Mapping the knowledge covered by library classification systems


Autoria(s): Zins, Chaim; Santos, Plácida Leopoldina Ventura Amorim da Costa
Contribuinte(s)

Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)

Data(s)

20/05/2014

20/05/2014

01/05/2011

Resumo

This study explores, in 3 steps, how the 3 main library classification systems, the Library of Congress Classification, the Dewey Decimal Classification, and the Universal Decimal Classification, cover human knowledge. First, we mapped the knowledge covered by the 3 systems. We used the 10 Pillars of Knowledge: Map of Human Knowledge, which comprises 10 pillars, as an evaluative model. We mapped all the subject-based classes and subclasses that are part of the first 2 levels of the 3 hierarchical structures. Then, we zoomed into each of the 10 pillars and analyzed how the three systems cover the 10 knowledge domains. Finally, we focused on the 3 library systems. Based on the way each one of them covers the 10 knowledge domains, it is evident that they failed to adequately and systematically present contemporary human knowledge. They are unsystematic and biased, and, at the top 2 levels of the hierarchical structures, they are incomplete.

Formato

877-901

Identificador

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.21481

Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. Malden: Wiley-blackwell, v. 62, n. 5, p. 877-901, 2011.

1532-2882

http://hdl.handle.net/11449/10571

10.1002/asi.21481

WOS:000289486100006

2-s2.0-79953867202

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Wiley-Blackwell

Relação

Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology

Direitos

closedAccess

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article