National Information Standards Organization (NISO) Publishes New Recommended Practice for Video and Audio Metadata
From a National Information Standards Organization (NISO) Announcement (Full Text):
The National Information Standards Organization (NISO) today announced publication of its new Video and Audio Metadata Recommended Practice (NISO RP-41-2023), which establishes metadata guidelines for video and audio assets.
Audio and especially video assets are growing in volume, popularity, and use in scholarly, scientific, and professional communities around the world. Libraries are seeing higher demand from their patrons, publishers are developing and extending their offerings, and software developers and other vendors are improving support for media assets in their products and systems. From video abstracts of journal articles to podcasts to primary content and more, video and audio content is an increasingly important component of the academic information industry. However, until now it has been difficult to communicate metadata for academic media assets due to a wide variety of models in use. Different parties in the ecosystem often employ different and potentially incompatible metadata models, causing challenges for collaboration and interoperability, and impeding the dissemination, discoverability, and indexability of video and audio content.
NISO’s new Video and Audio Metadata Recommended Practice will help address these challenges, by providing a vocabulary that enables connectivity between existing standards covering key metadata elements: administrative (e.g., dates, versions, and identifiers); semantic (e.g., subject classifications and keywords); technical (e.g., media type, encoding, and bitrate); rights (e.g., rights owner, licensor, and embargo information); and accessibility (e.g., accessibility features and access).
Video and Audio Metadata Working Group co-chair, Barbara Chen (formerly Director of Bibliographic Information Services and Editor, MLA International Bibliography Modern Language Association, now retired) said, “We are delighted that this Recommended Practice is now published. It is the culmination of nearly four years’ dedicated work by a group of stakeholders from libraries, publishers, and vendors. Our goal is to make the exchange of content among producers and consumers more efficient by identifying essential elements of information exchange and by reducing ambiguity.”
Co-chair Violaine Iglesias (CEO, Cadmore Media) added, “The Recommended Practice acts like a ‘Rosetta stone’ rather than a replacement for existing standards. It enables clear and effective communication between two parties using different metadata models for their audio visual materials—for example, a broadcaster using PBCore, and a librarian using MARC 21.”
Co-chair Bill Kasdorf (Principal, Kasdorf & Associates, LLC) noted, “The NISO Working Group developed its hierarchical vocabulary in an iterative process, in order to create as comprehensive a list of candidate properties as possible. These are intended to communicate the basic information needed by a recipient of the metadata, and provide a structure for its interchange through documentation of a variety of use cases and application in relevant standards.”
And co-chair Michelle Urberg, independent consultant and Client Success Manager for LibLynx (representing the Music Library Association), summed up, ”Video and audio are no longer emerging media for scholarly outputs. They now play a primary role in many disciplines. We are proud and pleased that this new NISO Recommended Practice is officially published, and we hope that it will lead to meaningful improvements for everyone working with audio and video content.”
NISO’s Executive Director, Todd Carpenter, added, “Many thanks to Barbara, Violaine, Bill, Michelle, and the other Video and Audio Metadata Working Group members for their hard work to develop this Recommended Practice, as well as to everyone who commented on the draft version. It is a valuable resource to help support the discovery and use of non-text formats for all those working in the scholarly information community.”
Direct to Full Text: Video and Audio Metadata Recommended Practice (NISO RP-41-2023)
37 pages; PDF.
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About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.