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Hedden H. The Accidental Taxonomist
Information Today Inc., 2010. — 472 p. — ISBN 1573873977.
Наиболее полное руководство построения информационной таксономии. Инструктор и консультант по индексации и таксономии рассказывает, опираясь на многочисленные реальные примеры, как представить информацию в простой, понятной форме , объясняет, как пользоваться программным обеспечением для управления, проектирования таксономии для человека по сравнению с автоматизированной индексацией, управлять корпоративными проектами систематики, таксономии и адаптироваться к различным пользовательским интерфейсом. Книга - практическое руководство для специалистов в области информации, которые должны эффективно создавать таксономии, управлять ими при помощи словарей и тезаурусов. На английском языке.
The Accidental Taxonomist is the most comprehensive guide available to the art and science of building information taxonomies. Heather Hedden one of today s leading writers, instructors, and consultants on indexing and taxonomy topics walks readers through the process, displaying her trademark ability to present highly technical information in straightforward, comprehensible English. Drawing on numerous real-world examples, Hedden explains how to create terms and relationships, select taxonomy management software, design taxonomies for human versus automated indexing, manage enterprise taxonomy projects, and adapt taxonomies to various user interfaces. The result is a practical and essential guide for information professionals who need to effectively create or manage taxonomies, controlled vocabularies, and thesauri.
Heather Hedden is an independent taxonomy consultant and indexer with Hedden Information Management in Carlisle, Massachusetts. She also teaches online continuing education workshops in taxonomy creation through Simmons College Graduate School of Library and Information Science and often speaks at conferences.
Find out more at
www.hedden-information.com[b][/b]
Table of Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
What Are Taxonomies?
Definitions and Types of Taxonomies
Applications and Purposes of Taxonomies
Taxonomies for License
History of Taxonomies
Who Are Taxonomists?
Backgrounds of Taxonomists
Taxonomist Skills
Related Duties
Employment of Taxonomists
Creating Terms
Concepts and Terms
Identifying Concepts
Choosing the Preferred Term
Term Format
Precoordinated Terms
Notes and Attributes
Creating Relationships
Equivalence Relationships and Nonpreferred terms
Hierarchical Relationships
Associative Relationships
Hierarchical/Associative Ambiguities
Semantic Variations for Relationships
Software for Taxonomy Creation and Management
Software Not Designed for Creating Taxonomies
Thesaurus Software
Single-User Desktop Thesaurus Software
Large-Scale Thesaurus Systems
Free and Open Source Software
Other Software with Taxonomy Management Components
Taxonomies for Human Indexing
What is Human Indexing?
Terms, Relationships, and Notes for Indexers
Taxonomy Structure and Indexing Interface
Taxonomy Updates and Quality Control
Managing Folksonomies
Taxonomies for Automated Indexing
Automated Indexing, Search, and Taxonomies
Automated Indexing Technologies
Software for Auto-Categorization
Creating Taxonomies for Automatic Indexing
Taxonomies Structures
Hierarchies
Facets
Multiple Vocabularies and Categories
Taxonomy Displays
Thesaurus Displays
Hierarchical Taxonomy Displays
Fielded Search Displays
Taxonomy Planning, Design, and Creation
Planning for a Taxonomy
Enterprise Taxonomies
Taxonomy Creation Process
Taxonomy Goveance
Taxonomy Implementation and Evolution
Taxonomy Interoperability
Taxonomy Updating
Combining Taxonomies
Multilingual Taxonomies
Taxonomy Work and Profession
The Nature of Taxonomy Work
Taxonomists as Contractors
Education and Training
Organizations, Conferences, and Networking
Appendix
Survey of Taxonomists
Glossary
Recommended Reading
Web Sites
About the Author
Index