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  • × year_i:[2000 TO 2010}
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  1. ¬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
  2. 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).
  3. MARC and metadata : METS, MODS, and MARCXML: current and future implications (2004) 0.03
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    Source
    Library hi tech. 22(2004) no.1
  4. MARC and metadata : METS, MODS, and MARCXML: current and future implications (2004) 0.02
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    Source
    Library hi tech. 22(2004) no.1
  5. International yearbook of library and information management : 2001/2002 information services in an electronic environment (2001) 0.02
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    Date
    25. 3.2003 13:22:23
  6. Subject gateways (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:43:01
  7. MARC and metadata : METS, MODS, and MARCXML: current and future implications part 2 (2004) 0.02
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    Source
    Library hi tech. 22(2004) no.2
  8. Wege zum Wissen - die menschengerechte Information : 22. Oberhofer Kolloquium 2002, Gotha, 26. bis 28. September 2002. Proceedings (2002) 0.02
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  9. Wissen in Aktion : Wege des Knowledge Managements, 22. Online-Tagung der DGI 2000 / Frankfurt am Main, 2. bis 4. Mai 2000: Proceedings (2000) 0.02
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  10. Between data science and applied data analysis : Proceedings of the 26th Annual Conference of the Gesellschaft für Klassifikation e.V., University of Mannheim, July 22-24, 2002 (2003) 0.02
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  11. XML topic maps : creating and using topic maps for the Web (2003) 0.02
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    Content
    Inhalt: Let There Be Light / Jack Park - Introduction to the Topic Maps Paradigm / Michel Biezunski - A Perspective on the Quest for Global Knowledge Interchange / Steven R. Newcomb - The Rise and Rise of Topic Maps / Sam Hunting - Topic Maps from Representation to Identity: Conversation, Names, and Published Subject Indicators / Bernard Vatant - How to Start Topic Mapping Right Away with the XTM Specification / Sam Hunting - Knowledge Representation, Ontological Engineering, and Topic Maps / Leo Obrst and Howard Liu - Topic Maps in the Life Sciences / John Park arid Nefer Park - Creating and Maintaining Enterprise Web Sites with Topic Maps and XSLT / Nikita Ogievetsky - SemanText / Eric Freese - XTM Programming with TM4J / Kal Ahmed - Nexist Topic MapTestbed / Jack Park - GooseWorks Toolkit / Sam Hunting - Topic Map Visualization / Benedicte Le Grand - Topic Maps and RDF / Eric Freese - Topic Maps and Semantic Networks / Eric Freese - Topic Map Fundamentals for Knowledge Representation / H. Holger Rath - Topic Maps in Knowledge Organization / Alexander Sigel - Prediction: A Profound Paradigm Shift / Kathleen M. Fisher - Topic Maps, the Semantic Web, and Education / Jack Park
  12. Creating Web-accessible databases : case studies for libraries, museums, and other nonprofits (2001) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 3.2008 12:21:28
  13. Seminario FRBR : Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records: reguisiti funzionali per record bibliografici, Florence, 27-28 January 2000, Proceedings (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    29. 8.2005 12:54:22
  14. Encoded archival description on the Internet (2002) 0.01
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    Footnote
    Essays live through nine present case studies of the use of EAD in specific organizations and projects. Those organizations include the Online Archive of California, the American Heritage Virtual Archive Project, the Research Libraries Group, Public Records Office of the UK, and its use in museums. Success seems to be the general conclusion of each of these case studies. Milestones reached included the creation of broad-based integrated access to archival finding aids, increased access to digital content for users, and redefining the definition and purpose of finding aids. Concerns about the future are also a theme in the case studies. Continuing challenges include improving access to primary sources, creating seamless technology, and assuring communication between competing cultural institutions for political dollars. Previous essays in this anthology discuss introductory concepts of EAD and its use in several institutional and government settings. However, the way in which EAD is transforming archival reference services is examined in the tenth essay, "Encoded Finding Aids as a Transforming Technology in Archival Reference Service." The author focuses an barriers such as technology, communications, and concerns but also discusses its potential to transform reference Services, including the standardization of finding aid information, increased search functions across finding aids, integration of finding aids with catalogs, and the human interface (self sufficiency, staff productivity, and need for education). The last essay in this anthology, "Popularizing the Finding Aid: Exploiting EAD to Enhance Online Discovery and Retrieval in Archival Information Systems by Diverse User Groups," describes the development of the traditional finding aid and how that process of development can be manipulated in light of EAD's advancing initiative. More importantly, the author presents ten strategies that may enhance browsing and retrieval in an EAD-based archival information system. In promoting EAD, the author notes that the "true potential of EAD does not lie in replicating the physical and intellectual form of the finding aid for online distribution. Rather, EAD allows archivists to contemplate how therr encoded finding aids might collectively populate a metadata infrastructure for more broadly conceived archival information systems" (p. 200). The ten strategies promoted include footnote chasing, function and repository scanning; subject, name, data, geographic, physical form or genre, top-down, and bottom-up searching. This anthology provides an excellent picture of the current state of encoded archival description an the Internet. The essays are well written and concise. The clear message is that EAD is working but that there is much work to be done to assure that archival information is easily located, available, and well described."
