[Data-modeling] Yet another revision to the publishing domain
Jeff Prucher
jeff at metaweb.com
Thu Jul 24 23:14:31 UTC 2008
Spurred on by an aside that spatialed made in some discussion post awhile
back (I can't locate the post), I'm considering revising the way that we
model journal issues. Currently, each issue has its own topic, which links
to both the journal and the articles contained in that issue. (See
http://www.freebase.com/type/schema/book/journal_issue) The main problems
with this format are that it is cumbersome to enter data, and also that most
bibliographic sources are concerned primarily with the article and the
journal, relegating the issue to a series of strings (volume, issue, date).
This latter issue might make integration with standard bibliographic schemas
a bit cumbersome, although it wouldn't be insurmountable.
As an experiment, though, I thought I'd try to see what a model that
eliminated the issue entirely looked like. Here are the results:
http://sandbox.freebase.com/view/guid/9202a8c04000641f8000000008cd1edd.
I've replaced the issue type with a CVT that connects the article and the
journal, and includes the standard bibliographic data of Volume, issue,
date, date extra, and pages ("date extra" is something I had to make up for
journals that aren't published on a schedule that translates into
mm/dd/yyyy). Journal articles have both Scholarly Work and Written Work as
included types, although a journal article can also be a review, editorial,
letter or other type of writing.
The only real disadvantage that I see to this is that constructing the
contents of a given issue will be harder -- users will have to query on a
combination of several fields (volume, issue, etc.) to find what they're
looking for.
I'd love to hear what people think about this.
Thanks,
Jeff Prucher
Type Librarian & Ontologist
Metaweb Technologies, Inc.
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