Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 15, No. 118.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
<http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
<http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>
Date: Wed, 27 Jun 2001 07:52:00 +0100
From: Gerry McKiernan <gerrymck@IASTATE.EDU>
Subject: _KBL(sm): A Registry of Library Knowledge Bases_
_KBL(sm): A Registry of Library Knowledge Bases_
For a new registry, I am greatly interested in identifying
library-created or library -related Knowledge Bases. A Knowledge Base /
Knowledgebase may be defined viewed as a database with a focus on empirical
or practical knowledge. In recent years, Knowledge bases have become common
components for many businesses and services. The RealNetworks "RealSystem
Knowledge Base"
[ http://service.real.com/kb/ ]
is an excellent example of a technical support knowledge base.
I am interested in library-created OR library-related Knowledge Bases.
An excellent example of a library-created knowledge base is "VID Knowledge
Base 2000-2001" for the Virtual Information Desk of the Pennsylvania
Inter-Library Online Library (PILOT)
[ http://157.62.21.5/vid/vid-kb.asp ]
AND
The Collaborative Digital Library, "a database of annotated resources
indexed by research group, title, url, keywords, and comments that serves
as a virtual bookmark file for teams of researchers working asynchronously
and remotely on projects.
[ http://www.kie.berkeley.edu/cool_library/library_home.html ]
[ http://www.kie.berkeley.edu/cool_library/library_search.html ]
AND
Perhaps the most sophisticated Knowledge Base is that planned as part of the
OPAL Project, "an eighteen month research project which is exploring the
development of a fully automated online 24/7 reference service for
students." [BTW: OPAL = Online Personal Academic Librarian]
[ http://oulib1.open.ac.uk/wh/research/opal/ ].
"The project team is currently developing and testing a prototype automated
reference system designed to answer common questions from OU distance
learners."
[ http://oulib1.open.ac.uk/wh/research/opal/intro.html ]
SEE ALSO:
"The OPAL Project: Developing An Automated Online Reference System For
Distance Learners" in the June 2001 issue of D-Lib Magazine.
[ http://www.dlib.org/dlib/june01/06inbrief.html ]
Examples of library-related Knowledge Base could/would include:
The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
[ http://www.update-software.com/cochrane/product-cochrane.html ]
"Cochrane Reviews are full text articles reviewing the effects of
healthcare. The reviews are highly structured and systematic, with evidence
included or excluded on the basis of explicit quality criteria, to minimise
bias."
AND
The AEGIS Clinical Trials Knowledgebase
[ http://www.aegis.com/pubs/trials/index.html ]
Perhaps the sophisticated Knowledge Base, I've discovered are those offered
by Proteome, which provides "a variety of products and services to integrate
the accumulated knowledge from the research literature with genomic
information and software tools to produce a powerful resource for
bioinformatic scientists and biologists of all disciplines."
[The Proteome knowledge bases are built upon the review, extraction, and
synthesis of information and data from peer-reviewed journals] [WOW!]
Over the coming weeks, I will be adding these and other Library Knowledge
Bases to a new Web-based registry titled:
KBL(sm): A Registry of Library Knowledge Bases
[http://www.public.iastate.edu/~CYBERSTACKS/KBL.htm ]
As Always, I Welcome Any and All contributions, queries, comments,
nominations, Cosmic Insights, Etc. Etc. Etc. [I am NOT interested in
corporate Knowledge Bases per se]
Articles, reports, studies, school papers or projects regarding Library
Knowledge Bases are also of major interest for a planned General
Bibliography [I am NOT interested in literature about Knowledge Bases per
se]
Gerry McKiernan
The Basic, Knowledgeable Librarian
Iowa State Library
Ames IA 50011
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Wed Jun 27 2001 - 03:19:19 EDT