Home | Browse | Search | Credits | About
Register | User Area | DL-Harvest | Help
DLIST

Approaches to Knowledge Organization (KO). Lecture given at the University of Rome. April 20, 2007

Hjørland, Birger (2007) Approaches to Knowledge Organization (KO). Lecture given at the University of Rome. April 20, 2007 .

Full text available as:
Microsoft Powerpoint Presentation (.ppt) - Requires Microsoft Powerpoint

Abstract

Presentations and discussions of different approaches to Knowledge Organization from Melvil Dewey to Internet enginees: 1. “Traditional approaches” 2. Management oriented approaches 3. Logical and facet-analytic approaches 4. Computer based approaches 5. Bibliometric approaches 6. User oriented and cognitive approaches 7. Domain analytic approaches

EPrint Type:Presentation
Subjects:Knowledge Organization
ID Code:2130
Deposited On:02 January 2008
Alternative Locations:http://iskouk.blogspot.com/2007/04/approaches-to-knowledge-organization-by.html
Eprint Statistics:View statistics for this eprint
Tell A Colleague:Tell a colleague about it.

Bliss, H. E. (1929).The organization of knowledge and the system of the sciences. With an introduction by John Dewey. New York: Henry Holt and Co.

Broughton, V. (2004). Essential classification. London : Facet Publishing.

Ereshefsky, M. (2000). The Poverty of the Linnaean Hierarchy: A Philosophical Study of Biological Taxonomy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Ellis, D. (1996). Progress and Problems in Information Retrieval. London: Library Association Publishing.

 Hjørland, B. & Nissen Pedersen, K. (2005). A substantive theory of classification for information retrieval. Journal of Documentation, 61(5), 582-597. http://www.db.dk/bh/Core%20Concepts%20in%20LIS/Hjorland%20&%20Nissen.pdf

Hunter, E. J. (2002). Classification made simple. 2nd ed. Aldershot : Ashgate Publishing Limited.

La Barre, K. (2006). The use of faceted analytico-synthetic theory as revealed in the practice of website construction and design. Ph.D.-dissertation submitted at the school of LIS at Indiana University.

Leydesdorff, L. (2006). Can scientific journals be classified in terms of aggregated journal-journal citation relations using the Journal Citation Reports? Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 57(5),  601-613.

Miksa, F. (1998). The DDC, the Universe of Knowledge, and the Post-Modern Library. Albany, NY: Forest Press.

Mishler, B. D. (2000). Deep Phylogenetic Relationships among "Plants" and Their Implications for Classification. Taxon, 49(4), 661-683.

Ranganathan, S. R. (1951). Philosophy of Library Classification. Copenhagen: E. Munksgaard.

Schneider, J. & Borlund, P. (2004). Introduction to bibliometrics for construction and maintenance of thesauri: methodical considerations. Journal of Documentation, 60(5), 524-549.

Sebastiani, F. (2002). Machine learning in automated text categorization. ACM Computing Surveys, 34(1), 1-47. http://www.math.unipd.it/~fabseb60/Publications/ACMCS02.pdf

Sparck Jones, K. (2005). Revisiting classification for retrieval. Journal of Documentation, 61(5), 598-601. [Reply to Hjørland & Nissen Pedersen, 2005]  

 http://www.db.dk/bh/Core%20Concepts%20in%20LIS/Sparck%20Jones_reply%20to%20Hjorland%20&%20Nissen.pdf

Tredinnick, L. (2006). Digital information contexts: Theoretical approaches to understanding digital information. Oxford: Chandos Publishing.

Warner, J. (2002). Forms of labour in information systems. Information Research, 7(4) http://informationr.net/ir/7-4/paper135.html 

White, H. D., & McCain, K. W. (1998). Visualizing a discipline: An author co-citation analysis of information science, 1972-1995. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 49(4), 327-355.

Wiegand, W. A. (1998). The "Amherst method". The origins of the Dewey Decimal Classification System. Libraries & Culture, 33(2), 175-194. Available at:  http://www.gslis.utexas.edu/~landc/fulltext/LandC_33_2_Wiegand.pdf

Ørom, A. (2003). Knowledge Organization in the domain of Art Studies - History, Transition and Conceptual Changes. Knowledge Organization, 30(3/4), 128-143.

Åström, F (2002) Visualizing Library and Information Science concept spaces through keyword and citation based maps and clusters. In: Bruce, Fidel, Ingwersen & Vakkari (Eds.). Emerging frameworks and methods: Proceedings of the fourth international conference on conceptions of Library and Information Science (CoLIS4), pp 185-197. Greenwood Village: Libraries unlimited. Two figures: Bibliometric_MAP_LIS.PDF; Bibliometric_LIS_2.PDF

EPrints dLIST, an open access archive for the Information Sciences, is supported by the School of Information Resources and Library Science and Learning Technologies Center, University of Arizona. Established in 2002, dLIST has a global Advisory Board and is a part of the Information Technology & Society Research Lab. Open Archives
Contact: Admin | Donate