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  • × year_i:[1970 TO 1980}
  • × author_ss:"Svenonius, E."
  1. Svenonius, E.: Facet definition: a case study (1978) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Historical account of the sophisticated method of indexing developed by J.O. Kaiser (1896/97), a librarian at the Philadelphia Commercial Museum who established his index on cards (a novelty then) and distinguished his items according to the categories 'concrete', 'process', and 'country'. He also introduced "statement indexing" and rules to this end in order to permit the supply of "complete information" on a subject in a document. In summarizing these findings, the author stresses the necessitiy of establishing well-defined categories if an organization of terms is to serve e.g. information retrieval.
    Type
    a
  2. Svenonius, E.; Schmierer, H.P.: Current issues in the subject control of information (1977) 0.00
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    Type
    a
  3. Svenonius, E.: Good indexing : a question of evidence (1975) 0.00
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    Source
    Library science with a slant to documentation. 12(1975), S.33-39
    Type
    a
  4. Svenonius, E.: Facets as semantic categories (1979) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The paper looks at the semantic and syntactic components of facet definition. In synthetic classificatory languages, primitive terms are categorized into facets; facet information, when, is used in stating the syntactic rules for combining primitive terms into the acceptable (well-formed) complex expressions in the language. In other words, the structure of a synthetic classificatory language can be defined in terms of the facets recognized in the language and the syntactic rules employed by the language. Thus, facets are the "grammatical categories" of classificatory languages and their definition is the first step in formulating structural descriptions of such languages. As well, the study of how facets are defined can give some insight into how language is used to embody information
    Type
    a