The paper reports findings from a study to identify characteristics of serials with title changes and then make recommendations for recognizing new works for these serials. Findings show title changes occur due to underlying subject, function, corporate, geographic, frequency, or format changes, with 80.8% of the changes being subject or function changes. It is recommended that reasons for title changes be determined from clear statements in text or elsewhere, and that new works be recognized based upon the requirements of a definition of a work. With the FRBR definition, a new work would be recognized only for a significant subject or function change
<strong>ABSTRACT</strong></p><p><strong>Purpose: </strong> The paper investigates the importance and...
Titles are a key part of every academic genre and are particularly important in research papers. Tod...
This one-day pre-conference workshop, presented by Steve Shadle at NASIG 2018, was based on an abrid...
The study compared the characteristics of academic and nonacademic serials with title changes, from ...
The purpose of the study was to develop a means for identifying significant subject and function cha...
This study examines serials title changes in scientific, social science, and humanities serials publ...
A solid theoretical foundation has been built over the years exploring the bibliographic work and in...
has never itself been brought successfully under control. Librarians have never collectively given d...
In this paper, we examine the characteristics of titles (average length, proportion of titles with s...
Titles are a crucial feature of research papers and have become increasingly important with changes ...
What makes a “good” title for an article, i.e. one which might attract citations in the academic com...
6 p.The digital format has caused major changes in libraries and serials cataloging operations have ...
Research articles are clearly influenced by the discipline of the research being reported. Just as d...
45-59<span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family: " times="" new="" roman";mso-fareast-font-family:"t...
Titles: The Emerging Priority in Bringing Bibliographic Control to Social Science Machine-Readable D...
<strong>ABSTRACT</strong></p><p><strong>Purpose: </strong> The paper investigates the importance and...
Titles are a key part of every academic genre and are particularly important in research papers. Tod...
This one-day pre-conference workshop, presented by Steve Shadle at NASIG 2018, was based on an abrid...
The study compared the characteristics of academic and nonacademic serials with title changes, from ...
The purpose of the study was to develop a means for identifying significant subject and function cha...
This study examines serials title changes in scientific, social science, and humanities serials publ...
A solid theoretical foundation has been built over the years exploring the bibliographic work and in...
has never itself been brought successfully under control. Librarians have never collectively given d...
In this paper, we examine the characteristics of titles (average length, proportion of titles with s...
Titles are a crucial feature of research papers and have become increasingly important with changes ...
What makes a “good” title for an article, i.e. one which might attract citations in the academic com...
6 p.The digital format has caused major changes in libraries and serials cataloging operations have ...
Research articles are clearly influenced by the discipline of the research being reported. Just as d...
45-59<span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family: " times="" new="" roman";mso-fareast-font-family:"t...
Titles: The Emerging Priority in Bringing Bibliographic Control to Social Science Machine-Readable D...
<strong>ABSTRACT</strong></p><p><strong>Purpose: </strong> The paper investigates the importance and...
Titles are a key part of every academic genre and are particularly important in research papers. Tod...
This one-day pre-conference workshop, presented by Steve Shadle at NASIG 2018, was based on an abrid...