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  1. Hsieh, Y.-s.: ¬A study on the users' perception to the body language of reference librarians (1997) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Part 2 of an article reporting results of a questionnaire survey of library users' perceptions of reference librarians' body language aims and its influence on the users' satisfaction of the reference interviews
  2. Hsieh, Y.-s.: ¬A study on the users' perception to the body language of reference librarians (1997) 0.04
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    Abstract
    Reports results of a questionnaire survey, the main purpose of which was to study and understand library users' perceptions of reference librarians' body language and its influence on the users' satisfaction of the reference interviews. The aim was to improve the overall quality of reference services. The study was undertaken in the National Yang-Ming University Library and involved 162 data samples. Describes the statistical methods used and the content analysis applied to the analysis of the data. Findings indicate that users prefer librarians' to adopt an approachable mode: arms relaxed; frequent eye contact; greeting users with a smile; hands unoccupied, and with appropriate hand gestures. Contrarily, preoccupation mode: with arms crossed; frowning; and hands busy with work; conveys an unfriendly message to library users. Concludes that the findings could be a valuable tool for reference librarians to develop their interviewing techniques in terms of body language and so improve the quality of referecne services
  3. Chang, H.-C.: Introduction to the fifth edition of National Library of Medicine Classification (1998) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Introduces the content and structure of the US National Library of Medicine Classification, focusing on the revisions and features of the 5th ed. Cites as an example, for the reference of other medical libraries in Taiwan, the National Taiwan Univeristy Medical Library's reclassification of its collection in response to the publication of the 5th edition
  4. Meng, L.: ¬The creation of [the] Chinese Science Citation Database : status quo and future development (1997) 0.02
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    Abstract
    The Chinese Science Citation Database (CSCD) is a significant document database on mainland China, which has been built up by the Documentation and Information Centre of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Briefly introduces the background to CSCD, and discusses in detail its development and application, source journals and citation data, data processing methods, subject scope, compilation regulations, stylistic rules and layout, and usage directions for both the printed and CD-ROM editions of CSCD which have been published from the data
  5. Chen, S.-f.: ¬A general description of the automation in cataloguing (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Discusses the growth of automated catalogues in Taiwan and the rest of the world. Considers an automated catalogue as the prerequisite for a complete bibliographical database. Covers the meaning, functions, scope, pre-operation, post-project and future development of automated cataloguing
  6. Tseng, Y.-H.: Solving vocabulary problems with interactive query expansion (1998) 0.01
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    Abstract
    One of the major causes of search failures in information retrieval systems is vocabulary mismatch. Presents a solution to the vocabulary problem through 2 strategies known as term suggestion (TS) and term relevance feedback (TRF). In TS, collection specific terms are extracted from the text collection. These terms and their frequencies constitute the keyword database for suggesting terms in response to users' queries. One effect of this term suggestion is that it functions as a dynamic directory if the query is a general term that contains broad meaning. In term relevance feedback, terms extracted from the top ranked documents retrieved from the previous query are shown to users for relevance feedback. In the experiment, interactive TS provides very high precision rates while achieving similar recall rates as n-gram matching. Local TRF achieves improvement in both precision and recall rate in a full text news database and degrades slightly in recall rate in bibliographic databases due to the very limited source of information for feedback. In terms of Rijsbergen's combined measure of recall and precision, both TS and TRF achieve better performance than n-gram matching, which implies that the greater improvement in precision rate compensates the slight degradation in recall rate for TS and TRF
  7. Lu, S.-j.: Bibliographic control in a national bibliographic centre (1996) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Discusses the theory and practice of bibliographic control, provides a definition for a bibliographic centre and for bibliographic control in a national bibliographic centre, and discusses the current situation and future development in bibliographic control in the national bibliographic centre (of China). Makes some suggestions for planning effective bibliographic control in the national bibliographic centre as follows: to collect materials; to recruit advisers; to set up a mission, goals and objectives; to make and implement action plans; to put in place the organizational structure of the bibliographic database; and to make plans for cooperating with other area or national bibliographic centres
  8. Tseng, Y.-H.: Keyword extraction techniques and relevance feedback (1997) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Automatic keyword extraction is an important and fundamental technology in an advanced information retrieval systems. Briefly compares several major keyword extraction methods, lists their advantages and disadvantages, and reports recent research progress in Taiwan. Also describes the application of a keyword extraction algorithm in an information retrieval system for relevance feedback. Preliminary analysis shows that the error rate of extracting relevant keywords is 18%, and that the precision rate is over 50%. The main disadvantage of this approach is that the extraction results depend on the retrieval results, which in turn depend on the data held by the database. Apart from collecting more data, this problem can be alleviated by the application of a thesaurus constructed by the same keyword extraction algorithm
  9. Lee, Y.-R.: ¬A study on the conditions of using OPAC access points and subject searching by users (1997) 0.01
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    Source
    Bulletin of library and information science. 1997, no.22, S.39-55
  10. Yi, H.; Shubai, L.: Application of classification in information organization under the networking environment (1998) 0.01
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    Source
    Journal of the China Society for Scientific and Technical Information. 17(1998) no.1, S.19-22
  11. Lin, W.-Y.C.: ¬The concept and applications of faceted classifications (2006) 0.01
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    Date
    27. 5.2007 22:19:35
  12. Huang, S.-L.: ¬The conceptual model of computer aided Chinese classification system (1997) 0.01
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    Abstract
    In a prototype model of a computer aided Chinese classification system, 4 different modules were included: the keyword searching type, user's predomination type, expert wizard type and versatile type. These 4 modules work in different ways whilst sharing the same concept. The keyword searching type finds the most suitable category by scanning the keywords of all categories in a database; it is useful for entrance level staff. The user's predomination type allows the user to key in the proper category to size down the number of returning data; the user then picks the best category by browsing the built in keywords. This module is suitable for professional librarians. The expert wizard type actively leads the user to choose the best category one by one. The versatile type is a mixture of the other 3 types
  13. Pu, H.-T.: Exploration of personalized information service for OPAC (1997) 0.01
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    Date
    4. 8.1998 19:36:22