While production and research quality may be extremely high ( with organizational reputation vested in the end product ), the producing body, not being a formal publisher, generally lacks the channels for extensive distribution and bibliographic control.
12.
Wilson is noted within the library and information science communities for his work on the philosophical underpinnings of bibliographic control, that is, the ways in which knowledge is organized and the relationships between different documents and pieces of knowledge.
13.
The second part of the goal is achieved by thorough acquisition programs and collection development policies which target book markets in other nations, and which foster international agreements with other countries with national libraries who have national bibliographic control as one of their goals.
14.
In this role, she was tireless in spreading the gospel of using international standards to link databases housed on disparate computer systems . Though she never intended to be a librarian, Avram became a towering figure in library automation and bibliographic control .
15.
The U . S . Interagency Gray Literature Working Group ( IGLWG ), in its " Gray Information Functional Plan " of 1995, defined grey literature as " foreign or domestic open source material that usually is available through specialized channels and may not enter normal channels or systems of publication, distribution, bibliographic control, or acquisition by booksellers or subscription agents ".
16.
In his writings on libraries, Bade s research focus has been on the processes of misunderstanding, mystifying and mythologizing technologies and how this allows a technocratic elite to turn convivial tools into tools for control and exploitation . He has written extensively about cataloging, bibliographic control, authority control, and misinformation, drawing upon the literatures of philosophy, linguistics, rhetoric, ergonomics and resilience engineering in making his arguments.
17.
One of the best known is the FRBR entity-relationship model, which Smiraglia credits with providing the separate identification, for the first time in the history of bibliographic control, of the work as an essential and distinct bibliographic entity . In the FRBR model, a work is a distinct intellectual or artistic creation ( for instance, Shakespeare s " Romeo and Juliet " ); an expression is an intellectual or artistic realization of a work ( the original language text of the play ); a manifestation physically embodies a work s expression ( a 2007 edition of the First Quarto of " Romeo and Juliet " from Cambridge University Press ); and an item is a single exemplar of a manifestation ( a single copy of the edition of " Romeo and Juliet " just mentioned ).