Anyone else? Rich enough metadata) | |
15 | Authority control | As a librarian | I would like to enter any form of an author's name and have authority control | As it stands this use case doesn't seem to leverage our work. If the method by which one decided which "John Smith" you wanted used other information about the person, their works, their geography, etc. then it would seem to fit. Still seems a somewhat standalone tool though – sw | 3.4 leveraging authorities
| S5 H0 -Does not need our data | |
16 | Be guided in collection building by usage | As a librarian | I would like help building my collection by seeing what is being used by students and faculty, and what's being used at other universities | 5.2 usage | S0 H4.5 + useful + uses unusual data (It's another use of #1) | ||
17 | Use NLP to explore the Library Graph | As a researcher or student | I would like to be able to ask questions about the relationships among library data using something like natural language (although I'd be happy to accept some common sense restrictions) and get back interesting results. For example, "What books were written by Cornell biologists on topics that Harvard and Stanford biologists rarely write books about?" "What books are available about communication technology that don't use 'Communication' in their title or subtitle?" "Create a timeline of science books that charts them by how many of those books have illustrations." "Find all the anthologies that have chapters by both Marshall McLuhan and Neil Postman." "Create a table that shows how many genetics books were published in England per year versus how many were published in the United States." "Find me books about Christian Fundamentalism read (or assigned) in Divinity schools in the 1990s but less so after 2000." "Show me chronologically the usage in medical schools of books under the headings of both vaccination and autism." "Map by publisher location the clustering of books about American slavery since 1640." (Library Graph) | I will be satisfied when there is at least a limited vocabulary and syntax that I can master and get back interesting results. | (We could limit the NLP issue by creating a pick list of operations, relations, and outcomes. Or maybe there's an Open Source NLP library we could use. I dunno. - dw) I think the NLP part of this is too much to bite off. I think it would be a reasonable goal for this project to use a structure query language to express and then answer these queries, I think the NLP part would be extremely cool but would need NLP expert collaborators – sw
Keep an eye out for an NLP person who might want to hook up an NLP front end to this, for a demo. | 4.3 deeper graph | S0 H5 +Great for the media (Remember that these are use cases, not things we're saying we'll build. And we have the data – not the NLP – to do this. I.e., we should be aiming at enabling someone else to build this.) |
18 | **MERGE with 24** Expand on Cornell's Curated List of Library Resources (CuLLR) | As a researcher or librarian | I would like to be able to tag and group resources of a specific type, matching some of the affordances of a physical library in the virtual world. Examples include:
| Allow students and researchers to easily discover selected types of highly used/useful materials | What about extending the use case to inclusion of non-local materials? – sw See #24 | 1.2 bib+curation | C5 S5 |
19 | Acquire related works | As a librarian working on acquisitions | I would like to find additional materials that build on our current holdings – additional works by the same authors or about the same topics. | I will be satisfied when I have a tool that lets me explore these ways | 3.2 leveraging authorities | S5 H5 but only if it brings in outside sources | |
21 | Intelligent term expansion | As a researcher or student | I would like intelligent term expansion:
| This would rely on some of the ideas of authority control #15 – sw OCLC Fast? We could do this for authors etc. but how well by navigating the linked data we have? | 3.2 leveraging authorities | S5 H5 if we have the data | |
22 | Find unexpected resources through OPAC searches | As a researcher | I would like a panel in the OPAC that shows more information about a given <author,subject> when I do a search. E.g. "Gettysburg Address" shows panel on the town of Gettysburg, Lincoln, the battle, the tourist destination. Find other items near Gettysburg's geocode and perhaps in decades surrounding the event's time. | So that I can find related resources that fall on the periphery of my search | Facilitates serendipitous discovery, not too near not too far. | 3.1 leveraging authorities | H4.5 S5 +cross-inst. +external data LD +pragmatic +media |
23 | Pivot on works to explore more contexts | As a researcher | I would like a browse interface in the OPAC that is more intuitive, more flexible and allows for easy pivots than current (legacy) browse interactions for author, title, subject, shelf location | So that I can get a sense of related works across multiple different dimensions. | 3.1 leveraging authorities | S5 H5 depending on data implications (Similar to #22) +pragmatic | |
24 | Tag items in cross-silo ways | As a librarian | I would like to be able to 'tag' items in the OPAC into curated lists, to feed subject guides, course reserves, or reference collections; I'd like these lists to be portable (into Drupal, into LibGuides, into Spotlight! or Omeka, into Sakai, e.g.) and durable; I'd like these lists to selectively feed back into the OPAC without having to modify a MARC record. | So that I can create durable, portable lists of curated resources for many uses, without having to do cataloging. | aka LD-powered CuLLR for SearchWorks ha ha! I added a similar comment to #18. Maybe merge these? – sw Will use CuLLR | 1.1 bib+curation | H5 S5 (Not sure what it implies for the data model) |
25 | Work-based discovery | As a researcher or librarian | I'd like to do work-based discovery rather than item-based discovery for musical resources. | because I heard that FRBR would be really useful. </snark> | Hummable front end? | 3.2 leveraging authorities | S0 H5 If this means someone could spin up a page at the work level, then 5. (Doing it for music is a nice touch but not essential) |
26 | See usage faceted by funder | As a bibliographer or librarian | I'd like to be able to search all books acquired by a certain fund, and see which fund paid for the acquisition of any given book, and crosswalk that to how many times each book circulated / was used in course reserves / was on a syllabi or reading list / was authored by an institutional faculty member | So that I can do queries to support collection development and management. | 5.3 usage | S0 H3 we have this data. Not sure how useful. | |
27 | Authorized names via auto-suggest | As a cataloger | I'd like an auto-suggest for fields when doing cataloging that gave me authorized forms of <names, places, subjects, corporate bodies> for data entry – based on pooled data | So data entry is quick, less error-prone, and authority controlled from the get go. | no cluster | S0 H same as #15 | |
