Pennsylvania Libraries: Research & Practice (Nov 2015)

Connecting RDA and RDF: Linked Data for a Wide World of Connected Possibilities

  • Ashleigh Faith,
  • Michelle Chrzanowski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5195/palrap.2015.106
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
pp. 122 – 135

Abstract

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Libraries have struggled with connecting a plethora of content and the metadata stored in catalogs to patrons. Adding more value to catalogs, more tools for reference librarians, and enriched patron search, linked data is a means to connect more people with more relevant information. With the recent transition to the Resource Description and Access (RDA) cataloging standard within libraries, linking data in library databases has become a much easier project to tackle, largely because of another standard called Resource Description Framework (RDF). Both focus on resource description and both are components of linked data within the library. Tying them together is the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) conceptual framework. Acknowledging that linked data components are most likely new to many librarians, this article seeks to explain what linked data is, how RDA and RDF are connected by FRBR, and how knowledge maps may improve information access.