Welcome to P K Kelkar Library, Online Public Access Catalogue (OPAC)

Normal view MARC view ISBD view

The taxobook.

By: Hlava, Marjorie M. K [author.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science: ; Synthesis lectures on information concepts, retrieval, and services: # 36.Publisher: San Rafael, California (1537 Fourth Street, San Rafael, CA 94901 USA) : Morgan & Claypool, 2015.Description: 1 PDF (xxiii, 140 pages) : illustrations.Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781627055819.Other title: Principles and practices of building taxonomies.Subject(s): Classification | Knowledge, Theory of | Information organization | taxonomy | thesaurus | controlled vocabulary | search | retrieval | ontology | knowledge organization | classification | theory of knowledge | metadataDDC classification: 121 Online resources: Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.
Contents:
1. Building a case for building a taxonomy -- 1.1 Taxonomies and metadata -- 1.2 How are taxonomies and thesauri used? -- 1.3 Where are taxonomies and thesauri used? -- 1.4 From list to taxonomy to thesaurus -- 1.5 Why are taxonomies and thesauri used? -- 1.6 The cornerstones of information architecture -- 1.7 So tell me again: why build a taxonomy? --
2. Taxonomy basics -- 2.1 Vocabulary control and why it is important -- 2.1.1 Synonyms in vocabulary control -- 2.1.2 Vocabulary control and keywords -- 2.2 Indexing and tagging -- 2.3 A few types of tagging -- 2.3.1 Post-coordination versus pre-coordinate indexing -- 2.4 Taxonomies and hierarchical structure -- 2.4.1 Another taxonomy example -- 2.5 Thesauri: taxonomies with extras -- 2.5.1 Equivalence relationships -- 2.5.2 Associative relationships -- 2.6 Authority files -- 2.7 What about ontologies? -- 2.8 More about metadata -- 2.8.1 ONIX -- 2.8.2 RDF -- 2.8.3 TEI -- 2.8.4 ROADS -- 2.8.5 RDA -- 2.8.6 Dublin core -- 2.9 A brief history of markup languages -- 2.10 A few details about the markup languages -- 2.10.1 The basic parts of SGML -- 2.10.2 The SGML declaration -- 2.10.3 The document type definition (DTD) -- 2.10.4 The document instance -- 2.11 Semantic networks and semantic webs -- 2.12 A taxonomy is subjective -- 2.13 Keeping your audience happy --
3. Getting started -- 3.1 Defining the focus and scope -- 3.2 Basic approaches to creating a taxonomy -- 3.3 Adapting an existing taxonomy or thesaurus -- 3.4 Cut and paste: using parts of multiple existing vocabularies -- 3.5 Start from the beginning -- 3.6 Mix it up --
4. Terms: the building blocks of a taxonomy -- 4.1 Gathering potential terms -- 4.2 Other places to look -- 4.3 Identifying frequently used terms -- 4.4 How many terms do I need? -- 4.5 Recording and reviewing terms -- 4.6 Choosing terms -- 4.7 Literary, user, and organizational warrant -- 4.7.1 Literary warrant -- 4.7.2 User warrant -- 4.7.3 Organizational warrant -- 4.8 Terms and their style -- 4.8.1 Use natural language -- 4.8.2 Nouns, nouns, nouns -- 4.8.3 Singular versus plural -- 4.8.4 Capitalization -- 4.8.5 Initialisms and acronyms -- 4.8.6 Spelling -- 4.8.7 The little things (commas, hyphens, apostrophes, and parentheses) -- 4.9 Clarity and clarification of term meanings -- 4.10 Parts of a term record -- 4.10.1 Scope notes, editorial notes, definitions, bibliographic references, and cross-references -- 4.10.2 Tracking information --
5. Building the structure of your taxonomy -- 5.1 Organizing how we think: a bookstore example -- 5.2 Outlining the structure of your taxonomy -- 5.2.1 First steps for creating the taxonomy structure -- 5.2.2 Roughing out the structural relationships -- 5.2.3 The all-and-some test -- 5.2.4 Crafting the hierarchical structure -- 5.3 Bottom up or top down? -- 5.4 Hierarchical levels -- 5.5 Possibilities for hierarchical relationships -- 5.6 Adding associative relationships -- 5.7 Adding equivalence relationships -- 5.8 A day in the life of a taxonomist: working with taxonomy structure -- 5.9 The user's perspective --
6. Evaluation and maintenance -- 6.1 Editorial review -- 6.2 Use testing -- 6.3 External review -- 6.3.1 User level review -- 6.3.2 Subject matter experts -- 6.3.3 The dangers of subject experts and silo thinking -- 6.3.4 How to disagree with an expert -- 6.3.5 Taxonomy review guidelines for subject matter experts -- 6.3.6 The valuable partnership between taxonomists and subject matter experts -- 6.4 I collected, I sorted, I structured, I tested, when will it be finished? -- 6.5 Maintaining your thesaurus -- 6.5.1 Keep a schedule -- 6.5.2 Common mistakes --
7. Standards and taxonomies -- 7.1 What do we call these things? -- 7.2 So who are these standards guys and why should we listen to them, anyway? -- 7.3 Creating standards -- 7.4 An abbreviated guide to the standards --
Glossary -- End notes -- Author biography.
Abstract: This book outlines the basic principles of creation and maintenance of taxonomies and thesauri. It also provides step by step instructions for building a taxonomy or thesaurus and discusses the various ways to get started on a taxonomy construction project. Often, the first step is to get management and budgetary approval, so I start this book with a discussion of reasons to embark on the taxonomy journey. From there I move on to a discussion of metadata and how taxonomies and metadata are related, and then consider how, where, and why taxonomies are used. Information architecture has its cornerstone in taxonomies and metadata. While a good discussion of information architecture is beyond the scope of this work, I do provide a brief discussion of the interrelationships among taxonomies, metadata, and information architecture. Moving on to the central focus of this book, I introduce the basics of taxonomies, including a definition of vocabulary control and why it is so important, how indexing and tagging relate to taxonomies, a few of the types of tagging, and a definition and discussion of post- and pre-coordinate indexing. After that I present the concept of a hierarchical structure for vocabularies and discuss the differences among various kinds of controlled vocabularies, such as taxonomies, thesauri, authority files, and ontologies.
    average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E books E books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur
Available EBKE599
Total holds: 0

