Logic and the Organization of Information

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Logic and the Organization of Information closely examines the historical and contemporary methodologies used to catalogue information objects—books, ebooks, journals, articles, web pages, images, emails, podcasts and more—in the digital era.

This book provides an in-depth technical background for digital librarianship, and covers a broad range of theoretical and practical topics including: classification theory, topic annotation, automatic clustering, generalized synonymy and concept indexing, distributed libraries, semantic web ontologies and Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS). It also analyzes the challenges facing today’s information architects, and outlines a series of techniques for overcoming them.

Logic and the Organization of Information is intended for practitioners and professionals working at a design level as a reference book for digital librarianship. Advanced-level students, researchers and academics studying information science, library science, digital libraries and computer science will also find this book invaluable.

Author(s): Martin Frické (auth.)
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York
Year: 2012

Language: English
Commentary: Correct bookmarks, cover, pagination.
Pages: 312
Tags: Information Storage and Retrieval; Management of Computing and Information Systems; Multimedia Information Systems

Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Overview....Pages 1-23
Some Useful Ideas and Background Theories....Pages 25-85
Catalogs, Inventories and Propaedias....Pages 87-120
A Logic for Organizing Information....Pages 121-163
Classification....Pages 165-193
Topic Annotation....Pages 195-228
Indexing/Annotation....Pages 229-243
Distributed Libraries, Information and Databases....Pages 245-275
Logic and the Organization of Information....Pages 277-282
Back Matter....Pages 283-312