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  1. Diodato, V.: Dictionary of bibliometrics (1994) 0.14
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Journal of library and information science 22(1996) no.2, S.116-117 (L.C. Smith)
  2. Hagenau, B.: ¬Der Deutsche Gesamtkatalog : Vergangenheit und Zukunft einer Idee (1988) 0.12
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    Pages
    V,149 S
    Series
    Beiträge zum Buch- und Bibliothekswesen; 22
  3. Barden, B.R.; Denison, B.: Guide to the SLA loan collection of classification schemes and subject heading lists on deposit at Western Reserve Univ. as of March 20, 1961 (1961) 0.12
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: College and research libraries 22(1961) no.6, S.483-484 (A.R. Lindsay)
    Pages
    V,97 S
  4. Information Macht Bildung. : Zweiter Gemeinsamer Kongress der Bundesvereinigung Deutscher Bibliotheksverbände e. V. (BDB) und der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Informationswissenschaft und Informationspraxis e. V. (DGI), Leipzig, 23. bis 26. März 2004, zugleich 93. Deutscher Bibliothekartag (2004) 0.09
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    Date
    22. 2.2008 14:21:53
  5. Saving the time of the library user through subject access innovation : Papers in honor of Pauline Atherton Cochrane (2000) 0.08
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    Abstract
    Pauline Atherton Cochrane has been contributing to library and information science for fifty years. Think of it-from mid-century to the millennium, from ENIAC (practically) to Internet 11 (almost here). What a time to be in our field! Her work an indexing, subject access, and the user-oriented approach had immediate and sustained impact, and she continues to be one of our most heavily cited authors (see, JASIS, 49[4], 327-55) and most beloved personages. This introduction includes a few words about my own experiences with Pauline as well as a short summary of the contributions that make up this tribute. A review of the curriculum vita provided at the end of this publication Shows that Pauline Cochrane has been involved in a wide variety of work. As Marcia Bates points out in her note (See below), Pauline was (and is) a role model, but I will always think of her as simply the best teacher 1 ever had. In 1997, I entered the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science as a returning mid-life student; my previous doctorate had not led to a full-time job and I was re-tooling. I was not sure what 1 would find in library school, and the introductory course attended by more than 100 students from widely varied backgrounds had not yet convinced me I was in the right place. Then, one day, Pauline gave a guest lecture an the digital library in my introductory class. I still remember it. She put up some notes-a few words clustered an the blackboard with some circles and directional arrows-and then she gave a free, seemingly extemporaneous, but riveting narrative. She set out a vision for ideal information exchange in the digital environment but noted a host of practical concerns, issues, and potential problems that required (demanded!) continued human intervention. The lecture brought that class and the entire semester's work into focus; it created tremendous excitement for the future of librarianship. 1 saw that librarians and libraries would play an active role. I was in the right place.
