Faceted Classification and Logical Division in Information Retrieval
Mills, Jack
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/1687
Description
Title
Faceted Classification and Logical Division in Information Retrieval
Author(s)
Mills, Jack
Issue Date
2004
Keyword(s)
Philosophy of information
Library science --Philosophy
Information science --Philosophy
Abstract
The main object of the paper is to demonstrate in detail the role of
classification in information retrieval (IR) and the design of classificatory
structures by the application of logical division to all forms of the content
of records, subject and imaginative. The natural product of such division
is a faceted classification. The latter is seen not as a particular kind of library
classification but the only viable form enabling the locating and relating
of information to be optimally predictable. A detailed exposition of
the practical steps in facet analysis is given, drawing on the experience of
the new Bliss Classification (BC2). The continued existence of the library
as a highly organized information store is assumed. But, it is argued, it must
acknowledge the relevance of the revolution in library classification that has
taken place. It considers also how alphabetically arranged subject indexes
may utilize controlled use of categorical (generically inclusive) and syntactic
relations to produce similarly predictable locating and relating systems
for IR.
Publisher
Graduate School of Library and Information Science. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
ISSN
0024-2594
Type of Resource
text
Language
en
Permalink
http://hdl.handle.net/2142/1687
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