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  • × author_ss:"Stock, W.G."
  1. Stock, W.G.: Informationsmangel trotz Überfluß : Informationsgesellschaft verlangt neue Berufe und Berufsbilder (1995) 0.11
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    Source
    Insider. 1995, Nr.4, Juli, S.19-22
    Theme
    Information Resources Management
  2. Stock, W.G.: Management interner und externer Informationsressourcen in einem einheitlichen Groupware-System : Information Center von AGI - Information Management Consultants (1999) 0.08
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    Abstract
    Seit 1983 gibt es die Arbeitsgemeinschaft Informationsvermittlung (AGI). Die AGI-Information Management Consultants, vorneweg Manfred Hauer, sind inzwischen ausgewiesene Spezialisten bei der Anwendung von Information Retrieval-Systemen. Seit 1994 bietet M. Hauer ein umfassendes Produkt an, das INFORMATION CENTER, das u.a. Elemente der Bibliotheksverwaltung, der Pressedokumentation, der Recherche, der Adreßverwaltung und des Publizierens miteinander verbindet. Durch den aktuellen Umstieg der Basis-Software, Lotus, auf die neue IBM-Suchmaschine GTR hat eine Betrachtung von INFORMATION CENTER besondere Relevanz, erreichen wir doch nunmehr einen Bereich, der von Informatikern und Beratern mit 'Knowledge Management' umschrieben wird. Damit wäre INFORMATION CENTER das erste deutsche Knowledge Management-Produkt auf einer umfassenden informationswissenschaftlichen Basis. Wird es einem solchen Anspruch gerecht?
  3. Stock, W.G.: Informational cities : analysis and construction of cities in the knowledge society (2011) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Informational cities are prototypical cities of the knowledge society. If they are informational world cities, they are new centers of power. According to Manuel Castells (1989), in those cities space of flows (flows of money, power, and information) tend to override space of places. Information and communication technology infrastructures, cognitive infrastructures (as groundwork of knowledge cities and creative cities), and city-level knowledge management are of great importance. Digital libraries provide access to the global explicit knowledge. The informational city consists of creative clusters and spaces for personal contacts to stimulate sharing of implicit information. In such cities, we can observe job polarization in favor of well-trained employees. The corporate structure of informational cities is made up of financial services, knowledge-intensive high-tech industrial enterprises, companies of the information economy, and further creative and knowledge-intensive service enterprises. Weak location factors are facilities for culture, recreational activities, and consumption. Political willingness to create an informational city and e-governance activities are crucial aspects for the development of such cities. This conceptual article frames indicators which are able to mark the degree of "informativeness" of a city. Finally, based upon findings of network economy, we try to explain why certain cities master the transition to informational cities and others (lagging to relative insignificance) do not. The article connects findings of information science and of urbanistics and urban planning.
    Date
    3. 7.2011 19:22:49
  4. Linde, F.; Stock, W.G.: Information markets : a strategic guideline for the i-commerce (2011) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Information Markets is a compendium of the i-commerce, the commerce with digital information, content as well as software. Information Markets is a comprehensive overview of the state of the art of economic and information science endeavors on the markets of digital information. It provides a strategic guideline for information providers how to analyse their market environment and how to develop possible strategic actions. It is a book for information professionals, both for students of LIS (Library and Information Science), CIS (Computer and Information Science) or Information Management curricula and for practitioners as well as managers in these fields.
    LCSH
    Information technology / Management
    Knowledge management
    Subject
    Information technology / Management
    Knowledge management
  5. Stock, W.G.: ¬Der Ort der Bibliotheken und Informationszentren in der Informationsgesellschaft (1995) 0.03
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    Theme
    Information Resources Management
  6. Stock, W.G.: Wissenschaftsinformatik : Fundierung, Gegenstand und Methoden (1980) 0.02
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    Source
    Ratio. 22(1980), S.155-164
  7. Stock, M.; Stock, W.G.: Recherchieren im Internet (2004) 0.02
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    Date
    27.11.2005 18:04:22
  8. Stock, W.G.: Informationswirtschaft : Management externen Wissens (2000) 0.02
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    Theme
    Information Resources Management
  9. Stock, W.G.: Endnutzersystem für internationale Geschäftsinformationen (1998) 0.02
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    Source
    Password. 1998, H.10, S.22-28
  10. Stock, W.G.; Stock, M.: Handbook of information science : a comprehensive handbook (2013) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Dealing with information is one of the vital skills in the 21st century. It takes a fair degree of information savvy to create, represent and supply information as well as to search for and retrieve relevant knowledge. How does information (documents, pieces of knowledge) have to be organized in order to be retrievable? What role does metadata play? What are search engines on the Web, or in corporate intranets, and how do they work? How must one deal with natural language processing and tools of knowledge organization, such as thesauri, classification systems, and ontologies? How useful is social tagging? How valuable are intellectually created abstracts and automatically prepared extracts? Which empirical methods allow for user research and which for the evaluation of information systems? This Handbook is a basic work of information science, providing a comprehensive overview of the current state of information retrieval and knowledge representation. It addresses readers from all professions and scientific disciplines, but particularly scholars, practitioners and students of Information Science, Library Science, Computer Science, Information Management, and Knowledge Management. This Handbook is a suitable reference work for Public and Academic Libraries.