    Content
    Enthält Beiträge von: FUGMANN, R.: Obstacles to progress in mechanized subject access and the necessity of a paradigm change; TELL, B.: On MARC and natural text searching: a review of Pauline Cochrane's inspirational thinking grafted onto a Swedish spy on library matters; KING, D.W.: Blazing new trails: in celebration of an audacious career; FIDEL, R.: The user-centered approach; SMITH, L.: Subject access in interdisciplinary research; DRABENSTOTT, K.M.: Web search strategies; LAM, V.-T.: Enhancing subject access to monographs in Online Public Access Catalogs: table of contents added to bibliographic records; JOHNSON, E.H.: Objects for distributed heterogeneous information retrieval
    Date
    22. 9.1997 19:16:05
  6. Information ethics : privacy, property, and power (2005) 0.07
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    Classification
    323.44/5 22 (GBV;LoC)
    DDC
    323.44/5 22 (GBV;LoC)
    Footnote
    Part III, "Privacy and Information Control," has four articles and three discussion cases beginning with an 1890 article from the Harvard Law Review, "The Right to Privacy," written by Samuel A Warren and Louis D. Brandeis. Moore then includes an article debating whether people own their genes, an article on caller I.D., and an article on computer surveillance. While all four articles pose some very interesting questions, Margaret Everett's article "The Social Life of Genes: Privacy, Property, and the New Genetics" is incredible. She does a great job of demonstrating how advances in genetics have led to increased concerns over ownership and privacy of genetic codes. For instance, if someone's genetic code predisposes them to a deadly disease, should insurance companies have access to that information? Part IV, "Freedom of Speech and Information Control," has three articles and two discussion cases that examine speech and photography issues. Moore begins this section with Kent Greenawalt's "Rationales for Freedom of Speech," which looks at a number of arguments favoring free speech. Then the notion of free speech is carried over into the digital world in "Digital Speech and Democratic Culture: A Theory of Freedom of Expression for the Information Society" by Jack M. Balkin. At 59 pages, this is the work's longest article and demonstrates how complex the digital environment has made freedom of speech issues. Finally, Part V, "Governmental and Societal Control of Information," contains three articles and three discussion cases which provide an excellent view into the conflict between security and privacy. For instance, the first article, "Carnivore, the FBI's E-mail Surveillance System: Devouring Criminals, Not Privacy" by Griffin S. Durham, examines the FBI's e-mail surveillance program called Carnivore. Durham does an excellent job of demonstrating that Carnivore is a necessary and legitimate system used in limited circumstances and with a court order. Librarians will find the final article in the book, National Security at What Price? A Look into Civil Liberty Concerns in the Information Age under the USA Patriot Act by Jacob R. Lilly, of particular interest. In this article, Lilly uses historical examples of events that sacrificed civil liberties for national security such as the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II and the McCarthyism of the Cold War era to examine the PATRIOT Act.
    The book also includes an index, a selected bibliography, and endnotes for each article. More information on the authors of the articles would have been useful, however. One of the best features of Information Ethics is the discussion cases at the end of each chapter. For instance, in the discussion cases, Moore asks questions like: Would you allow one person to die to save nine? Should a scientist be allowed to experiment on people without their knowledge if there is no harm? Should marriages between people carrying a certain gene be outlawed? These discussion cases really add to the value of the readings. The only suggestion would be to have put them at the beginning of each section so the reader could have the questions floating in their heads as they read the material. Information Ethics is a well thought out and organized collection of articles. Moore has done an excellent job of finding articles to provide a fair and balanced look at a variety of complicated and far-reaching topics. Further, the work has breadth and depth. Moore is careful to include enough historical articles, like the 1890 Warren article, to give balance and perspective to new and modern topics like E-mail surveillance, biopiracy, and genetics. This provides a reader with just enough philosophy and history theory to work with the material. The articles are written by a variety of authors from differing fields so they range in length, tone, and style, creating a rich tapestry of ideas and arguments. However, this is not a quick or easy read. The subject matter is complex and one should plan to spend time with the book. The book is well worth the effort though. Overall, this is a highly recommended work for all libraries especially academic ones."
