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Invite colleaguesNow you can see (and track and manage) it: Incorporating streaming video content into ProQuest’s 360 KB
Abstract
Consumers today can easily discover, access and view streaming video through subscription products. While the experience for the individual consumer can be relatively seamless, this is less often the case for library patrons using library platforms in educational settings, due to access restrictions, an apparent absence of content, or difficulties finding the material. Web-scale discovery tools have helped to change the landscape with respect to making streaming video more discoverable in the library context, but many of the issues associated with apparent access restrictions or absence of content can be traced to the absence of important metadata, including universal standard identifiers (eg International Standard Serial Numbers or International Standard Book Numbers), or the design choices of library service platforms (eg catalogues, discovery layers and knowledge bases). This paper argues that vendors of video content and vendors of library platforms have not adequately enhanced streaming content access through improved metadata. This enhancement is particularly relevant for streaming video used in two major growth areas: research and teaching. The paper provides a case study of streaming video in ProQuest’s access and discovery products — especially the 360 KnowledgeBase Suite (360 KB) — and demonstrates that streaming video content discovery designed for learning settings is enhanced through consistent and controlled metadata.
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Author's Biography
Michelle Urberg is a metadata librarian on ProQuest’s 360 KB Content team, which is currently part of the ExLibris product family. She has a PhD in music history from the University of Chicago and an MSLIS from the University of Illinois. In addition to writing about streaming video, she is currently Principal Investigator for a grant project supported by the Online Audiovisual Catalogers Inc. Outside of this project, she is active with the Music Library Association, the European Studies Section of the Association of College and Research Libraries, Metadata 2020, and the Medieval Women’s Choir of Seattle.