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  • × theme_ss:"Literaturübersicht"
  • × type_ss:"el"
  1. Ingenerf, J.: Literatur zum Thema Terminologie (1993) 0.01
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    Content
    Enthält Literaturangaben zu folgenden Themen: Allgemeines, insbesondere bzgl. Institutionen zum Thema Terminologie // Konkrete Ordnungssysteme / Wörterbücher: Medizin // Konkrete Ordnungssysteme / Wörterbücher: Informatik // Grundlagen // Prinzipien der Erstellung eines Wörterbuches // Terminologie und NLP: im allgemeinen bzw. in der Medizin // Terminologie und KI: im allgemeinen bzw. in der Medizin // Terminologie und konzeptuelle Modellierung: Ontologie // Normen // Rechnergestützte bzw. formal rekonstruierte Terminologie // Standardisierung, Sharing, Reuse // Werkzeuge zur Wörterbucherstellung
  2. Thiele, H.: ¬The Dublin Core and Warwick framework : a review of the literature, March 1995 - September 1997 (1998) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The purpose of this essay is to identify and explore the dynamics of the literature associated with the Dublin Core Workshop Series. The essay opens by identifying the problems that the Dublin Core Workshop Series is addressing, the status of the Internet at the time of the first workshop, and the contributions each workshop has made to the ongoing discussion. The body of the essay describes the characteristics of the literature, highlights key documents, and identifies the major researchers. The essay closes with evaluation of the literary trends and considerations of future research directions. The essay concludes that a shift from a descriptive emphasis to a more empirical form of literature is about to take place. Future research questions are identified in the areas of satisfying searcher needs, the impact of surrogate descriptions on search engine performance, and the effectiveness of surrogate descriptions in authenticating Internet resources.
  3. Denton, W.: Putting facets on the Web : an annotated bibliography (2003) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Consider movie listings in newspapers. Most Canadian newspapers list movie showtimes in two large blocks, for the two major theatre chains. The listings are ordered by region (in large cities), then theatre, then movie, and finally by showtime. Anyone wondering where and when a particular movie is playing must scan the complete listings. Determining what movies are playing in the next half hour is very difficult. When movie listings went onto the web, most sites used a simple faceted organization, always with movie name and theatre, and perhaps with region or neighbourhood (thankfully, theatre chains were left out). They make it easy to pick a theatre and see what movies are playing there, or to pick a movie and see what theatres are showing it. To complete the system, the sites should allow users to browse by neighbourhood and showtime, and to order the results in any way they desired. Thus could people easily find answers to such questions as, "Where is the new James Bond movie playing?" "What's showing at the Roxy tonight?" "I'm going to be out in in Little Finland this afternoon with three hours to kill starting at 2 ... is anything interesting playing?" A hypertext, faceted classification system makes more useful information more easily available to the user. Reading the books and articles below in chronological order will show a certain progression: suggestions that faceting and hypertext might work well, confidence that facets would work well if only someone would make such a system, and finally the beginning of serious work on actually designing, building, and testing faceted web sites. There is a solid basis of how to make faceted classifications (see Vickery in Recommended), but their application online is just starting. Work on XFML (see Van Dijck's work in Recommended) the Exchangeable Faceted Metadata Language, will make this easier. If it follows previous patterns, parts of the Internet community will embrace the idea and make open source software available for others to reuse. It will be particularly beneficial if professionals in both information studies and computer science can work together to build working systems, standards, and code. Each can benefit from the other's expertise in what can be a very complicated and technical area. One particularly nice thing about this area of research is that people interested in combining facets and the web often have web sites where they post their writings.