BibSonomy bookmarks for /tag/indexinghttps://www.bibsonomy.org/tag/indexingBibSonomy RSS Feed for /tag/indexingTagging and Automation – Challenges and Opportunities for Academic Libraries comparing and examining the quality of the results of tagging,
intellectual and automated indexing processeshttps://biecoll.ub.uni-bielefeld.de/index.php/bieconf/article/download/162/255/252zivana1232024-03-26T08:08:10+01:00classification comparative indexing information retrieval study tagging technique visualization <span itemprop="description">comparing and examining the quality of the results of tagging,
intellectual and automated indexing processes</span>A content analysis of Twitter hyperlinks and their application in web resource indexinghttps://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/asi.23508lucijab2024-03-24T22:16:13+01:00indexing social_media <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2024-03-24T22:16:13+01:00" href="https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/asi.23508" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/asi.23508</a>Fundamentals of Knowledge Organizationhttps://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/0943-7444-2003-2-87.pdflucijajakovic2024-03-23T17:59:17+01:00Information-Science indexing knowledge organization <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2024-03-23T17:59:17+01:00" href="https://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/0943-7444-2003-2-87.pdf" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/0943-7444-2003-2-87.pdf</a>Written Knowledge: A Literary Perspective on Indexing Theoryhttps://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/0943-7444-2000-4-201.pdfabudimir2024-03-22T18:54:22+01:00indexing literary-theory <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2024-03-22T18:54:22+01:00" href="https://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/0943-7444-2000-4-201.pdf" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/0943-7444-2000-4-201.pdf</a>Studying Social Tagging and Folksonomy: A Review and Frameworkhttps://jodi-ojs-tdl.tdl.org/jodi/article/view/269aspisic2023-03-28T17:02:18+02:00folksonomy indexing social_tagging_systems tagging user_behaviour <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2023-03-28T17:02:18+02:00" href="https://jodi-ojs-tdl.tdl.org/jodi/article/view/269" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://jodi-ojs-tdl.tdl.org/jodi/article/view/269</a>Studying Social Tagging and Folksonomy: A Review and Frameworkhttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/31914832_Studying_Social_Tagging_and_Folksonomy_A_Review_and_Frameworknikolina_kos2023-03-27T17:12:54+02:00indexing research social tagging <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2023-03-27T17:12:54+02:00" href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/31914832_Studying_Social_Tagging_and_Folksonomy_A_Review_and_Framework" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.researchgate.net/publication/31914832_Studying_Social_Tagging_and_Folksonomy_A_Review_and_Framework</a>UUIDs Are Bad for DB Index performance - SolvedThe initial UUIDs were defined with focus on uniqueness rather than on efficiency in database indexes. Newly developed UUID versions address this problem.https://www.toomanyafterthoughts.com/uuids-are-bad-for-database-index-performance-uuid7/iblis2022-12-31T01:10:56+01:00database db indexing <span itemprop="description">The initial UUIDs were defined with focus on uniqueness rather than on efficiency in database indexes. Newly developed UUID versions address this problem.</span>Problems with indexing and citation of articles with group authorship -https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12038908/ntabak2022-04-07T17:52:23+02:00citation indexing problems <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2022-04-07T17:52:23+02:00" href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12038908/" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12038908/</a>Citation Indexing Revisited: Garfield’s Early Vision and Its Implications for the Futurehttps://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frma.2018.00008/fullntabak2022-04-07T17:36:35+02:00citation indexing <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2022-04-07T17:36:35+02:00" href="https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frma.2018.00008/full" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frma.2018.00008/full</a>Indexing techniques [...] for historical datahttps://www.proquest.com/openview/9dabb24f23b6b0fad4a342406337e08e/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=ypetarkonig2022-04-06T23:16:59+02:00historicaldata indexing <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2022-04-06T23:16:59+02:00" href="https://www.proquest.com/openview/9dabb24f23b6b0fad4a342406337e08e/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=y" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.proquest.com/openview/9dabb24f23b6b0fad4a342406337e08e/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=y</a>Indexing techniques for historical databaseshttps://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings-article/icde/1989/00047208/12OmNAndiuopetarkonig2022-04-06T23:06:51+02:00database historicaldatabase indexing <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2022-04-06T23:06:51+02:00" href="https://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings-article/icde/1989/00047208/12OmNAndiuo" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings-article/icde/1989/00047208/12OmNAndiuo</a>Thesaurus-Based Indexing of Research Data in the Social Sciences: Opportunities and Difficulties of Internationalization Efforts Efforts towards internationalization have become increasingly important in scientific environments. As for content-based indexing of scientific research data, however, standards leading to internationally coherent indexing which is vital for retrieval purposes are not yet sufficiently developed. Even concerning the concrete use of indexing instruments, launched by initiatives on an international scale, there are still no binding policies and guidelines.
