Using a Native XML Database for Encoded Archival Description Search and Retrieval

Authors

  • Alan Cornish

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6017/ital.v23i4.9662

Abstract

This article is an attempt to develop Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology into an analytical tool for examining the relationships between the height of the bookshelves and the behavior of library readers in utilizing books within a library. The tool would contain a database to store book-use information and some GIS maps to represent bookshelves. Upon analyzing the data stored in the database, different frequencies of book use across bookshelf layers are displayed on the maps. The tool would provide a wonderful means of visualization through which analysts can quickly realize the spatial distribution of books used in a library. This article reveals that readers tend to pull books out of the bookshelf layers that are easily reachable by human eyes and hands, and thus opens some issues for librarians to reconsider the management of library collections.

Downloads

Published

2017-09-17

How to Cite

Cornish, A. (2017). Using a Native XML Database for Encoded Archival Description Search and Retrieval. Information Technology and Libraries, 23(4), 181–184. https://doi.org/10.6017/ital.v23i4.9662

Issue

Section

Communications