  7. Haravu, L.J.: Lectures on knowledge management : paradigms, challenges and opportunities (2002) 0.06
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Knowledge organization 30(2003) no.1, S.42-44 (D. Mercier): "This work is a collection of lecture notes following the 22"d Sarada Ranganathan Endowment Lectures which took place in Bangalore, India, from 4-6 December 2000. This compilation has been divided into four sections: historical introduction, compilation of several definitions about knowledge and its management, impacts of knowledge management (KM) an information professionals and, review of information technologies as tools for knowledge management. The aim of this book is to provide "a succinct overview of various aspects of knowledge management, particularly in companies" (p. v). Each chapter focuses an a dominant text in a specific area. Most of the quoted authors are known consultants in KM. Each chapter is similarly handled: a review of a dominant book, some subject matter from a few other consultants and, last but not least, comments an a few broadly cited cases. Each chapter is uneven with regards to the level of detail provided, and ending summaries, which would have been useful, are missing. The book is structured in two parts containing five chapters each. The first part is theoretical, the second deals with knowledge workers and technologies. Haravu begins the first chapter with a historical overview of information and knowledge management (IKM) essentially based an the review previously made by Drucker (1999). Haravu emphasises the major facts and events of the discipline from the industrial revolution up to the advent of the knowledge economy. On the whole, this book is largely technology-oriented. The lecturer presents micro-economic factors contributing to the economic perspective of knowledge management, focusing an the existing explicit knowledge. This is Haravu's prevailing perspective. He then offers a compilation of definitions from Allee (1997) and Sveiby (1997), both known for their contribution in the area of knowledge evaluation. As many others, Haravu confirms his assumption regarding the distinction between information and knowledge, and the knowledge categories: explicit and tacit, both actions oriented and supported by rules (p. 43). The SECI model (Nonaka & Takeuchi, 1995), also known as "knowledge conversion spiral" is described briefly, and the theoretically relational dimension between individual and collectivities is explained. Three SECI linked concepts appear to be missing: contexts in movement, intellectual assets and leadership.
    Haravu makes a rather original analogy with Ranganathan's theory of "spiral of subjects development". This will be of particular interest for those working in knowledge organisation. The last third of this chapter covers the Allee's "Knowledge Complexity Framework", defining the Knowledge Archetype, the learning and performance framework, and twelve principles of knowledge management (p. 55-66). In the third chapter, Haravu describes at first and extensively KM interdisciplinary features and its contributive disciplines (and technologies): cognitive science, expert systems, artificial intelligence, knowledge-based systems, computer-supported collaborative work, library and information science, technical writing, document management, decision support systems, semantic networks, relational and object databases, Simulation and organisational science. This combination of disciplines and technologies is aligned with the systematic approach chosen in the first chapter. After a combined definition of knowledge management (Malhotra, 1998; Sveiby, 1997), Haravu surveys three specific approaches of the knowledge economic perspective: core-competency (Godbout, 1998), leveraging and managing intangible assets (Sveiby, 1997), and expanding an organisationas capacity to learn and share knowledge (Allee, 1997). Then, he describes again Sveiby's and Allee's frameworks, largely borrowing from the Sveiby's "six KM strategies" (p. 101). For each approach, he summarizes a case study from the reviewed authors. The final section section is a summary of broadly cited case studies (Buchman Laboratories and Hoffman-Laroche). On a practical basis, Haravu underlines the Impacts of KM practices an knowledge workers, particularly information professionals. The major activity of information professionals is adding value to information: filtering, validating, analysing, synthesising, presenting and prevading facilities to access and use. Leadership in knowledge management processes is rapidly detailed. At the end of this chapter, the author describes information professionals' core competencies required in organisational knowledge management and refer to the Andersen Consulting and Chevron's cases. From this perspective, new collaborative roles in KM for information professionals are omitted.
