Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval?

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval? / Hjørland, Birger.

In: Knowledge Organization, Vol. 43, No. 3, 18.04.2016, p. 145-159.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hjørland, B 2016, 'Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval?', Knowledge Organization, vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 145-159.

APA

Hjørland, B. (2016). Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval? Knowledge Organization, 43(3), 145-159.

Vancouver

Hjørland B. Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval? Knowledge Organization. 2016 Apr 18;43(3):145-159.

Author

Hjørland, Birger. / Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval?. In: Knowledge Organization. 2016 ; Vol. 43, No. 3. pp. 145-159.

Bibtex

@article{8d818d8d07cb46c8bc94bb362c43a437,
title = "Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval?",
abstract = "The thesaurus has been - and still is - very important in the self-images of library and information professionals and scientists. However, as indicated by the recent debate in the ISKO UK (2015) the role of the thesaurus in modern information retrieval seemingly has shrunk from what it once was (although it won the day in the final voting of this debate). Why is this the case? What is the future prospect for thesauri?The three main points of this paper are: (1) Any knowledge organization system (KOS) is today threatened by Google-like systems, and it is therefore important to consider if there still is a need for knowledge organization (KO) in the traditional sense. (2) A thesaurus is a somewhat reduced form of KOS compared to, for example, an ontology, and its {"}bundling{"} and restricted number of semantic relations has never been justified theoretically or empirically. Which semantic relations are most fruitful is thus an open question. (3) A thesaurus is today mostly considered a standardized tool but different domains may need different kinds of KOS including different sets of relations between terms. It is urgent that progress in information science and KOS is evaluated from proper theoretical perspectives. A specific KOS is not a “perfect language” (Eco, 1995) that is able to remove the ambiguity of natural language. Much ambiguity should be understood as the battle between many “voices” (Bakhtin, 1981) or “paradigms” (Kuhn, 1962). In this perspective, a specific KOS, e.g. a thesaurus, is just one {"}voice{"} among many voices, and that voice has to demonstrate its authority and utility.",
author = "Birger Hj{\o}rland",
year = "2016",
month = apr,
day = "18",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "145--159",
journal = "Knowledge Organization",
issn = "0943-7444",
publisher = "Ergon-Verlag",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Does the traditional thesaurus have a place in modern information retrieval?

AU - Hjørland, Birger

PY - 2016/4/18

Y1 - 2016/4/18

N2 - The thesaurus has been - and still is - very important in the self-images of library and information professionals and scientists. However, as indicated by the recent debate in the ISKO UK (2015) the role of the thesaurus in modern information retrieval seemingly has shrunk from what it once was (although it won the day in the final voting of this debate). Why is this the case? What is the future prospect for thesauri?The three main points of this paper are: (1) Any knowledge organization system (KOS) is today threatened by Google-like systems, and it is therefore important to consider if there still is a need for knowledge organization (KO) in the traditional sense. (2) A thesaurus is a somewhat reduced form of KOS compared to, for example, an ontology, and its "bundling" and restricted number of semantic relations has never been justified theoretically or empirically. Which semantic relations are most fruitful is thus an open question. (3) A thesaurus is today mostly considered a standardized tool but different domains may need different kinds of KOS including different sets of relations between terms. It is urgent that progress in information science and KOS is evaluated from proper theoretical perspectives. A specific KOS is not a “perfect language” (Eco, 1995) that is able to remove the ambiguity of natural language. Much ambiguity should be understood as the battle between many “voices” (Bakhtin, 1981) or “paradigms” (Kuhn, 1962). In this perspective, a specific KOS, e.g. a thesaurus, is just one "voice" among many voices, and that voice has to demonstrate its authority and utility.

AB - The thesaurus has been - and still is - very important in the self-images of library and information professionals and scientists. However, as indicated by the recent debate in the ISKO UK (2015) the role of the thesaurus in modern information retrieval seemingly has shrunk from what it once was (although it won the day in the final voting of this debate). Why is this the case? What is the future prospect for thesauri?The three main points of this paper are: (1) Any knowledge organization system (KOS) is today threatened by Google-like systems, and it is therefore important to consider if there still is a need for knowledge organization (KO) in the traditional sense. (2) A thesaurus is a somewhat reduced form of KOS compared to, for example, an ontology, and its "bundling" and restricted number of semantic relations has never been justified theoretically or empirically. Which semantic relations are most fruitful is thus an open question. (3) A thesaurus is today mostly considered a standardized tool but different domains may need different kinds of KOS including different sets of relations between terms. It is urgent that progress in information science and KOS is evaluated from proper theoretical perspectives. A specific KOS is not a “perfect language” (Eco, 1995) that is able to remove the ambiguity of natural language. Much ambiguity should be understood as the battle between many “voices” (Bakhtin, 1981) or “paradigms” (Kuhn, 1962). In this perspective, a specific KOS, e.g. a thesaurus, is just one "voice" among many voices, and that voice has to demonstrate its authority and utility.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 43

SP - 145

EP - 159

JO - Knowledge Organization

JF - Knowledge Organization

SN - 0943-7444

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 143011887