  11. Garfield, E.; Stock, W.G.: Citation Consciousness : Interview with Eugene Garfiels, chairman emeritus of ISI; Philadelphia (2002) 0.01
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    Source
    Password. 2002, H.6, S.22-25
  12. Bredemeier, W.; Stock, W.G.: Informationskompetenz europäischer Volkswirtschaften (2000) 0.01
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    Theme
    Information Resources Management
  13. Bredemeier, W.; Stock, M.; Stock, W.G.: ¬Die Branche elektronischer Geschäftsinformationen in Deutschland 2000/2001 (2001) 0.01
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    Theme
    Information Resources Management
  14. Stock, W.G.: ¬Ein allgemeiner Bibliotheksindex (1998) 0.01
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    Abstract
    A general library index, produced as a series over years, would describe performance in the whole national system, showing increases and decreases compared with previous years. The index should cover input, processing and output and be modelled on the consumer price index. This will reflect service quality and quantity and users' reactions
  15. Linde, F.; Stock, W.G.: Informationsmarkt : Informationen im I-Commerce anbieten und nachfragen (2011) 0.01
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    Date
    23. 9.2010 11:15:22
  16. Stock, W.G.: Information Retrieval : Informationen suchen und finden (2007) 0.01
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    Classification
    ST 270 Informatik / Monographien / Software und -entwicklung / Datenbanken, Datenbanksysteme, Data base management, Informationssysteme
    RVK
    ST 270 Informatik / Monographien / Software und -entwicklung / Datenbanken, Datenbanksysteme, Data base management, Informationssysteme
  17. Stock, W.G.: Elektronische Informationsdienstleistungen und ihre Bedeutung für Wirtschaft und Wissenschaft (1995) 0.01
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    Theme
    Information Resources Management
  18. Stock, W.G.; Weber, S.: Facets of informetrics : Preface (2006) 0.01
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    Abstract
    According to Jean M. Tague-Sutcliffe "informetrics" is "the study of the quantitative aspects of information in any form, not just records or bibliographies, and in any social group, not just scientists" (Tague-Sutcliffe, 1992, 1). Leo Egghe also defines "informetrics" in a very broad sense. "(W)e will use the term' informetrics' as the broad term comprising all-metrics studies related to information science, including bibliometrics (bibliographies, libraries,...), scientometrics (science policy, citation analysis, research evaluation,...), webometrics (metrics of the web, the Internet or other social networks such as citation or collaboration networks), ..." (Egghe, 2005b,1311). According to Concepcion S. Wilson "informetrics" is "the quantitative study of collections of moderatesized units of potentially informative text, directed to the scientific understanding of information processes at the social level" (Wilson, 1999, 211). We should add to Wilson's units of text also digital collections of images, videos, spoken documents and music. Dietmar Wolfram divides "informetrics" into two aspects, "system-based characteristics that arise from the documentary content of IR systems and how they are indexed, and usage-based characteristics that arise how users interact with system content and the system interfaces that provide access to the content" (Wolfram, 2003, 6). We would like to follow Tague-Sutcliffe, Egghe, Wilson and Wolfram (and others, for example Björneborn & Ingwersen, 2004) and call this broad research of empirical information science "informetrics". Informetrics includes therefore all quantitative studies in information science. If a scientist performs scientific investigations empirically, e.g. on information users' behavior, on scientific impact of academic journals, on the development of the patent application activity of a company, on links of Web pages, on the temporal distribution of blog postings discussing a given topic, on availability, recall and precision of retrieval systems, on usability of Web sites, and so on, he or she contributes to informetrics. We see three subject areas in information science in which such quantitative research takes place, - information users and information usage, - evaluation of information systems, - information itself, Following Wolfram's article, we divide his system-based characteristics into the "information itself "-category and the "information system"-category. Figure 1 is a simplistic graph of subjects and research areas of informetrics as an empirical information science.
  19. Schumann, L.; Stock, W.G.: ¬Ein umfassendes ganzheitliches Modell für Evaluation und Akzeptanzanalysen von Informationsdiensten : Das Information Service Evaluation (ISE) Modell (2014) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 9.2014 18:56:46
  20. Stock, M.; Stock, W.G.: Intellectual property information : A comparative analysis of main information providers (2006) 0.01
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    Abstract
    After modeling expert user needs with regard to intellectual property information, we analyze and compare the main providers in this specific information area (Thomson DIALOG, Esp@cenet by the European Patent Office, Questel-Orbit, and STN International) in terms of system content and system functionality. The key question is whether the main providers are able to satisfy these expert user needs. For patent information, some special retrieval features such as chemical structure search (including Markush search), patent family references and citations search, biosequence search, and basic informetric functionality such as ranking, mapping, and visualization of information flows are realized. Considering the results of information science research, the practice of patent information shows unexhausted improvement opportunities (e.g., the application of bibliographic patent coupling and co-patent-citation for mapping patents, patent assignees, and technology specialties). For trademark search, users need multiple truncated search (realized) as well as phonetic search and image retrieval (not realized yet).

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  • d 19
  • e 7

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