Title: CONSER
1CONSERS Publication Pattern Initiative why is
it important and whats in it for you?
2Todays presentation
- Background on the CONSER initiative
- What is the problem and what is CONSER doing
about it? - What CONSER has achieved to date and still hopes
to accomplish - A brief review of MARC 21 holdings
- How patterns are added to CONSER records
- New initiatives
- Experience at my institution
- Whats in it for you and your library
3The Challenge
- The MARC 21 Holdings Format was created in the
1980s as a means to communicate holdings data. - It is now for the first time being widely used by
integrated library systems (ILSs) - Part of the holdings format is the inclusion of
fields that include publication patterns that
allow the ILS to predict the future issues of a
serial - This is a time-saver for check-in, but creation
of the patterns is often time-consuming
4The Challenge
- However, most ILSs have not fully implemented the
format - Each ILS handles predictive pattern data
differently forcing time-consuming and costly
pattern creation in many libraries - Pattern data can be shared by ILS customers but
not with users of other ILSs - And sharing an initial load does not help with
ongoing maintenance - If a library decides to migrate to a new ILS down
the road, the check-in data will have to be
recreated
5The Solution
- A pattern should be created once and shared with
all others who own the serial (like bib records!) - If each ILS would fully implement the MARC 21
Holdings Format, check-in data could be shared
and migrated, just as we now do with
bibliographic records
6CONSERs Efforts
- Patterns and dates/numbers associated with the
beginning pattern are being added to CONSER
records on OCLC in field 891 (distributed to RLIN
in fields 853/863) - CONSER is sharing this data to
- share the intellectual effort of pattern creation
and - to promote conformance with the standard
7CONSER Publication Pattern Initiative
- Began in 1999 to experiment with the addition of
patterns to CONSER records on OCLC - Experiment was determined a success in 2001 and
declared an ongoing part of CONSER - This has been the first group to really test the
holdings format - Task force members have contributed proposals to
MARBI to enhance and improve the standard
8CONSER Initiative
- Key goal involves working with ILS vendors to
promote improvements - Pattern participants have partnered with
different ILSs to propose changes and promote
cooperation - CONSER has also promoted documentation and
training to spread awareness and increase skills - Documentation on the CONSER Pub Pattern Web site
http//www.loc.gov/acq/conser/patthold.html - SCCTP Holdings Workshop
9Accomplishments
- CONSER/OCLC database currently has over 50,000
patterns - Many of these were created by Harvard and contain
captions but not always pattern data - Participants have input over 10,000 patterns
- Currently 19 participating institutions
- New participants continue to join
- Mentoring program developed for new institutions
10Accomplishments
- ILSs have responded
- VTLS has always been able to load patterns
- III has developed a pattern loader
- Endeavor has promised full compliance in the
future - Most major vendors send representatives to CONSER
task force meetings at ALA - But its slow going nonetheless!
11Accomplishments
- Other accomplishments include
- Improvements to the MARC 21 Holdings format
- Free availability of documentation
- Training opportunities
- Outreach via discussions at ALA and NASIG and
meetings such as this - Raising awareness that non-compliance with
standards is unacceptable!
12A brief overview of the holdings format
- MFHD uses paired fields 853 and 863
- 853 carries the captions and patterns
- 863 carries the enumeration and chronology of the
holdings that relate to that pattern - Captions and patterns
- Caption the word, phrase, or abbreviation that
the publisher uses to indicate the issues or
parts of a serials or multipart (e.g., volume,
issue, number, jahrgang) - Pattern includes the frequency, regularity, and
number of issues or parts this is the part that
makes prediction work
13Example of 853 fields
- Monthly serial des. by vol., no. year, and month
- 853 a v. b no. u 12 v r i (year) j
(month) w m x 01 - a and b 1st and 2nd levels of enumeration
- u numbers per volume (used to determine when
1st level will increase) - v numbering repeats with each volume (1-12)
- i and j 1st and 2nd levels of chronology
- w monthly frequency
- x calendar changes with the first month
(January)
14Example of 863 field
- Serial begins with vol. 1, no. 1 in January 2002
- 863 a 1 b 1i 01 j 2002
- a 1st level of enumeration
- b 2nd level of enumeration
- i 1st level of chronology
- j 2nd level of chronology
15Pattern for this serial in a CONSER record on OCLC
- 853 and 863 fields are imbedded in 891 fields in
9 - Indicators apply to 853 and 863
- 8 links the 853 and 863 fields
- 891 20 9 853 8 1 a v. b no. u 12 v r i
(year) j (month) w m x 01 - 891 41 863 8 1.1 a 1 b 1i 01 j 2002
16Pattern for this serial as it appears in RLIN
- Records are exported using MARC fields and 852
field with universal pattern - 852 Universal pattern
- 853 20 8 1 a v. b no. u 12 v r i (year)
j (month) w m x 01 - 863 41 8 1.1 a 1 b 1i 01 j 2002
17Relation to Holdings
- These are the fields used locally to create
detailed holdings statements - The primary difference is in field 863
- In CONSER, only issues noted are first and last
to which pattern apply - Locally, more complete holdings statement is
given, including gaps, non-published issues, etc.