  8. Haarmann, H.: Geschichte der Schrift (2002) 0.06
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    Date
    12. 2.1996 22:34:46
    Footnote
    Rez. in FR Nr.150 vom 2.7.2003, S.WB3 (F. Ufen): "Langsam spricht es sich herum. Die Schrift ist nicht, wie man lange geglaubt hat, gegen Ende des 4. Jahrtausends v Chr. in Mesopotamien erfunden worden. Es scheint auch nicht zu stimmen, dass nur Gesellschaften, die schon staatlich organisiert und in Klassen gespalten sind, sich Schriftsysteme austüfteln, um sie als Herrschaftsinstrumente einzusetzen. Nach dem heutigen Erkenntnisstand ist die Schrift um 5500 v Chr. in Europa erfunden worden - womit sie mehr als 2000 Jahre älter ist als die Hieroglyphen des prädynastischen Ägyptens und die archaischen piktographischen Zeichen der sumerischen Stadtstaaten. Die älteste Schrift war die Errungenschaft einer Zivilisation, die so egalitär organisiert war, dass sie ohne einen Staatsapparat auskam. Und offensichtlich haben nicht ökonomische, militärische oder politisch-administrative Erfordernisse zur Entwicklung des ersten Schriftsystems geführt, sondern die Notwendigkeit, mit den gesellschaftlichen Folgen einer verheerenden Naturkatastrophe fertig zu werden. Noch lange nach dem Ende der letzten Eiszeit war das Schwarze Meer ein Süßwassersee, der erheblich niedriger als das Mittelmeer lag und mit ihm nur durch eine Landbrücke verbunden war. Doch dann stieg der Wasserspiegel im Gebiet der Dardanellen dramatisch an, bis um 6800 v Chr. schließlich der Riegel gesprengt wurde. Das Mittelmeer brach durch, riesige Wassermassen ergossen sich ins Schwarze Meer und überschwemmten die neolithischen Siedlungen an seinen Küstengebieten. Die Küstenbewohner flohen und ließen sich später am Unterlauf der Donau - im heutigen Bulgarien und Rumänien - nieder, um dort die erste Hochkultur der Weltgeschichte zu begründen. Aus der Schrift, die sie nebenbei erfanden, sollte später die kretische Linear A hervorgehen. Mittlerweile wird vermutet, dass auch die Sumerer bei der Donauzivilisation Anleihen gemacht haben könnten. Die Schrift ist mindestens sechsmal erfunden worden - in Südosteuropa, Mesopotamien, Ägypten, Indien, China und Mesoamerika. Überall beginnt sie als Pikto- und Logographie, während der Übergang zur Phonographie erst spät erfolgt. Auf die Idee, mit dem alphabetischen Schreibprinzip zu experimentieren, ist man allerdings nur im Nahen Osten gekommen. Der Linguist Harald Haarmann hat mit seiner "Universalgeschichte der Schrift" einen Klassiker geschrieben. Wer nicht die Zeit hat zu lesen, was dort auf über 800 Seiten abgehandelt wird, kann aus diesem Abriss das Wesentliche über die Ursprünge, Entwicklungsstadien, Formen, Funktionen und Auswirkungen des Schriftgebrauchs erfahren. Ein hervorragendes Kompendium."
  9. Roessler, D.: Sacherschließung an Bibliotheken bei Einsatz elektronischer Datenverarbeitung (1970) 0.05
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  10. Jonas, C.: Datenfernübertragung mit Personal Computern : von V.24 zu X.400 und EDIFACT (1992) 0.05
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  11. Metcalfe, J.: British and American information retrieval 1876-1976 (1976) 0.05
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  12. Porstmann, R.: ¬Eine universelle Fachklassifikation Wirtschaftswissenschaften : ein Entwurf für Bibliotheken, Dokumentations- und Informationseinrichtungen (1995) 0.05
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  13. Huber-Dyson, V.: Gödel's theorems : a workbook on formalization (1991) 0.05
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  14. Cetron, M.; Davies, O.: Mastering information in the new century (1994) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Offers a thought-provoking forecast abouit the development of the information superhighway and the changes it will bring. Focusing on the legal, social and political implications of the enormous growth of information, the authors focus on anticipated changes in the professional and personal lives of people throughout the developed world
    Footnote
    Rez. in: Journal of academic librarianship 22(1996) no.1, S.62 (R.F. Rose)
