iSchool researchers present at NASKO 2021

David Dubin
David Dubin, Teaching Associate Professor
bobby Bothmann
Bobby Bothmann, Adjunct Lecturer

Teaching Associate Professor David Dubin, Postdoctoral Research Associate Jacob Jett, and Adjunct Lecturer Bobby Bothmann presented their research at the North American Symposium on Knowledge Organization (NASKO 2021), which was held virtually on July 9-11. The theme of this year's symposium was "Resilience, Resistance, and Reflection: Knowledge Organization at a Crossroads."

The researchers presented their paper, "To Map or Not to Map: Rethinking Crosswalk Agendas," in which they review developments in cataloging during the last fifty years that have led to competing explanations for works of authorship, art, and design, and standards proposed for describing their complexities.

"Colleagues of ours believe that sharing records between databases using these different accounts (IFLA’s Library Reference Model and the Library of Congress's BIBFRAME) will require systems for translating records from one model to the other, but we suggest that LRM and BIBFRAME may instead play complementary roles in bibliographic description, even without a translation map or switching language," said Dubin. "In our presentation, we focused on conceptual analysis as a tool for using models like LRM and BIBFRAME in systems design, and we responded to critics who have expressed skepticism of the usefulness of conceptual analysis."

Dubin's research interests include the foundations of information representation and description, and issues of expression and encoding in documents and digital information resources. He teaches courses on information organization and access, and information modeling. Dubin received his PhD in information science from the University of Pittsburgh.

Jett's research is primarily focused on information modeling issues with a special focus on ontology, controlled vocabulary, and schema development for Semantic Web infrastructure. He earned his PhD in library and information science from the iSchool at Illinois, where he also completed his master's and Certificate of Advanced Study work.

Bothmann is the catalog and metadata librarian at Minnesota State University, Mankato. At the iSchool, he has taught courses on bibliographic metadata. He holds a master's in library and information science from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and a master's in geography and English technical communication from the Minnesota State University, Mankato.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

He receives Amazon Research Award to improve monitoring of Earth’s ecosystem

A new project led by Professor Jingrui He aims to help scientists monitor disruptions to the Earth’s ecosystem, such as climate change. She recently received support for her work through an Amazon Research Award, which includes $60,000 in cash and an additional $40,000 in Amazon Web Services (AWS) credits.

Jingrui He

iSchool researchers to present at CHI 2025

iSchool faculty and students will present their research at the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2025), which will be held from April 26 to May 1 in Yokohama, Japan. 

Undergraduate Research Symposium features iSchool students and mentors

Several iSchool undergraduate students will participate in the 18th annual Undergraduate Research Symposium. During the event, visitors will learn about undergraduate research projects through oral and poster presentations, creative performances, and art exhibits. All are welcome to attend the symposium, which will be held on April 24 from 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. in the Illini Rooms and South Lounge of the Illini Union. Oral presentations will be held on the second floor of the Illini Union.

Wang wins grand prize at Research Live!

Informatics PhD student Olivia Wang won the Grand Prize at the 2025 Research Live! competition, which was held on April 8 in the Campus Instructional Facility Atrium. At the event, which is hosted by the Graduate College, thirteen finalists presented their graduate research in three minutes or less to a general audience. Wang received $500 as the Grand Prize winner.

Olivia Wang

Zhou defends dissertation

Doctoral candidate Kyrie Zhixuan Zhou successfully defended his dissertation, "A Pragmatic and Human-centered Approach to Promoting Software Accessibility: Design, Education, Governance," on April 3.

Zhixuan Zhou