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Indexing and Abstracting in Theory and Practice

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Award-winning author F.W. Lancaster has revised his widely used text, Indexing and Abstracting in Theory and Practice, to address growing complexities in the field. New chapters in the second edition feature multimedia sources and indexing within the Internet; chapters on text searching, automatic processing methods, and the future of indexing and abstracting are substantially revised. The first nine chapters, covering basic principles and theories, are updated and the section of practical exercises is modified by use of the current edition of UNBIS Thesaurus. Researchers from a wide range of disciplines are now involved in content analysis activities that formerly were the sole concern of members of the library and information science field. At the same time, indexing and abstracting have grown in interest within other major disciplines, such as medicine. As a result, relevant articles have become increasingly scattered throughout varied literatures, and a wide range of technologies such as linguistics, computer science, artificial intelligence, and pattern recognition now impinge upon the subject matter of this book, providing the impetus for updating a text noted for both its practicality and attention to theoretical underpinnings. As with the first edition, Indexing and Abstracting in Theory and Practice remains primarily a text for teaching the subject. However, it also holds value for managers of information services and others concerned with indexing, abstracting, and all related issues of content analysis. Chapters focus on indexing principles, indexing practice, consistency and quality of indexing, the types and functions of abstracts, writing and evaluating the abstract, enhancing indexing, natural language in information retrieval, automated indexing and abstracting, indexing of multimedia sources, indexing within the Internet, and the future of indexing and abstracting services. The section of exercises provides concrete illustrations of the text's major points.

Hardcover

First published February 1, 1991

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F.W. Lancaster

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Natalie.
63 reviews15 followers
September 18, 2008
Have you ever pondered the most exhaustive yet specific route to creating an index card including mathematical permutations to figure subject layout? If so, this book may be for you. Even though we live in a wired society that allows for FRBR catalogs and long-tail data, why not take a side trip down the dull and outdated halls of 1970s library science? 1 star because I could not give zero.
Profile Image for Rita.
145 reviews6 followers
November 18, 2016
Have to read this for a class. It is slightly more interesting than the instructor's written lectures, but still very dry. The information is great. I would just need to hook myself up to a caffeine i.v. to be able to ever finish the book.
Profile Image for R..
52 reviews20 followers
January 12, 2016
Adding this book to my list was a cry for help and an act of masochism without the pleasure.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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