  15. Bibliothekarisch-bibliographische Klassifikation. Tafeln für wissenschaftliche Bibliotheken (1967 ff.) 0.05
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    Content
    1. Einführung (1978) 2. A. Marxismus-Leninismus (1969) 3. B. Naturwissenschaften insgesamt. V. Physikalisch-math. Wissenschaften (1968) 4. Chemische Wissenschaften (1967) 5. D. Geowissenschaften. Geodäsie, Geophysik, Geologie u. Geographie (1972) 6. E. Biologische Wissenschaften (1969) 7,1 Z. Technik. Technische Wissenschaften insgesamt (1972) 7,2 Z. Energetik. Hochfrequenzelektronik (1974) 8. I. Bergbau K. Technologie der Metalle, Maschinen- u. Gerätebau (1987) 9,1 L. Chemische Technologie. Chemische und Nahrungsmittelproduktion (Halbband 1.2. 1972) 9,2 M. Holztechnologie.Leichtindustrie. Polygraphische Industrie. Photokinotechnik (1980) 10. N. Bauwesen (1985) 11. O. Transport (Halbband 1.2. 1973) 12. P. Land- und Forstwirtschaft. Landwirtschaftliche und forstwissen-schaftliche Wissenschaften (1968) 14,1 S. Gesellschaft-wissenschaften insgesamt. T 0/2. Geschichte. Historische Wissenschaften (Allg. Teil 1970) 14,2 T 3(2) Geschichte der UdSSR (1974) 14,3 S. Gesellschaftswissenschaften insgesamt. T 3 (4/9). Geschichte der Länder außerhalb der Sowjetunion (1971) 14,4 T. Archäologie. Ethnographie (1986) 15. U. Wirtschaft. Wirtschaftswiss. (Textband 1.2 1985) 15. U. Wirtschaft.Wirtschaftswissenschaften (Register 1985) 16. F 6/7 Politische Parteien. Geselschaftliche Organisationen (Textband 1.2 1977) 16. F 6/7 Politische Parteien. Gesellschaftliche Organisationen (Register 1977) 17. Ch. Staat und Recht. Rechts-wissenschaft (1978) 18. C. Militärwissenschaft. Militärwesen (1978) 19. C. Kultur. Wissenschaft, Bildung (1972) 20. S. Philologische Wissenschaften. Schöne Literatur (1985) 21. Sc Kunst. Kunstwissenschaft (1968) 22. E. Religion. Atheismus (1976) 23. Ju. Philosphische Wissenschaften. Psychologie (1973) 24. Ja. Literatur universalen Inhalts (1967) 25. Hilfstafeln (1967)
  16. Library of Congress Classification Schedules. A cumulation of additions and changes, 1974-1975 (1976) 0.05
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    Content
    A. General Works. Polygraphy 1 // B. Philosophy and Religion. P. 1.2. // 1. B-BJ: Philosophy 2 // 2. BL - BX: Religion 3 // C. Auxilary sciences of history 4 // D. History. General and old world 5 // E-F. History. America 6 // H. Social Sciences 7 // J. Political Science 8 // K. Law // KD: Law of the United Kingdom and Ireland 9 // KF: Law of the United States 10 // L. Education 11 // M. Music and books on music 12 // N. Fine Arts 13 // P. Philology and Literature // P-PA: Philology, Linguistics, Classical philology, Classical literature 14 // PA, Suppl. Byzantine and modern Greek literature, Medieval and modern Latin literature 15 // PB-PH: Modern European languages 16 // PG (in part) Russian literature 17 // PJ-PM: Languages and literatures of Asia, Africa, Oceania, America, Mixed languages, Artificial languages 18 // P-PM, Suppl. Index to languages and dialects 19 // PN, PR, PS, PZ: Literature /general), English and American literatures, Fiction in English, Juvenile literature 20 // PQ. 1.: French literature 21 // PQ. 2.: Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literatures 22 // PT. 1.: German literature 23 // PT. 2.: Dutch and Scandinavian literatures 24 // Q. Science 25 // R. Medicine 26 // S. Agriculture, plant and animal industry, fish culture and fisheries, Hunting sports 27 // T. Technology 28 U. Military Science 29 // V. Naval Science 30 // Z. Bibliography and Library Science 31
  17. Vernon, K.D.C.; Lang, V.: ¬The London classification of business studies (1971) 0.05
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  18. Norton, M.J.: Introductory concepts in information science (2001) 0.05
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    Pages
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  19. Möntmann, V.: Kognitive Dissonanz und Gewinn von Information als Konsequenzen eines kognitiven Hypothesentests (1985) 0.05
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  20. Neou, V.; Recker, M.: HTML CD : an internet publishing toolkit (1996) 0.05
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