Title of article :
Catalogers’ Common Ground and Shared Knowledge
Author/Authors :
Alenka S? auperl، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The problem of multiple interpretations of meaning in
the indexing process has been mostly avoided by information
scientists. Among the few who have addressed
this question are Clare Beghtol and Jens Erik Mai. Their
findings and findings of other researchers in the area of
information science, social psychology, and psycholinguistics
indicate that the source of the problem might lie
in the background and culture of each indexer or cataloger.
Are the catalogers aware of the problem? A general
model of the indexing process was developed from
observations and interviews of 12 catalogers in three
American academic libraries. The model is illustrated
with a hypothetical cataloger’s process. The study with
catalogers revealed that catalogers are aware of the
author’s, the user’s, and their own meaning, but do not
try to accommodate them all. On the other hand, they
make every effort to build common ground with catalog
users by studying documents related to the document
being cataloged, and by considering catalog records
and subject headings related to the subject identified in
the document being cataloged. They try to build common
ground with other catalogers by using cataloging
tools and by inferring unstated rules of cataloging from
examples in the catalogs.
Journal title :
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Journal title :
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology