Function, Purpose, Predication, and Context of Information Organization Frameworks

dc.contributor.authorTennis, Joseph T.
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-19T22:30:06Z
dc.date.available2017-01-19T22:30:06Z
dc.date.created2006
dc.description.abstractThis paper outlines the purposes, predications, functions, and contexts of information organization frameworks; including: bibliographic control, information retrieval, resource discovery, resource description, open access scholarly indexing, personal information management protocols, and social tagging in order to compare and contrast those purposes, predications, functions, and contexts. Information organization frameworks, for the purpose of this paper, consist of information organization systems (classification schemes, taxonomies, ontologies, bibliographic descriptions, etc.), methods of conceiving of and creating the systems, and the work processes involved in maintaining these systems. The paper first outlines the theoretical literature of these information organization frameworks. In conclusion, this paper establishes the first part of an evaluation rubric for a function, predication, purpose, and context analysis.
dc.format.mimetypepdf
dc.identifier.citationJoseph T. Tennis. (2006). "Function, Purpose, Predication, and Context of Information Organization Frameworks." In Knowledge Organization for a Global Learning Society: Proceedings of the 9th International Conference for Knowledge Organization. International Society for Knowledge Organization 9th International Conference. (Vienna, Austria. Jul, 2006). Advances in Knowledge Organization vol 10. Ergon. Würzburg: 303-310.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1773/37987
dc.publisherAdvances in Knowledge Organization
dc.titleFunction, Purpose, Predication, and Context of Information Organization Frameworks
dc.typeArticle

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