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  1. Weitz, J.: Cataloger's judgment : music cataloging questions and answers from the music OCLC users group newsletter (2003) 0.13
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    Abstract
    In this light hearted and practical compilation, Weitz collects and updates music cataloguing questions and answers featured in OCLC's "MOUG Newsletter."
    Date
    25.11.2005 18:22:29
  2. Hoffmann, H.: Descriptive Cataloging in a new light : polemical chapters for librarians (1976) 0.07
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  3. Kandel, E.R.: Reductionism in art and brain science : bridging the two cultures (2016) 0.07
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    Abstract
    Are art and science separated by an unbridgeable divide? Can they find common ground? In this new book, neuroscientist Eric R. Kandel, whose remarkable scientific career and deep interest in art give him a unique perspective, demonstrates how science can inform the way we experience a work of art and seek to understand its meaning. Kandel illustrates how reductionism?the distillation of larger scientific or aesthetic concepts into smaller, more tractable components?has been used by scientists and artists alike to pursue their respective truths. He draws on his Nobel Prize-winning work revealing the neurobiological underpinnings of learning and memory in sea slugs to shed light on the complex workings of the mental processes of higher animals. In Reductionism in Art and Brain Science, Kandel shows how this radically reductionist approach, applied to the most complex puzzle of our time?the brain?has been employed by modern artists who distill their subjective world into color, form, and light. Kandel demonstrates through bottom-up sensory and top-down cognitive functions how science can explore the complexities of human perception and help us to perceive, appreciate, and understand great works of art. At the heart of the book is an elegant elucidation of the contribution of reductionism to the evolution of modern art and its role in a monumental shift in artistic perspective. Reductionism steered the transition from figurative art to the first explorations of abstract art reflected in the works of Turner, Monet, Kandinsky, Schoenberg, and Mondrian. Kandel explains how, in the postwar era, Pollock, de Kooning, Rothko, Louis, Turrell, and Flavin used a reductionist approach to arrive at their abstract expressionism and how Katz, Warhol, Close, and Sandback built upon the advances of the New York School to reimagine figurative and minimal art. Featuring captivating drawings of the brain alongside full-color reproductions of modern art masterpieces, this book draws out the common concerns of science and art and how they illuminate each other.
    Content
    The emergence of a reductionist school of abstract art in New York -- The Beginning of a Scientific Approach to Art -- The Biology of the Beholder's Share: Visual Perception and Bottom-Up Processing in Art -- The Biology of Learning and Memory: Top-Down Processing in Art -- A Reductionist Approach to Art. Reductionism in the Emergence of Abstract Art -- Mondrian and the Radical Reduction of the Figurative Image -- The New York School of Painters -- How the Brain Processes and Perceives Abstract Images -- From Figuration to Color Abstraction -- Color and the Brain -- A Focus on Light -- A Reductionist Influence on Figuration -- The Emerging Dialogue Between Abstract Art and Science. Why Is Reductionism Successful in Art? -- A Return to the Two Cultures
    Date
    14. 6.2019 12:22:37
  4. Dominich, S.: Mathematical foundations of information retrieval (2001) 0.06
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    Abstract
    This book offers a comprehensive and consistent mathematical approach to information retrieval (IR) without which no implementation is possible, and sheds an entirely new light upon the structure of IR models. It contains the descriptions of all IR models in a unified formal style and language, along with examples for each, thus offering a comprehensive overview of them. The book also creates mathematical foundations and a consistent mathematical theory (including all mathematical results achieved so far) of IR as a stand-alone mathematical discipline, which thus can be read and taught independently. Also, the book contains all necessary mathematical knowledge on which IR relies, to help the reader avoid searching different sources. The book will be of interest to computer or information scientists, librarians, mathematicians, undergraduate students and researchers whose work involves information retrieval.
