šŸ”Ø Workshop: Leveraging Zurich Zentralbibliothekā€™s Jupyter Notebooks for metadata retrieval and analysis from Alma

Facilitator

Linda Samsinger (@saml)

Abstract

Zurich Zentralbibliothek (ZB) has developed a powerful, versatile and user-friendly series of seven Jupyter Notebooks to search, download and analyze library data from the SLSP catalog. This Swiss-wide online repository of metadata in MarcXML format houses over 25 million entries (=Alma).

While library users browse Swisscovery to search for media titles, their Excel export is unstructured and limited to 50 entries. In contrast, ZBā€™s Jupyter Notebooks allows downloading up to 10,000 highly structured metadata records with bespoke calculation and grouping of underlying MARC fields to yield recordsā€™ title, author, publisher, year, language, ā€¦, summary, epoch, Swisscovery link and link to Table of Contents (ToC). Also, Wikidata/GND data fields can be added upon customization. ToC records are downloadable as PDF en masse. In a second step, the search results can be analyzed using frequency, bar and pie charts, world maps and word clouds, which are PDF exportable. The insights generated could constitute the touchstone for developing brand-new, publication-quality findings about underlying trends and anomalies.

The notebooks are customizable and open-source, a treasure trove for researchers and library professionals alike, who aim to explore and assess library data with data-driven methods. Consequently, these tools can be leveraged for academic projects, their bibliographies curated and citations sourced. Additionally, cataloging entries can be improved and gaps in the libraryā€™s collection uncovered, thereby guiding future acquisitions. Following in the steps of the DNB and the ƖNB, as well as the university library Bern, ZB has released its own series of Jupyter Notebooks to extend its data services with newly crafted functionalities. Users should be familiar with Jupyter Notebooks and basic Python programming as well as German.

For more information, visit Zurich Zentralbibliothek Jupyter Notebookā€™s project repository. This resource provides detailed documentation to help users get started with these tools.

:information_source: To register your participation in this workshop click on the ā€œGoingā€ button above. You will then receive an email notification as soon as facilitators post an update. Watch out to not register for two parallel workshops.

Dear SWIB24 participants,

Iā€™m looking forward to hosting my workshop next week, Monday morning at 9:00 AM. Prior to our session, I would like to gauge your familiarity with Jupyter Notebooks.

How much experience do you have with Jupyter Notebooks?

  • none
  • modest (run cell, add cells, restart kernel)
  • advanced (use keyboard shortcuts, pip install)
  • expert (portfolio of libraries, Python programming) i
0 voters

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Also, please make sure to check you have the following system requirements for a smooth workshop experience:
Laptop / Desktop
Windows
Internet
Chrome
[smartphone]
For experts:
Anaconda or Jupyter Notebooks
Python
Pip package manager

You can use checkmarks to make sure you have everything that is listed.

I appreciate your contribution to making this workshop as hands-on, fun and inspiring as possible! For any questions or ideas, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Thank you.

Kind regards,
Linda Samsinger @saml

dear Linda
where does the workshop takes place?
zoom?
thanks for providing a link!
RenƩ

Hi RenƩ, the workshop will take place in this BigBlueButton room: IMS RealTime Communication I also added the link to the original event post.

Thanks!

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