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How do we describe something?

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Languages for aboutness Indexing languages: Terminological tools Thesauri (CV controlled vocabulary) Subject headings lists (CV) Authority files for named ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How do we describe something?


1
How do we describe something?
  • What something is about?
  • What the content of an object is about?
  • Different methods (Wilson, 1968)
  • counting terms (objective method)
  • complete description/summarization
  • unifying thought(s)
  • What stands out (main points)
  • Challenges
  • Non-text

2
Languages for aboutness
  • Indexing languages
  • Terminological tools
  • Thesauri (CV controlled vocabulary)
  • Subject headings lists (CV)
  • Authority files for named entities (people,
    places, structures, organizations)
  • Classification
  • Keyword lists
  • Natural language systems (broad interpretation)

3
Aboutness How to do it!
  • Read the document Intellectual reading
  • look for key features
  • many indexers mark up the items
  • rarely have time to read the whole document
  • Determine aboutness Conceptual analysis
  • Translate aboutness into the vocabulary or scheme
    you are using
  • In general Subject headings 1-3 headings
  • Descriptors, 5-8 descriptors
  • Classification 1 notation (should it only be
    one!?).

4
Features of indexing languages
  • With the exception of a few general domain tools,
    they are generally domain specific.
  • MeSH
  • NASA Thesaurus
  • Astronomy Thesaurus
  • ERIC thesaurus
  • http//www.darmstadt.gmd.de/lutes/thesoecd.html
  • Concepts (or concept representations) are
    arranged in a discernable order?

5
Language schema designs
  • Classified--grouping
  • Hierarchies and facets
  • MeSH Browser
  • http//www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/MBrowser.html
  • Art and Architecture (Getty AAT)
  • http//www.getty.edu/research/conducting_researc
    h/vocabularies/aat/
  • Alphabetical -- horizontal
  • Verbal/Alphabetical (ordering/filing challenges)

6
Controlled Vocabulary
  • Why do we have a controlled vocabulary?
  • Three of you independently identify a new human
    gene, and each separately name it different
    things.
  • How do we handle references/resolving/utilizing
    this concept which has different names. Let
    alone, across languages?!

7
Controlled Vocabulary
  • A list or a database of subject terms in which
    each concept has a preferred terms or phrase that
    will be used to represent it in the retrieval
    tool the terms not used have references
    (syndetic structure), and often scope notes.
    Their can be aliases for preferred terms (so the
    all three of your gene names get recorded and are
    matchable to the preferred term).

8
Example
  • For gene names, there is an authority, HUGO Gene
    Nomenclature Committee that designates an
    official curated name for gene.
  • During the research process however, there may
    have been multiple initial names.

9
More Examples
  • Most processs however, do NOT have standardized
    naming.
  • For instance genetic conditions are not named in
    one standard way. Doctors treating patients
    often propose the first name, but often expert
    working groups later revise to more appropriate
    name.

10
Contd
  • The basic genetic or biochemical defect that
    causes the condition (for example, alpha-1
    antitrypsin deficiency)
  • One or more major signs or symptoms of the
    disorder (for example, hypermanganesemia with
    dystonia, polycythemia, and cirrhosis)
  • The parts of the body affected by the condition
    (for example, craniofacial-deafness-hand
    syndrome)
  • The name of a physician or researcher, often the
    first person to describe the disorder (for
    example,Marfan syndrome, which was named after
    Dr. Antoine Bernard-Jean Marfan)
  • A geographic area (for example, familial
    Mediterranean fever, which occurs mainly in
    populations bordering the Mediterranean Sea) or
  • The name of a patient or family with the
    condition (for example, amyotrophic lateral
    sclerosis, which is also called Lou Gehrig
    disease after the famous baseball player who had
    the condition).

11
Thesaurus (structured thesaurus)
  • Lexical semantic relationships
  • Composed of indexing terms/descriptors
  • Descriptors representations of concepts
  • Concepts Units of meaning (Svenonius)

12
Thesaurus
  • Preferred terms
  • Non-preferred terms
  • Semantic relations between terms
  • How to apply terms (guidelines, rules)
  • Scope notes
  • Adding terms (How to produce terms that are not
    listed explicitly in the thesaurus)

13
Preferred Terms
  • Control form of the term
  • Spelling, grammatical form
  • Theatre / Theater
  • MLA / Modern language association
  • Choose preferred term between synonyms
  • Brain cancer or Brain Neoplasms?

14
Common thesaural identifiers
  • SN Scope Note
  • Instruction, e.g. dont invert phrases
  • USE Use (another term in preference to this one)
  • UF Used For
  • BT Broader Term
  • NT Narrower Term
  • RT Related Term

15
Semantic Relationships
  • Hierarchy
  • Equivalence
  • Association

16
Hierarchies of Meaning
Beer Glass

White wine glass

Glass

Wine Glass

Red wine glass

From Controlled Vocabularies/ Paul Miller
Interoperability Focus UKOLN
17
Hierarchy
  • Level of generality both preferred terms
  • BT (broader term)
  • Robins BT Birds
  • NT (narrower term)
  • Birds NT Robins
  • Inheritance, very specific rules

18
Equivalence
  • When two or more terms represent the same concept
  • One is the preferred term (descriptor), where all
    the information is collected
  • The other is the non-preferred and helps the user
    to find the appropriate term

19
Equivalence
  • Non-preferred term USE Preferred term
  • Nuclear Power USE Nuclear Energy
  • Periodicals USE Serials
  • Preferred term UF (used for) Non-preferred term
  • Nuclear Energy UF Nuclear Power
  • Serials UF Periodicals

20
Association
  • One preferred term is related to another
    preferred term
  • Non-hierarchical
  • See also function
  • In any large thesaurus, a significant umber of
    terms will mean similar things or cover related
    areas, without necessarily being synonyms or
    fitting into a defined hierarchy

21
Association
  • Related Terms (RT) can be used to show these
    links within the thesaurus
  • Bed RT Bedding
  • Paint Brushes RT Painting
  • Vandalism RT Hostility
  • Programming RT Software
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