Against this backdrop, essential criteria which internationally applicable indexing systems should meet will be outlined. These will be illustrated through the multilingual European Language Social Science Thesaurus (ELSST ), originally based on the UK Data Archive’s (UKDA) Humanities and Social Science Electronic Thesaurus (HASSET ) and ultimately developed by the Council of European Social Science Data Archives (CESSDA). Additionally, the general pros and cons of using international versus national indexing languages will be weighed using the ELSST and the Thesaurus for the Social Sciences (TSS) developed by GESIS – Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences. In this light, the benefit of vocabulary crosswalks for supporting a combined use of international and national indexing systems will be discussed.https://iassistquarterly.com/public/pdfs/iqvol36_2_baum.pdfmaricazna2022-04-06T14:37:59+02:00content-based indexing social_sciences thesaurus <span itemprop="description">Efforts towards internationalization have become increasingly important in scientific environments. As for content-based indexing of scientific research data, however, standards leading to internationally coherent indexing which is vital for retrieval purposes are not yet sufficiently developed. Even concerning the concrete use of indexing instruments, launched by initiatives on an international scale, there are still no binding policies and guidelines.
Against this backdrop, essential criteria which internationally applicable indexing systems should meet will be outlined. These will be illustrated through the multilingual European Language Social Science Thesaurus (ELSST ), originally based on the UK Data Archive’s (UKDA) Humanities and Social Science Electronic Thesaurus (HASSET ) and ultimately developed by the Council of European Social Science Data Archives (CESSDA). Additionally, the general pros and cons of using international versus national indexing languages will be weighed using the ELSST and the Thesaurus for the Social Sciences (TSS) developed by GESIS – Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences. In this light, the benefit of vocabulary crosswalks for supporting a combined use of international and national indexing systems will be discussed.</span>Bias in the indexing languages Theorethical approaches about feminine issuesThe process of knowledge representation as well as its procedures or tools and its products are not neutral in terms of values; instead they imply moral values. In this context, bias in representation related to prejudice and discrimination, to gender issues, to dicotomic categorization in classification systems or in thesauri and to lack of cultural warrant may arise. Concerning the problem of bias in indexing languages, starting from the initial theoretical reflexions of Brey (1999), Berman (1993), Olson (1998; 2002), Lopez-Huertas Perez & Torres Ramirez (2005), Guimaraes (2006), Hjorland (2008) and Milani et al. (2009), the proposal is to present a preliminary categorization aiming at facilitating the identification of bias concerning feminine issues in indexing languages, to offer a contribution to the theoretical universe of the specific questions of knowledge organization and to present a theme to be discussed by educators and professionals in the areas of cataloging, classification and indexing. If in a society which intends to be politically correct, social attitudes towards stigmatized citizens should be modified, then, the universe of indexing languages, taken as tools of knowledge representation, is a fertile field to sow this reflexion.https://repositorio.unesp.br/handle/11449/117664maricazna2022-04-06T14:31:18+02:00bias indexing prejudice thesaurus women <span itemprop="description">The process of knowledge representation as well as its procedures or tools and its products are not neutral in terms of values; instead they imply moral values. In this context, bias in representation related to prejudice and discrimination, to gender issues, to dicotomic categorization in classification systems or in thesauri and to lack of cultural warrant may arise. Concerning the problem of bias in indexing languages, starting from the initial theoretical reflexions of Brey (1999), Berman (1993), Olson (1998; 2002), Lopez-Huertas Perez & Torres Ramirez (2005), Guimaraes (2006), Hjorland (2008) and Milani et al. (2009), the proposal is to present a preliminary categorization aiming at facilitating the identification of bias concerning feminine issues in indexing languages, to offer a contribution to the theoretical universe of the specific questions of knowledge organization and to present a theme to be discussed by educators and professionals in the areas of cataloging, classification and indexing. If in a society which intends to be politically correct, social attitudes towards stigmatized citizens should be modified, then, the universe of indexing languages, taken as tools of knowledge representation, is a fertile field to sow this reflexion.