This paper describes an experimental project for the com puter storage and generation of a bibliography of economics literature published in 1979, as a contribution to the broader computer applications in the International Bibliography of the Social Sciences and reviews some of the appropriate tech nology for such a system, the adequacy of existing data bases and directories of these, and the creation of tertiary data bases.
UNESCO, UNISIST II-Main Working Document, Inter-governmental Conference on Scientific and Technological Information for Development, Paris, 28 May-1 June 1979 (UNESCO, Paris. 1979) 60-61. (Document PGI/ UNISIST II 4, 18 April 1979)
2.
Hall, James Logan , On-Line Bibliographic Data Bases- 1979 Directory (Aslib, London, 1979) 94 pp.
3.
Tomberg, Alex , Eusidic Data Base Guide. ( Learned Information, London, 1978 ) 140 pp.
4.
Williams, Martha E., and O'Donnell, Rosemary F., Computer-Readable Data Bases - A Directory and Data Sourcebook (American Society for Information Science, Washington, 1979) (Loose-leaf, in preparation, ca. 1.000 pp.)
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Alberta Information Retrieval Association, COIN - A Directory of Computerized Information in Alberta (Alberta Research Council, Edmonton, 1978) 322 pp.
6.
Negus, A.E., EURONET Guideline: Standard Commands for Retrieval Systems: Final Report on a Study Carried out for the Commission of the European Communities, DG XIII . (INSPEC, London, 1977) 66 pp.
7.
Meadow, Charles T., Toliver, David E., and Edelman , Janet V., A technique for machine assistance to online searchers, Proc. ASIS Annual Meeting15 (1978) 222-225.
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Marcus, Richard S., and Reintjes, J. Francis, Computer interfaces for user access to heterogeneous information retrieval systems, Report ESL-R-739, MIT, Electronic Systems Laboratory, Cambridge, MA (1977).
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Dodd, Sue A. , Building a bibliographic/MARC Data Base for social science data files in a network environment, IASSIST Newsletter2 (2) (1978) 34-37.
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Barlow, D.H. , A&I services as database producers: Economic, Technological and Co-operative Opportunities, Aslib Proc.28 (10) ( 1976) 325-337.
11.
Brandhorst, Ted, and Williams, Martha, Tertiary data bases: Why, When, How, Bull Amer. Soc. Information Sci.4 (3) (1978) 22-23.
12.
Simpson, George A, Microcomputers in library automation, MITRE Technical Report 7938, MITRE Corporation, McLean, VA (1978).
13.
Williams, P.W., The potential of the microprocessor in Library and information work, Aslib Proc.31 (4) (1979) 202-209.
14.
Edwards, Anne , and Wild, Kate, MINISIS — a Minicomputer based bibliographic system. Paper presented to ASIDIC Spring Meeting, 3-5 June 1979. (Text available from IDRC)
15.
Martin, M.D., Reference manual for machine-readable bibliographic descriptions, prepared by the UNISIST/ ICSU-AB Working Group on Bibliographic Descriptions, UNESCO, Paris (1974) (Revised edition under preparation)
16.
Libres questions a Niklaus Wirth: le langage PASCAL, Zero-Un-Informatique 130 (1979) 107-112.