Mode of access: World Wide Web.

System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.

"Part 2 of a 3-part series."

Part of: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 131-137).

1. Building a case for building a taxonomy -- 1.1 Taxonomies and metadata -- 1.2 How are taxonomies and thesauri used? -- 1.3 Where are taxonomies and thesauri used? -- 1.4 From list to taxonomy to thesaurus -- 1.5 Why are taxonomies and thesauri used? -- 1.6 The cornerstones of information architecture -- 1.7 So tell me again: why build a taxonomy? --

2. Taxonomy basics -- 2.1 Vocabulary control and why it is important -- 2.1.1 Synonyms in vocabulary control -- 2.1.2 Vocabulary control and keywords -- 2.2 Indexing and tagging -- 2.3 A few types of tagging -- 2.3.1 Post-coordination versus pre-coordinate indexing -- 2.4 Taxonomies and hierarchical structure -- 2.4.1 Another taxonomy example -- 2.5 Thesauri: taxonomies with extras -- 2.5.1 Equivalence relationships -- 2.5.2 Associative relationships -- 2.6 Authority files -- 2.7 What about ontologies? -- 2.8 More about metadata -- 2.8.1 ONIX -- 2.8.2 RDF -- 2.8.3 TEI -- 2.8.4 ROADS -- 2.8.5 RDA -- 2.8.6 Dublin core -- 2.9 A brief history of markup languages -- 2.10 A few details about the markup languages -- 2.10.1 The basic parts of SGML -- 2.10.2 The SGML declaration -- 2.10.3 The document type definition (DTD) -- 2.10.4 The document instance -- 2.11 Semantic networks and semantic webs -- 2.12 A taxonomy is subjective -- 2.13 Keeping your audience happy --