    Date
    22. 3.2008 12:26:32
  5. Bidwell, S.: Curiosities of light and sight (1899) 0.06
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    Date
    6. 3.2020 17:58:22
  6. Kuronen, T.: Ranganathanin lait ja virtuaalikirjasto (1996) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Evaluates the potential of the electronic library (virtual library) to provide information for the public in light of Ranganathan's five laws of library science. Rephrases certain laws in the context of electronic information resources and points to opportunities to make additions to the laws in light of news services and the Internet
  7. ¬Die Wissenschaft und ihre Sprachen (2007) 0.05
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    Content
    Aus dem Inhalt: Konrad Ehlich / Dorothee Heller: Einleitung - Konrad Ehlich: Mehrsprachigkeit in der Wissenschaftskommunikation - Illusion oder Notwendigkeit? - Christian Fandrych: Bildhaftigkeit und Formelhaftigkeit in der allgemeinen Wissenschaftssprache als Herausforderung für Deutsch als Fremdsprache - Dorothee Heller: L'autore traccia un quadro... - Beobachtungen zur Versprachlichung wissenschaftlichen Handelns im Deutschen und Italienischen - Kristin Stezano Cotelo: Die studentische Seminararbeit - studentische Wissensverarbeitung zwischen Alltagswissen und wissenschaftlichem Wissen - Sabine Ylönen: Training wissenschaftlicher Kommunikation mit E-Materialien. Beispiel mündliche Hochschulprüfung - Susanne Guckelsberger: Zur kommunikativen Struktur von mündlichen Referaten in universitären Lehrveranstaltungen - Giancarmine Bongo: Asymmetrien in wissenschaftlicher Kommunikation - Klaus-Dieter Baumann: Die interdisziplinäre Analyse rhetorisch-stilistischer Mittel der Fachkommunikation als ein Zugang zum Fachdenken - Marcello Soffritti: Der übersetzungstheoretische und -kritische Diskurs als fachsprachliche Kommunikation. Ansätze zu Beschreibung und Wertung - Karl Gerhard Hempel: Nationalstile in archäologischen Fachtexten. Bemerkungen zu `Stilbeschreibungen' im Deutschen und im Italienischen - Ingrid Wiese: Zur Situation des Deutschen als Wissenschaftssprache in der Medizin - Winfried Thielmann: «...it seems that light is propagated in time... » - zur Befreiung des wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnisprozesses durch die Vernakulärsprache Englisch.
    Date
    7. 5.2007 12:16:22
  8. Gödert, W.; Lepsky, K.: Informationelle Kompetenz : ein humanistischer Entwurf (2019) 0.05
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Philosophisch-ethische Rezensionen vom 09.11.2019 (Jürgen Czogalla), Unter: https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Goedert1.html. In: B.I.T. online 23(2020) H.3, S.345-347 (W. Sühl-Strohmenger) [Unter: https%3A%2F%2Fwww.b-i-t-online.de%2Fheft%2F2020-03-rezensionen.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0iY3f_zNcvEjeZ6inHVnOK]. In: Open Password Nr. 805 vom 14.08.2020 (H.-C. Hobohm) [Unter: https://www.password-online.de/?mailpoet_router&endpoint=view_in_browser&action=view&data=WzE0MywiOGI3NjZkZmNkZjQ1IiwwLDAsMTMxLDFd].
  9. Chaitin, G.J.: ¬The limits of mathematics (1997) 0.04
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    Abstract
    This book is the final version of a course on algorithmic information theory and the epistemology of mathematics and physics. It discusses Einstein and Gödel views of the nature of mathematics in the light of information theory, and sustains the thesis that mathematics is quasi-empirical. There is a foreword by Cris Calude of the University of Auckland, and supplementary material is available at the autor web site
  10. Monastyrsky, M.: Modern mathematics in the light of the fields medals (1996) 0.04
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  11. Panizzi, A.K.C.B.: Passages in my official life (1871) 0.03
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    Date
    22. 7.2007 12:05:26
    22. 7.2007 12:08:24
  12. Advances in librarianship (1998) 0.03
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    Issue
    Vol.22.