</span>Assessment of Language and Indexing Biases Among Chinese-Sponsored Randomized Clinical TrialsLanguage and indexing biases may exist among Chinese-sponsored randomized clinical trials (CS-RCTs). Such biases may threaten the validity of systematic reviews.https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/article-abstract/2766380maricazna2022-04-06T14:26:48+02:00bias chinese indexing language <span itemprop="description">Language and indexing biases may exist among Chinese-sponsored randomized clinical trials (CS-RCTs). Such biases may threaten the validity of systematic reviews.</span>Social reproduction and exclusion in subject indexing: A comparison of public library OPACs and LibraryThing folksonomy | Emerald Insighthttps://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/00220411111124532/full/html?fullSc=1&fullSc=1&mbSc=1maricazna2022-04-06T14:25:05+02:00UK bias exclusion folksonomy indexing libraries <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2022-04-06T14:25:05+02:00" href="https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/00220411111124532/full/html?fullSc=1&fullSc=1&mbSc=1" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/00220411111124532/full/html?fullSc=1&fullSc=1&mbSc=1</a>Moving Towards an Actor-Based Model for Subject IndexingThis paper presents a preliminary exploration of an actor-based model for subject indexing, which considers four types of actors: professional indexers, domain experts, casual indexers, and machine algorithms. The paper describes each of the four actors, enumerating differences in approach, training, methodology, priorities, and tools, as well as similarities and historical collaborations between actors. The paper then explores how the actor-based model for subject indexing might serve as a complement to existing models that focus on processes, methods, disciplinary norms, and cultural biases by defining and exploring the following key properties of an actor-based model for subject indexing: 1) actors are the primary drivers of subject indexing work, 2) observing and understanding many types of actors’ processes in real-life situations is as valuable as prescribing correct methods for professional subject indexing, and 3) multiple and different types of actors can perform subject analysis work and subject representation work on the same information objects, and these hybrid (multi-actor) approaches to subject indexing are explicitly supported. These key properties suggest that an actor-based model for subject indexing might open new research opportunities and encourage new hybrid and collaborative approaches to knowledge organization.https://journals.lib.washington.edu/index.php/nasko/article/view/15631://maricazna2022-04-06T14:21:47+02:00algorithm bias culture indexing <span itemprop="description">This paper presents a preliminary exploration of an actor-based model for subject indexing, which considers four types of actors: professional indexers, domain experts, casual indexers, and machine algorithms. The paper describes each of the four actors, enumerating differences in approach, training, methodology, priorities, and tools, as well as similarities and historical collaborations between actors. The paper then explores how the actor-based model for subject indexing might serve as a complement to existing models that focus on processes, methods, disciplinary norms, and cultural biases by defining and exploring the following key properties of an actor-based model for subject indexing: 1) actors are the primary drivers of subject indexing work, 2) observing and understanding many types of actors’ processes in real-life situations is as valuable as prescribing correct methods for professional subject indexing, and 3) multiple and different types of actors can perform subject analysis work and subject representation work on the same information objects, and these hybrid (multi-actor) approaches to subject indexing are explicitly supported. These key properties suggest that an actor-based model for subject indexing might open new research opportunities and encourage new hybrid and collaborative approaches to knowledge organization.