28 | **OUT** Form-fill for faculty deposits to an IR | As a faculty depositor to an IR | I'd like an auto-suggest for fields when doing data deposit that (first) autopopulated my bio-demo data based on a unique ID (ORCID?), and (second) gave me useful, authorized forms of names, places, subjects, keywords, departments, etc. for data entry. | So data entry is quick, less error-prone, and authority controlled from the get go. | 3.2 leveraging authorities | H4 S5 + useful (see #15)
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29 | Increase the sophistication of query and display | As a researcher | I'd like to be able to visualize, pivot, do inferencing, and complex, ad hoc queries across the aggregated store of person, bibliographic, usage and curation data from three institutions | So I can uncover relationships and knowledge that were otherwise hidden. Maybe do this more as a specific narrative? | SPARQL-based OPAC + directory + circ reporting? Important Great if we can come up with some good UI, or subset UI that does interesting things. Is there an existing UI to drop on top of a SPARQL endpoint? We don't know of any. Make this use case more specific? And we need some concrete examples. Can we do inferencing?? Make that its own use case? | 4.2 deeper graph | S0 H0 This isn't a use case. These capabilties would support use cases, but these capabilities are what the project overall is about, aren't they? |
30 | Find which works by an author are used in courses | As a faculty member | I'd like to query the OPAC and/or Syllabus / Reading List portal to see which of works of a given author were used in courses | So I can gauge the impact and trends in pedagogy | no cluster | H0 S0 -no data | |
31 | Compare course usage to holdings | As a bibliographer | I'd like to be able to query which library resources were used in courses (as noted by syllabi, reading lists or course reserves) and compare that to a collection's holdings. (This may be at my or another institution) | So I can see if the relative strengths of collections to support teaching | more specific case of #8 combine with 8. drop 8 | no cluster | H0 S0 -no data |
32 | Finding Aids across institutions | As a researcher | I'd like to be able to search across archival holdings at different institutions, and follow the links from the records of one person or org to those of a collaborator held at an another institution. | So I can find relevant archival resources regardless of which institution holds them. | 3.3 leveraging authorities | H4 S0 If we have the data (cf. #14) | |
33 | Integrated search of Finding Aids for archival materials | As a researcher | I'd like to be able find an emeritus faculty member's publications, teaching materials, reading lists, grant products, advisors, and archival materials in a single search. | So I can trace relevant research and teaching activities. | What else do we have that is EAD-related? #14 would also rely upon decomposition of EAD – sw
| no cluster | H0 S0 -hard -how different from a faculty profiler? |
34 | Finding works related to course instructor | As a student | I'd like to be able to find all the works authored by, composed by, created by, or performed by any faculty member who has ever taught the Jazz Piano/B&W Photography/Colonial Women's History course that I'm currently taking | So that I can better understand the nature of the course and various approaches to it | no cluster | H0 S0 -low utility -part of faculty profiler? | |
35 | Finding selected or highlighted works | As a researcher | I would like to find works in a particular subject area (e.g., Civil War photographs) that have been individually selected and curated as part of a public exhibit by a museum, library, or archive | So I can find works that are likely to particularly exemplify some aspect of the subject area | 1.1 bib+curation | S5 H5 Great if we have the data. (Expand to include data from virtual collections and lists) | |
37 | Tracing archival relationships | As a researcher | Specifying an individual in an archival collection, I would like to identify all the individuals with whom they have corresponded and find out where, in turn, those individuals have archival collections | So that I can trace the potential impact an individual has on the people with whom he/she interacts | no cluster | H0 S0 -no data | |
38 | Identifying related works | As a researcher | I would like to find all the costume photographs and illustrations for the plays of George Bernard Shaw | So I can see how the characters have been interpreted and visually represented across time | I like this one as it uses relatedness along different axes combined with type taxa and and entity – sw
| 4.1 deeper graph
| H5 S0 + external data + discovery + cross-inst. |
39 | Identifying publications related to equipment or facilities | As a facility or lab director | I would like to find publications describing research that made use of my equipment or facilities | So that I can justify existing funding or advocate for additional resources | Where is the data linking publications to equipment or facilities? – sw
| 4.4 deeper graph | H0 S0 -no data |
40 | Identifying publications related to datasets involving research resources | As a researcher | Lacking a direct dataset citation, I would like to find candidate publications that may have used a particular dataset that involved certain resources or equipment | So that I can track the propagation of errors related to equipment calibration or otherwise determine the impact of particular questionable resources | How do we infer dataset use where there is no citation? – sw
| no cluster | H0 S0 -no data |
41 | Exploring the contemporary context of an historical source | As a researcher | I am exploring an artwork or text situated in a particular historical epoch and want to find related materials for a specified period leading up to that time, so that I can see the context of that work. E.g., For the twenty yeares before GB Shaw's Arms and the Man, what was being reported in England about the Serbo-Bulgarian war? | So that I can further my contextual understanding based on available resources | This could draw upon external data sets. E.g., NYTimes archive | 4.3 deeper graph | H5 S0 -useful -external data -media photogenic |
42 | Topical intersections of related authors | As a researcher | I would like to see the sets of topics worked on by authors within a particular field of study. E.g., assemble the authors who have written about GB Shaw and show me the other topics each has written about, so I can see over time the change in the domains within which GBS has been considered. (Maybe I'll discover that initially he was treated mainly by people writing about the arts, but during WWI he was taken up by political writers.) | 3.2 leveraging authorities | H5 S0 -useful -external data -media photogenic |