18More on MFHD
- Fields 854/864 are used for supplements
- Fields 855/865 are used for indexes
- Fields 866/867/868 are used for textual data
- Usually used for back holdings
- Not used for predictive check-in
- For more information and examples, see
http//www.loc.gov/acq/conser/patthold.html
19How are Patterns Added to CONSER Records?
- Participants use a macro designed by Robert
Bremer (OCLC) on Passport and CatME - The macro makes use of data in the bibliographic
record to create a pattern in seconds - For simple patterns, the macro works great
- For more complex patterns, additional data is
added or corrected - Works well for new patterns, but not subsequent
patterns
20New Initiatives
21Universal Holdings Record
- Two CONSER task groups
- Diane Hillmann (Cornell) is heading a CONSER task
group on the definition and uses of a universal
holdings record - Linda Miller (LC) is chairing a group looking at
the long-term storage of pattern data and the
technical aspects of a universal holdings record
22Universal Holdings Record what is it? What are
its uses?
- The complete record of what has been published,
not what is held by any one institution - Could exist on OCLC (or RLIN?) in association
with the bibliographic record - Potential uses
- Building local holdings records
- Collections development, digital archiving,
preservation, etc. - Supporting union listing
- Sharing creation of holdings data rather than
each institution doing it locally
23Patterns and Electronic Serials?
- Yumin Jiang is chairing CONSER Task Force
- Charge is to explore current use of holdings
data, explore potential uses for pattern data and
role of ILSs, and consider needs for the future - Recently issued and completed a survey
24Patterns and Electronic Serials
- Most responses say that this level of detail is
not needed for electronic serials - Most libraries currently use summary holdings
only - However, consider the following
- Uses of pattern data for potential self-checkin
of e-journals - Uses for archiving and document delivery
- Need for more detailed data if print is
discontinued - Use for claiming broken links or undelivered
issues
25Other activities
- Working with subscription agents to determine
whether data from them could be used to create
patterns - OCLC is exploring a pattern subscription and
notification service
26How does this affect me/my library?
- Your library may be able to use the patterns in
CONSER records - Are you using MARC holdings?
- Does your ILS have the capability to download
this data? (Talk to your vendor!) - Look at the Publication Patterns Workflow FAQ
document at http//lcweb.loc.gov/acq/conser/pattho
ld.html
27How does this affect me/my library?
- If you are using MFHD, you will have new
capabilities when ILSs implement new coding that
has been approved by MARBI - If you are using MFHD, CONSERs documentation and
training will be useful to you in better
understanding the standard you are using
28How might this affect me/my library in the future?
- Hopefully your ILS will have fully implemented
MFHD - You will then have the capability of downloading
patterns from CONSER records - This will save time from in-house pattern
creation - Pattern data related to electronic serials could
enable automatic check-in by the journals
themselves!
29How will this affect me/my library in the future?
- When your library decides it is time to go to a
new ILS, you wont have to recreate all of your
check-in data!
30My institutions experience
31Can I participate?
- Yes! Requirements are
- Ability to work directly on OCLC
- Ability to contribute a minimum of 75 new or
revised patterns a year - CONSER is recruiting more libraries to contribute
pattern data as CONSER Enhance libraries - CONSER Enhance libraries receive credits from
OCLC and are mentored by an existing participant - Interested? Contact Les Hawkins (lhaw_at_loc.gov)
32Where Can I Learn More?
- CONSER Publication Pattern Web page
- http//www.loc.gov/acq/conser/patthold.html
- Or contact
- Carlen Ruschoff, Chair, CONSER Publication
Pattern Task Force (ruschoff_at_deans.umd.edu) - Les Hawkins, CONSER Coordinator (lhaw_at_loc.gov)