Title

KBART (Knowledge Bases And Related Tools) - NISO Open Teleconference

Document Type

Article

Comments

NISO Open Teleconference, November 15, 2021.

Date of Original Version

11-15-2021

Abstract

This is a link to a recording of a National Information Standards Organization (NISO) Open Teleconference titled "KBART (Knowledge Bases and Related Tools," which took place on November 15, 2021. There were 19 people in attendance.

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From the NISO website:

The NISO open teleconference session on Monday, November 15th at 3:00 PM Eastern time is open to everyone! and our topic will be will be KBART (KnowledgeBases And Related Tools).

KBART recommends best practices for the communication of electronic resource title list and coverage data from content providers to knowledge base (KB) developers. KBART specifies file format, delivery mechanisms, and fields to include, and it applies to both serials and monographs. More information on the work, including the 2014 Recommended Practice, can be found at https://www.niso.org/standards-committees/kbart.

KBART Standing Committee co-chair Andrée Rathemacher, Head of Acquisitions at the University of Rhode Island, and member Sheri Meares, Senior Director, KnowledgeBase at EBSCO will join the call to discuss the initiative and how the Standing Committee is managing its work, including tackling a "KBART Phase III" development process.

KBART provides all parties in the information supply chain with straightforward guidance about metadata formatting-focused mainly on journal resources-to ensure the exchange of accurate metadata between content providers and knowledge base developers. The KBART Recommendations were first published in 2010 and updated in 2014. In the meantime, the products that use KB data have changed dramatically. KBs now, in addition to link resolution, also provide the foundation for electronic resource management systems (ERMs), are used in conjunction with COUNTER data, provide rights/holdings information to discovery systems, provide data to library catalogs, and other uses. The KBART Automation Recommended Practice was published in 2019, providing a means to transfer accurate, library-specific KBART-formatted holdings reports between content providers’ access control systems and knowledge bases, allowing knowledge base-powered systems to more accurately reflect content accessible at a particular institution and its unique holdings.

Since the first Recommended Practice was issued, scores of publishers and content providers have endorsed KBART and demonstrated their commitment to good quality metadata provision. With implementation of the KBART recommendations, users can be assured that the providers' metadata is trusted and has the required level of granularity without the burdensome task of title-by-title checking.

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Included as supplemental files are:

  • PDF printout of NISO website page advertising the Open Teleconference

Included as supplemental files (suppressed from public view) are:

  • Open Teleconference audio recording in MP4 format
  • Email chain with invitation to speakers (10/20/2021) and list of questions to be asked (11/10/2021)
  • NISO email announcement of Open Teleconference (11/11/2021)
  • Thank-you email to speakers (11/15/2021)

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