Evidence of Term-Structure Differences among Folksonomies and Controlled Indexing Languages


Autoria(s): Good, Benjamin M.; Tennis, Joseph T.
Data(s)

19/01/2017

19/01/2017

2008

Resumo

With the advent of Internet-based technologies for information organization, many groups have constructed their own indexing languages. Biologists, Library and Information Science practitioners, and now social taggers have worked together to create large and many times complex indexing languages. In this environment of diversity, two questions surface: (1) what are the measurable characteristics of these indexing languages, and (2) do measurements of these indexing languages speciate along these characteristics? This poster presents data from this exploratory work.

Formato

pdf

Identificador

Good, B. M., and Tennis, J. T. (2008). Evidence of term-structure differences among folksonomies and controlled indexing languages. In Proceedings of the ASIST Annual Meeting. (Vol. 45)

http://hdl.handle.net/1773/37979

Publicador

Proceedings of the ASIST Annual Meeting

Tipo

Article