</span>Viewpoints in indexing term assignmentThe literature on assigned indexing considers three possible viewpoints—the author's viewpoint as evidenced in the title, the users' viewpoint, and the indexer's viewpoint—and asks whether and which of those views should be reflected in an indexer's choice of terms to assign to an item. We study this question empirically, as opposed to normatively. Based on the literature that discusses whose viewpoints should be reflected, we construct a research model that includes those same three viewpoints as factors that might be influencing term assignment in actual practice. In the unique study design that we employ, the records of term assignments made by identified indexers in academic libraries are cross-referenced with the results of a survey that those same indexers completed on political views. Our results indicate that in our setting, variance in term assignment was best explained by indexers' personal political views. https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/asi.24246maricazna2022-04-06T14:19:23+02:00bias indexing politics viewpoint <span itemprop="description">The literature on assigned indexing considers three possible viewpoints—the author's viewpoint as evidenced in the title, the users' viewpoint, and the indexer's viewpoint—and asks whether and which of those views should be reflected in an indexer's choice of terms to assign to an item. We study this question empirically, as opposed to normatively. Based on the literature that discusses whose viewpoints should be reflected, we construct a research model that includes those same three viewpoints as factors that might be influencing term assignment in actual practice. In the unique study design that we employ, the records of term assignments made by identified indexers in academic libraries are cross-referenced with the results of a survey that those same indexers completed on political views. Our results indicate that in our setting, variance in term assignment was best explained by indexers' personal political views. </span>Delay and bias in PubMed medical subject heading (MeSH®) indexing of respiratory journalsPubMed is a primary global open-access literature research database. Articles on PubMed are indexed manually with medical subject headings (MeSH®) to facilitate more complete literature searches. We aimed to determine the length of delay from publication to MeSH® indexing for key respiratory journals and to investigate whether delays are increasing over time and whether there are country or impact-factor specific biases in indexing.https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.10.01.20205476v1maricazna2022-04-06T14:16:46+02:00bias indexing <span itemprop="description">PubMed is a primary global open-access literature research database. Articles on PubMed are indexed manually with medical subject headings (MeSH®) to facilitate more complete literature searches. We aimed to determine the length of delay from publication to MeSH® indexing for key respiratory journals and to investigate whether delays are increasing over time and whether there are country or impact-factor specific biases in indexing.</span>Traditional versus emerging knowledge organization systems: Consistency of subject indexing of the web by indexers and taggershttps://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/meet.14504701367branimirguc2022-04-06T00:06:38+02:00indexing subject taggers <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2022-04-06T00:06:38+02:00" href="https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/meet.14504701367" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/meet.14504701367</a>Bias in indexing and loaded languagehttps://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/40737258/Bias_in_indexing-with-cover-page-v2.pdf?Expires=1649196549&Signature=I9t7mWngd0Fc5MioL5XOWgy3KjXNo8E-mv6-MBEFAisx7ssMbxGrziTL6PCkdPQPXxIQUVZLrfw4KTpl8HYUSN27cDtf0Lf7FoT4xCrDwFa7ZUkp-ILAVndkVVtCoBeYQHzjQbopf9k-vJFUH5sR17cZzVBtrzCzvUEyQRxUxuvawhslZBsDWN3FU0PnR3ATAWYQB~nsGr65ftcfe6gHLUCyLLeJHILGpBPl77cllFyZwo6O0QK~0LZoZy3RJ5ws5DB-s8GsDgacbXqpSfXXIUlV-fZk83Iq2pWZ5SV8oOUiQl~OzSeL6tlVI-sDtQX4-CJ1VPCeKBZahadf8AY-NQ__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZAbranimirguc2022-04-06T00:05:18+02:00bias indexing language <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2022-04-06T00:05:18+02:00" href="https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/40737258/Bias_in_indexing-with-cover-page-v2.pdf?Expires=1649196549&Signature=I9t7mWngd0Fc5MioL5XOWgy3KjXNo8E-mv6-MBEFAisx7ssMbxGrziTL6PCkdPQPXxIQUVZLrfw4KTpl8HYUSN27cDtf0Lf7FoT4xCrDwFa7ZUkp-ILAVndkVVtCoBeYQHzjQbopf9k-vJFUH5sR17cZzVBtrzCzvUEyQRxUxuvawhslZBsDWN3FU0PnR3ATAWYQB~nsGr65ftcfe6gHLUCyLLeJHILGpBPl77cllFyZwo6O0QK~0LZoZy3RJ5ws5DB-s8GsDgacbXqpSfXXIUlV-fZk83Iq2pWZ5SV8oOUiQl~OzSeL6tlVI-sDtQX4-CJ1VPCeKBZahadf8AY-NQ__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/40737258/Bias_in_indexing-with-cover-page-v2.pdf?Expires=1649196549&Signature=I9t7mWngd0Fc5MioL5XOWgy3KjXNo8E-mv6-MBEFAisx7ssMbxGrziTL6PCkdPQPXxIQUVZLrfw4KTpl8HYUSN27cDtf0Lf7FoT4xCrDwFa7ZUkp-ILAVndkVVtCoBeYQHzjQbopf9k-vJFUH5sR17cZzVBtrzCzvUEyQRxUxuvawhslZBsDWN3FU0PnR3ATAWYQB~nsGr65ftcfe6gHLUCyLLeJHILGpBPl77cllFyZwo6O0QK~0LZoZy3RJ5ws5DB-s8GsDgacbXqpSfXXIUlV-fZk83Iq2pWZ5SV8oOUiQl~OzSeL6tlVI-sDtQX4-CJ1VPCeKBZahadf8AY-NQ__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA</a>