THE ORGANIZATION OF INFORMATION

Introducing readers to the principles and processes of the organization of information, this text provides practitioners and students of library and information science with a guide to the organization of information in libraries. Arlene Taylor begins with a broad overview of the concept and its rol...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Taylor, Arlene G. 1941- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Englewood LIBARIES UNLIMITED, INC. 1999
Series:Library and information science text series
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Summary:Introducing readers to the principles and processes of the organization of information, this text provides practitioners and students of library and information science with a guide to the organization of information in libraries. Arlene Taylor begins with a broad overview of the concept and its role in human endeavours, then proceeds to a detailed discussion of such basic retrieval tools as bibliographies, catalogues, indexes, finding aids, registers, databases, major bibliographic utilities and other organizing entities. After tracing the development of the organization of recorded information in Western civilization from 2000 BCE to the present, she addresses topics that include encoding standards (MARC, SGML and various DTDs), metadata (description, access and access control), verbal subject analysis including controlled vocabularies and ontologies, classification theory and methodology, arrangement and display, system design, and a discussion of the future of the field.
Physical Description:xx, 280 pages illustrations 26 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN:1563084988
9781563084980