    Signature
    78 BAHH 1089-22
  13. Dennett, D.C.: Philosophie des menschlichen Bewußtseins (1994) 0.03
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    Date
    22. 7.2000 19:22:32
  14. Kling, R.; Rosenbaum, H.; Sawyer, S.: Understanding and communicating social informatics : a framework for studying and teaching the human contexts of information and communication technologies (2005) 0.03
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    Classification
    303.48/33 22
    DDC
    303.48/33 22
    Footnote
    The opening chapter provides a 10-page introduction to social informatics and identifies three high-level subdomains of the field: the normative, analytical, and critical orientations. Chapter 2 then narrows the focus to the social, technical, and institutional nature and consequences of ICTs, and provides a well-chosen review and analysis of social informatics research, mostly case studies of system implementations gone wrong. The recurring finding in these cases is that the social and institutional context of the system implementation was not sufficiently accounted for. In light of these concrete examples, the value and applicability of a social informatics perspective becomes clear. The chapters are organized exceptionally well, with bullet points and tables summarizing core ideas. One particularly good example of the organization of ideas is a table comparing designer-centric and social design views on the task of designing ICTs for workplaces (p. 42). Included are the different views of work, intended goals, design assumptions, and technological choices inherent in each design philosophy. Readers can immediately grasp how a social informatics perspective, as opposed to the more traditional designer-centric perspective, would result in significant differences in the design of workplace ICTs. The chapter titled, "Social Informatics for Designers, Developers, and Implementers of ICT Based Systems," provides an extremely focused introduction to the importance of social informatics for system builders, with more examples of large-scale system breakdowns resulting from failure to account for context, such as the 1988 destruction of a civilian passenger jet in the Persian Gulf by the USS Vincennes. However, many of the chapter subheadings have promising titles such as "ICTs Rarely Cause Social Transformations" (p. 28), and though the findings of several studies that reach this conclusion are reviewed, this section is but a page in length and no dissenting findings are mentioned; this seems insufficient support for such a substantial claim. Throughout the book, conclusions from different studies are effectively juxtaposed and summarized to create a sense of a cohesive body of social informatics research findings, which are expressed in a very accessible manner. At the same time, the findings are discussed in relation to their applicability to diverse audiences outside the social informatics field: system designers and developers, ICT policy analysts, teachers of technical curricula, and ICT professionals. Anticipating and addressing the concerns of such a diverse group of audiences outside the field of social informatics is an admirable but overly ambitious goal to achieve in a 153-page book (not counting the excellent glossary, references, and appendices). For example, the chapter on social informatics for ICT policy analysts includes approximately twenty pages of ICT policy history in the U.S. and Europe, which seems a luxury in such a small volume. Though it is unquestionably relevant material, it does not fit well with the rest of the book and might be more effective as a stand-alone chapter for an information policy course, perhaps used in tandem with the introduction.
  15. Covert and overt : recollecting and connecting intelligence service and information science (2005) 0.03
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    Classification
    327.12 22
    DDC
    327.12 22
    Footnote
    Rez. in: JASIST 58(2007) no.2, S.303-305 (L. Hayden): "Part history and part call to action, Covert and Overt examines the relationship between the disciplines of intelligence service and information science. The book is significant in that it captures both the rich history of partnership between the fields, and because it demonstrates clearly the incomplete nature of our understanding of that partnership. In the post-9/11 world, such understanding is increasingly important, as we struggle with the problem of transforming information into intelligence and intelligence into effective policy. Information science has an important role to play in meeting these challenges, but the sometimesambiguous nature of the field combined with similar uncertainties over what constitutes intelligence, makes any attempt at definitive answers problematic. The book is a collection of works from different contributors, in the words of one editor "not so much a created work as an aggregation" (p. 1). More than just an edited collection of papers, the book draws from the personal experiences of several prominent information scientists who also served as intelligence professionals from World War II onward. The result is a book that feels very personal and at times impassioned. The contributors attempt to shed light on an often-closed community of practice, a discipline that depends simultaneously on access to information and on secrecy. Intelligence, like information science, is also a discipline that finds itself increasingly attracted to and dependent upon technology, and an underlying question of the book is where and how technology benefits intelligence (as opposed to only masking more fundamental problems of process and analysis and providing little or no actual value).
  16. Hunter, E.J.; Bakewell, K.G.B.: Cataloguing (1983) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Originally published in 1979 as a title in the Outlines of Modern Librarianship' series this new edition has been expanded and updated in the light of recent developments in this rapidly developing field of librarianship, with particular reference to automation. As a consequence, this edition is substantially more than an outline of the subject. The authors take the reader through a comprehensive exposition of cataloguing - the definitions, arrangement and role of the catalogue: the history of its development; standardization and AACR2; the subject approach via pre-and post-coordinate indexing; analysis; filing rules and methods; the physical forms of the catalogue; the use of the computer in cataloguing; the role of networks; the management of cataloguing; and the relevance of book indexing. There is a detailed index, as well as a list of abbreviations and acronyms and a glossary of terms.
  17. Gehirn und Bewußtsein (1989) 0.03
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    Date
    22. 7.2000 18:21:08
  18. Chomsky, N.: Aspects of the theory of syntax (1965) 0.03
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    Date
    6. 1.1999 10:29:22
  19. Trauth, E.M.: Qualitative research in IS : issues and trends (2001) 0.03
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    Date
    25. 3.2003 15:35:22
  20. Ehrlich, U.: Bedeutungsanalyse in einem sprachverstehenden System unter Berücksichtigung pragmatischer Faktoren (1990) 0.03
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    Series
    Sprache und Information; 22

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  • s 76
  • i 13
  • el 5
  • b 1
  • d 1
  • n 1
  • u 1
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