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10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Information Structures and Metadata University of California, Berkeley School of Information Management.

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Presentation on theme: "10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Information Structures and Metadata University of California, Berkeley School of Information Management."— Presentation transcript:

1 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Information Structures and Metadata University of California, Berkeley School of Information Management and Systems SIMS 202: Information Organization and Retrieval

2 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Review The Course Information Hierarchy Volume of information and growth of the Internet

3 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Two Main Themes Information Organization and Design Information Retrieval and the Search Process

4 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Course Schedule Organization –Overview –Metadata and Markup –Controlled Vocabularies, Classification, Thesauri –Information Design Thesaurus Design Database Design Retrieval –The Search Process –Content Analysis Tokenization, Zipf’s Law, Lexical Associations –IR Implementation –Term weighting and document ranking Vector space model Probabilistic model –User Interfaces Overviews, query specification, providing context, relevance feedback

5 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Information Hierarchy Wisdom Knowledge Information Data

6 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Totals Stored Per Year Medium Type of content Terabytes/Year Terabytes/Year Upper Bound Lower Bound Paper Books 8 7 Newspapers 25 20 Periodicals 12 12 Office documents 312 312 SUBTOTAL 357 351 Film Photographs 410,000 100,000 Cinema 16 16 X-Rays 12,000 12,000 SUBTOTAL 422,000 112,016 Optical Music CDs 58 40 Data CDs 3 3 DVDs 22 22 SUBTOTAL 83 65 Magnetic Camcorder 300,000 300,000 Disk drives 2,555,000 1,000,20 SUBTOTAL 2,855,000 1,300,200 TOTAL 3,277,440 1,412,632

7 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Projected Voice and Data Traffic Gb/s Source: America's Network, May 15, 1998

8 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Internet Hosts (000s) 1989-2006 Source: Vint Cerf

9 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Information Overload “The greatest problem of today is how to teach people to ignore the irrelevant, how to refuse to know things, before they are suffocated. For too many facts are as bad as none at all.” (W.H. Auden)

10 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Today Organization of Information Information Life Cycle (review) Introduction to structured information (SGML/XML) Metadata and the Dublin Core

11 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Organization of Information Is there a basic human need to put things into some sort of order? –Much of natural language concerns categories of things rather than individual things (more on this next week) –Why do we organize things and information? Why do spoons go in THAT drawer in the kitchen and not in a can in the garage? Why do your favorite books go on one shelf and not-so-favorite on another?

12 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Why Organize Information? The main reason –So that you can find things more effectively I.e., Effective retrieval is predicated on some sort of organization applied to information resources Historically there have been many institutions and tools devoted to information organization –Libraries –Museums –Archives –Indexes and catalogs, dictionaries, Phone books, etc.

13 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval To organize is to (1) furnish with organs, make organic, make into living tissue, become organic; (2) form into an organic whole; give orderly structure to; frame and put into working order; make arrangements for. Knowledge is knowing, familiarity gained by experience; person’s range of information; a theoretical or practical understanding of; the sum of what is known. To retrieve is to (1) recover by investigation or effort of memory, restore to knowledge or recall to mind; regain possession of; (2) rescue from a bad state, revive, repair, set right. Information is (1) informing, telling; thing told, knowledge, items of knowledge, news. The Oxford English Dictionary

14 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval What is Information Organization? Identifying the existence of all types of information-bearing entities as they are made available Identifying the works contained within those information-bearing entities or as parts of them Systematically pulling together these information- bearing entities into collections in libraries, archives, museums, Internet communications files and other such depositories. From Taylor, Chap. 1

15 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval What is Information Organization? Producing lists of these information-bearing entities prepared according to standard rules for citation Providing name, title, subject and other useful access to these information-bearing entities Providing the means of locating each information-bearing entity or a copy of it

16 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Organizating Information Libraries Archives Museums and Galleries Internet Corporate and Office environments

17 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Information Life Cycle Creation UtilizationSearching Active Inactive Semi-Active Retention/ Mining Disposition Discard Using Creating Authoring Modifying Organizing Indexing Storing Retrieval Distribution Networking Accessing Filtering

18 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Authoring/Modifying Converting Data+Information+Knowledge to New Information. Creating information from observation, thought. Editing and Publication. Gatekeeping

19 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Organizing/Indexing Collecting and Integrating information. Affects Data, Information and Metadata. “Metadata” Describes data and information. –More on this later. Organizing Information. –Types of organization? Indexing

20 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Storing/Retrieving Information Storage –How and Where is Information stored? Retrieving Information. –How is information recovered from storage –How to find needed information –Linked with Accessing/Filtering stage

21 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Distribution/Networking Transmission of information –How is information transmitted? Networks vs Broadcast.

22 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Accessing/Filtering Using the organization created in the O/I stage to: –Select desired (or relevant) information –Locate that information –Retrieve the information from its storage location (often via a network)

23 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Using/Creating Using Information. Transformation of Information to Knowledge. Knowledge to New Data and New Information.