  15. ¬The Eleventh Text Retrieval Conference, TREC 2002 (2003) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Proceedings of the llth TREC-conference held in Gaithersburg, Maryland (USA), November 19-22, 2002. Aim of the conference was discussion an retrieval and related information-seeking tasks for large test collection. 93 research groups used different techniques, for information retrieval from the same large database. This procedure makes it possible to compare the results. The tasks are: Cross-language searching, filtering, interactive searching, searching for novelty, question answering, searching for video shots, and Web searching.
  16. Wissen - Innovation - Netzwerke : Wege zur Zukunftsfähigkeit (2003) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 3.2008 14:48:44
  17. 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) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.2008 14:21:53
  18. Handbuch der Künstlichen Intelligenz (2003) 0.01
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    Date
    21. 3.2008 19:10:22
  19. Software for Indexing (2003) 0.01
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    Footnote
    A chapter an image indexing starts with a useful discussion of the elements of bibliographic description needed for visual materials and of the variations in the functioning and naming of functions in different software packaltes. Sample features are discussed in light of four different software systems: MAVIS, Convera Screening Room, CONTENTdm, and Virage speech and pattern recognition programs. The chapter concludes with an overview of what one has to consider when choosing a system. The last chapter in this section is an oddball one an creating a back-ofthe-book index using Microsoft Excel. The author warns: "It is not pretty, and it is not recommended" (p.209). A curiosity, but it should have been included as a counterpoint in the first part, not as part of the database indexing section. The final section begins with an excellent article an voice recognition software (Dragon Naturally Speaking Preferred), followed by a look at "automatic indexing" through a critique of Sonar Bookends Automatic Indexing Generator. The final two chapters deal with Data Harmony's Machine Aided Indexer; one of them refers specifically to a news content indexing system. In terms of scope, this reviewer would have liked to see thesaurus management software included since thesaurus management and the integration of thesauri with database indexing software are common and time-consuming concerns. There are also a few editorial glitches, such as the placement of the oddball article and inconsistent uses of fonts and caps (eg: VIRAGE and Virage), but achieving consistency with this many authors is, indeed, a difficult task. More serious is the fact that the index is inconsistent. It reads as if authors submitted their own keywords which were then harmonized, so that the level of indexing varies by chapter. For example, there is an entry for "controlled vocabulary" (p.265) (singular) with one locator, no cross-references. There is an entry for "thesaurus software" (p.274) with two locators, plus a separate one for "Thesaurus Master" (p.274) with three locators. There are also references to thesauri/ controlled vocabularies/taxonomies that are not mentioned in the index (e.g., the section Thesaurus management an p.204). This is sad. All too often indexing texts have poor indexes, I suppose because we are as prone to having to work under time pressures as the rest of the authors and editors in the world. But a good index that meets basic criteria should be a highlight in any book related to indexing. Overall this is a useful, if uneven, collection of articles written over the past few years. Because of the great variation between articles both in subject and in approach, there is something for everyone. The collection will be interesting to anyone who wants to be aware of how indexing software works and what it can do. I also definitely recommend it for information science teaching collections since the explanations of the software carry implicit in them descriptions of how the indexing process itself is approached. However, the book's utility as a guide to purchasing choices is limited because of the unevenness; the vendor-written articles and testimonials are interesting and can certainly be helpful, but there are not nearly enough objective reviews. This is not a straight listing and comparison of software packaltes, but it deserves wide circulation since it presents an overall picture of the state of indexing software used by freelancers."
  20. Culture and identity in knowledge organization : Proceedings of the Tenth International ISKO Conference 5-8 August 2008, Montreal, Canada (2008) 0.01
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    Content
    Enthält die Beiträge: KEYNOTE ADDRESS Jonathan Furner. Interrogating "Identity": A Philosophical Approach to an Enduring Issue in Knowledge Organization. MODELS AND METHODS IN KNOWLEDGE ORGANIZATION Louise F. Spiteri. Causality and Conceptual Coherence in Assessments of Similarity. - Rebecca Green. Making Visible Hidden Relationships in the Dewey Decimal Classification: How Relative Index Terms Relate to DDC Classes. - John DiMarco. Examining Bloom's Taxonomy and Peschl's Modes of Knowing for Classification of Learning Objects on the PBS.org/teachersource Website. - Melanie Feinberg. Classificationist as Author: The Case of the Prelinger Library. - Fulvio Mazzocchi and Mela Bosch. Hermeneutic Approaches in Knowledge Organization: An Analysis of Their Possible Value. - Yves Marcoux and Elias Rizkallah. Knowledge Organization in the Light of Intertextual Semantics: A Natural-Language Analysis of Controlled Vocabularies. - Vanda Broughton. Language Related Problems in the Construction of Faceted Terminologies and their Automatic Management. - I. C. Mcllwaine and Nancy J. Williamson. Medicine and the UDC: The Process of Restructuring. - James M. Turner. Cultural Markers and Localising the MIC Site. - Joäo Alberto de Oliveira Lima, Monica Palmirani and Fabio Vitali. A Time-aware Ontology for Legal Resources.

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