2 – Basic Concepts

Document:

It is considered as document any support, be it printed or not, possible to be describedbibliographically. Within the context of the LILACS methodology, a document can be: a collection of monograph, a monograph, a chapter of a monograph, a thesis, dissertation, a chapter of a thesis, dissertation, an article of a journal, a report, a paper presented in a scientific meeting, a film, a tape recording, a musical or nonmusical sound record, a photograph, a map, an object, etc.

Conventional document:

Work/Informational item published and distributed through the formal publication channels (commercial, governmental or academic editors).

Non-conventional document:

Work/Informational item issued in an informal way. It is not published formally, this is, does not have a responsible publisher, is usually published with a limited number of copies, is not standardized, do not follow the formal publication and distribution channels and, for this characteristics, can not be considered as a conventional document.

Data element:

All the information that characterizes a document is considered a data element. For example, data elements include the name of the author, the title, a descriptor, etc. Data elements are transcribed in the appropriate areas or fields available in LILACS format.

Data field:

The data field is used for the transcription of one or more data elements and is identified in the LILACS format with a number. For example, field 10 is used for the entry of the name of the author of a document. A data field can contain one or more subfields.

Data subfield:

It is a part of a data field separately identified and that contains a data element. It is identified in the LILACS format by the symbol ^ followed by a letter or a number.

Characteristics of a data field:

a) In relation to entry:

♦ A data field can be defined as mandatory, essential, or optional.
♦ Data fields characterized as mandatory should always be entered.
♦ vEssential data fields should be entered whenever there is an established condition or
whenever the information can be obtained from the document analyzed.

Optional data fields should be entered at the criteria of the documentalist in charge of
the description.

b) In relation to length:

♦ A data field can be of fixed or variable length.
♦ A fixed length data field is that whose data element has a predefined length.
♦ A variable length data field is that whose data element has a non-determined length.

c) In relation to repeatable fields:

♦ A data field is repeatable when it permits the recording of several data elements.
♦ Non-repeatable data fields indicate that the data element cannot occur more than once.

d) In relation to editing:

♦ A data field can be enetered automatically, under control or freely.
♦ Automatic entry: when the system fills in the data automatically. Example: the record
creation date.
♦ Controlled entry: when there are tables with pre-defined values or codes that must be
consulted before the field is entered. Example: language codes.
♦ Free entry: the text is the responsibility of the cataloguer.
♦ Fields can be editable of non editable. Some fields with pre-defined values enable the
cataloguer to make a changes.

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