3. Getting started -- 3.1 Defining the focus and scope -- 3.2 Basic approaches to creating a taxonomy -- 3.3 Adapting an existing taxonomy or thesaurus -- 3.4 Cut and paste: using parts of multiple existing vocabularies -- 3.5 Start from the beginning -- 3.6 Mix it up --

4. Terms: the building blocks of a taxonomy -- 4.1 Gathering potential terms -- 4.2 Other places to look -- 4.3 Identifying frequently used terms -- 4.4 How many terms do I need? -- 4.5 Recording and reviewing terms -- 4.6 Choosing terms -- 4.7 Literary, user, and organizational warrant -- 4.7.1 Literary warrant -- 4.7.2 User warrant -- 4.7.3 Organizational warrant -- 4.8 Terms and their style -- 4.8.1 Use natural language -- 4.8.2 Nouns, nouns, nouns -- 4.8.3 Singular versus plural -- 4.8.4 Capitalization -- 4.8.5 Initialisms and acronyms -- 4.8.6 Spelling -- 4.8.7 The little things (commas, hyphens, apostrophes, and parentheses) -- 4.9 Clarity and clarification of term meanings -- 4.10 Parts of a term record -- 4.10.1 Scope notes, editorial notes, definitions, bibliographic references, and cross-references -- 4.10.2 Tracking information --

5. Building the structure of your taxonomy -- 5.1 Organizing how we think: a bookstore example -- 5.2 Outlining the structure of your taxonomy -- 5.2.1 First steps for creating the taxonomy structure -- 5.2.2 Roughing out the structural relationships -- 5.2.3 The all-and-some test -- 5.2.4 Crafting the hierarchical structure -- 5.3 Bottom up or top down? -- 5.4 Hierarchical levels -- 5.5 Possibilities for hierarchical relationships -- 5.6 Adding associative relationships -- 5.7 Adding equivalence relationships -- 5.8 A day in the life of a taxonomist: working with taxonomy structure -- 5.9 The user's perspective --

6. Evaluation and maintenance -- 6.1 Editorial review -- 6.2 Use testing -- 6.3 External review -- 6.3.1 User level review -- 6.3.2 Subject matter experts -- 6.3.3 The dangers of subject experts and silo thinking -- 6.3.4 How to disagree with an expert -- 6.3.5 Taxonomy review guidelines for subject matter experts -- 6.3.6 The valuable partnership between taxonomists and subject matter experts -- 6.4 I collected, I sorted, I structured, I tested, when will it be finished? -- 6.5 Maintaining your thesaurus -- 6.5.1 Keep a schedule -- 6.5.2 Common mistakes --

7. Standards and taxonomies -- 7.1 What do we call these things? -- 7.2 So who are these standards guys and why should we listen to them, anyway? -- 7.3 Creating standards -- 7.4 An abbreviated guide to the standards --

Glossary -- End notes -- Author biography.

Abstract freely available; full-text restricted to subscribers or individual document purchasers.

Compendex

INSPEC

Google scholar

Google book search

This book outlines the basic principles of creation and maintenance of taxonomies and thesauri. It also provides step by step instructions for building a taxonomy or thesaurus and discusses the various ways to get started on a taxonomy construction project. Often, the first step is to get management and budgetary approval, so I start this book with a discussion of reasons to embark on the taxonomy journey. From there I move on to a discussion of metadata and how taxonomies and metadata are related, and then consider how, where, and why taxonomies are used. Information architecture has its cornerstone in taxonomies and metadata. While a good discussion of information architecture is beyond the scope of this work, I do provide a brief discussion of the interrelationships among taxonomies, metadata, and information architecture. Moving on to the central focus of this book, I introduce the basics of taxonomies, including a definition of vocabulary control and why it is so important, how indexing and tagging relate to taxonomies, a few of the types of tagging, and a definition and discussion of post- and pre-coordinate indexing. After that I present the concept of a hierarchical structure for vocabularies and discuss the differences among various kinds of controlled vocabularies, such as taxonomies, thesauri, authority files, and ontologies.

Also available in print.

Title from PDF title page (viewed on November 20, 2014).

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.

Powered by Koha