0Please reply to: CONSER-survey@mit.edu or the "paper mail address" (as cited below) rather than to this list. Thanks. -ed. ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- This message is being cross-posted to ACQNET-L, AUTOCAT, BI-L, COLLDV-L, CONSRLST, COOPCAT, ILL-L, INTERCAT, LIBREF-L, SERIALST, and STS-L. We apologize in advance for any duplication. ************************************************************************** May 31, 1996 The CONSER Task Force on the Cataloging of Conference Publications is charged to review and recommend changes to the current practices surrounding the cataloging of ongoing conference publications (as outlined in AACR2 and the LC Rule Interpretations), taking into account the needs of a variety of users. One specific area the Task Force was asked to address was that of monograph vs. serial treatment. BACKGROUND INFORMATION: The Task Force recognizes that some publications of an ongoing named conference are clearly serials. Unfortunately, serial treatment excludes certain types of access points often identified by our users as important for retrieval purposes (e.g., editor, date, venue, series number). Frequent conference name and/or title changes can also cause an unwanted proliferation of successive entry serial records. Monographic treatment, on the other hand, does provide a way to access those elements commonly identified as important. Although an attractive alternative, the Task Force rejected the idea of treating all conference publications as monographs. Often serial treatment simply provides benefits, such as "automatic" call number collocation and less prohibitive added volume cataloging costs, which outweigh the potential gains of monographic cataloging. Many hours of discussion and research have convinced the Task Force that there is no easy solution to the cataloging of ongoing conference publications. One of the recommendations that the group has been working on is a revision to the conference publications portion of LCRI 12.0A. The Task Force tested many previous draft guidelines before formulating the current proposed version. The intent of this revision is threefold: 1) to provide clearer guidelines that will facilitate decision-making on the part of the cataloger 2) to reduce costly and time-consuming recataloging 3) to provide improved access points for users We would like to receive your comments on this proposal and any other thoughts you would be interested in sharing about the cataloging of conference publications. PLEASE send your response, by June 21st, to: CONSER-survey@mit.edu DO *NOT* SEND YOUR RESPONSE TO THE LIST. A paper mail address also appears at the end of the message. Thank you. Cooperative ONline SERials (CONSER) Program Task Force on the Cataloging of Conference Publications: Bob Ewald (LC), Mechael Gago (Indiana University, chair), Judy Herrick (LC), Jean Hirons (LC, ex-officio), Sara Shatford Layne (UCLA), David Van Hoy (MIT), Beacher Wiggins (LC) ==================================================================== 5/31/96 DRAFT REVISION TO LCRI 12.0A (CONFERENCES PORTION ONLY)** **NOTE: Exhibition catalogs will be retained as a separate category. They have been omitted from this draft revision. 4) Special types of publications b) Conference and exhibition publications. (1) Conference publications. Apply the following to ongoing conference publications that are being cataloged for the first time. Consider a conference publication to be "ongoing" if words such as "first" or "annual" are associated with the name of the conference and/or the title of the publication. Catalog conference publications that meet the three criteria for serial consideration as serials, unless one or more of the following is present: (a) a distinctive or unique title is presented on the chief source. These special titles are usually dedicated to a particular topic and vary from issue to issue and conference to conference. (b) the conference publication is issued as part of a numbered monographic series. Once a treatment decision is determined based on the first conference publication (or earliest issue in hand), prefer to retain that treatment. For conference publications treated serially, any change that would require the creation of another successive entry serial record should be considered "new" for the purposes of descriptive cataloging and once again re-evaluated against the above criteria. Use cataloger's judgement when changing the treatment and when deciding whether to recatalog the earlier issues. For instance, if a conference publication exhibits evidence of seriality only after the first issue, and it does not contain a distinctive title or series number, it is probably best to change the treatment to serial and recatalog the first issue (as would be done for other serials). However, if a number of issues have been cataloged and it becomes clear that the current treatment is highly undesirable (e.g., the serial changes title with each issue), the earlier issues need not be recataloged. In the serial record, a linking note may be added to indicate the preceding/succeeding monograph record or treatment change: 580 Beginning with the 1995 conference, issues are cataloged separately. 580 Continues the monograph: Conference on Abelian Group Theory (3rd : 1985 : Oberwolfach, Germany). Proceedings of the Third Conference on Abelian Group Theory at Oberwolfach. In general, prefer not to recatalog when the treatment is changed. As previously noted, ISSN centers create serial records for conference publications even though they may meet one or more of the above criteria that would qualify them for monographic treatment. If LC catalogs the publication as a monograph, "xlc" will be added to field 042 in the ISSN record. Other CONSER participants differing in their treatment decision may continue to use these records but may not further authenticate the record by adding "lcd." ================================ E N D ================================= PAPER MAIL ADDRESS: Mechael D. Gago Asst. Head, Serials Dept. Main Library, Rm. E-048 Indiana University Libraries Bloomington, IN 47408-1801 FAX: (812) 855-3072