24 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Information Life Cycle Scenarios Information Life Cycle in the Arts Information Life Cycle of Business Records Information Life Cycle in Health Information Systems

25 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Key issues in this course How to describe information resources or information-bearing objects in ways so that they may be effectively used by those who need to use them. –Organizing How to find the appropriate information resources or information-bearing objects for someone’s (or your own) needs. –Retrieving

26 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Key Issues Creation UtilizationSearching Active Inactive Semi-Active Retention/ Mining Disposition Discard Using Creating Authoring Modifying Organizing Indexing Storing Retrieval Distribution Networking Accessing Filtering

27 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Structure of an IR System Interest profiles & Queries Documents & data Rules of the game = Rules for subject indexing + Thesaurus (which consists of Lead-In Vocabulary and Indexing Language Storage Line Potentially Relevant Documents Comparison/ Matching Store1: Profiles/ Search requests Store2: Document representations Indexing (Descriptive and Subject) Formulating query in terms of descriptors Storage of profiles Storage of Documents Information Storage and Retrieval System

28 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Metadata Metadata is: – “data about data” (term usage database systems) –Information about Information –Structures and Languages for the Description of Information Resources and their elements (components or features) –“Metadata is information on the organization of the data, the various data domains, and the relationship between them” (Baeza-Yates p. 142)

29 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Types of Metadata Element names. Element description. Element representation. Element coding. Element semantics. Element classification.

30 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval How can you describe an information-bearing object?

31 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Dublin Core Simple metadata for describing internet resources. For “Document-Like Objects” 15 Elements.

32 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Dublin Core Elements Title Creator Subject Description Publisher Other Contributors Date Resource Type Format Resource Identifier Source Language Relation Coverage Rights Management

33 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Title Label: TITLE The name given to the resource by the CREATOR or PUBLISHER.

34 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Author or Creator Label: CREATOR The person(s) or organization(s) primarily responsible for the intellectual content of the resource. For example, authors in the case of written documents, artists, photographers, or illustrators in the case of visual resources.

35 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Subject and Keywords Label: SUBJECT The topic of the resource, or keywords or phrases that describe the subject or content of the resource. The intent of the specification of this element is to promote the use of controlled vocabularies and keywords. This element might well include scheme-qualified classification data (for example, Library of Congress Classification Numbers or Dewey Decimal numbers) or scheme-qualified controlled vocabularies (such as MEdical Subject Headings or Art and Architecture Thesaurus descriptors) as well.

36 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Description Label: DESCRIPTION A textual description of the content of the resource, including abstracts in the case of document-like objects or content descriptions in the case of visual resources. Future metadata collections might well include computational content description (spectral analysis of a visual resource, for example) that may not be embeddable in current network systems. In such a case this field might contain a link to such a description rather than the description itself.

37 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Publisher Label: PUBLISHER The entity responsible for making the resource available in its present form, such as a publisher, a university department, or a corporate entity. The intent of specifying this field is to identify the entity that provides access to the resource.

38 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Other Contributors Label: CONTRIBUTORS Person(s) or organization(s) in addition to those specified in the CREATOR element who have made significant intellectual contributions to the resource but whose contribution is secondary to the individuals or entities specified in the CREATOR element (for example, editors, transcribers, illustrators, and convenors).

39 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Date Label: DATE The date the resource was made available in its present form. The recommended best practice is an 8 digit number in the form YYYYMMDD as defined by ANSI X3.30-1985. In this scheme, the date element for the day this is written would be 19961203, or December 3, 1996. Many other schema are possible, but if used, they should be identified in an unambiguous manner.

40 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Resource Type Label: TYPE The category of the resource, such as home page, novel, poem, working paper, preprint, technical report, essay, dictionary. It is expected that RESOURCE TYPE will be chosen from an enumerated list of types. A preliminary set of such types can be found at the following URL: http://www.roads.lut.ac.uk/Metadata/DC-ObjectTypes.html

41 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Format Label: FORMAT The data representation of the resource, such as text/html, ASCII, Postscript file, executable application, or JPEG image. The intent of specifying this element is to provide information necessary to allow people or machines to make decisions about the usability of the encoded data (what hardware and software might be required to display or execute it, for example). As with RESOURCE TYPE, FORMAT will be assigned from enumerated lists such as registered Internet Media Types (MIME types). In principal, formats can include physical media such as books, serials, or other non-electronic media.

42 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Resource Identifier Label: IDENTIFIER String or number used to uniquely identify the resource. Examples for networked resources include URLs and URNs (when implemented). Other globally-unique identifiers,such as International Standard Book Numbers (ISBN) or other formal names would also be candidates for this element.

43 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Source Label: SOURCE The work, either print or electronic, from which this resource is derived, if applicable. For example, an html encoding of a Shakespearean sonnet might identify the paper version of the sonnet from which the electronic version was transcribed.

44 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Language Label: LANGUAGE Language(s) of the intellectual content of the resource. Where practical, the content of this field should coincide with the Z39.53 three character codes for written languages. See: http://www.sil.org/sgml/nisoLang3-1994.html

45 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Relation Label: RELATION Relationship to other resources. The intent of specifying this element is to provide a means to express relationships among resources that have formal relationships to others, but exist as discrete resources themselves. For example, images in a document, chapters in a book, or items in a collection. A formal specification of RELATION is currently under development. Users and developers should understand that use of this element should be currently considered experimental.

46 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Coverage Label: COVERAGE The spatial locations and temporal duration characteristic of the resource. Formal specification of COVERAGE is currently under development. Users and developers should understand that use of this element should be currently considered experimental.

47 10/24/2000Information Organization and Retrieval Rights Management Label: RIGHTS The content of this element is intended to be a link (a URL or other suitable URI as appropriate) to a copyright notice, a rights-management statement, or perhaps a server that would provide such information in a dynamic way. The intent of specifying this field is to allow providers a means to associate terms and conditions or copyright statements with a resource or collection of resources. No assumptions should be made by users if such a field is empty or not present.


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