Blind Alleys, Dead Ends, and Mazes

By |June 9th, 2014|Access Insights, Featured, Taxonomy|Comments Off on Blind Alleys, Dead Ends, and Mazes

Taxonomies can be displayed in a variety of ways. One of the display types that we occasionally see is known as the flat format display. It’s described in the main U.S. standard for controlled vocabularies, ANSI/NISO Z39.19 (Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and Management of Monolingual Controlled Vocabularies, published by the National Information Standards Organization.

NIOSH’s Office of Mine Safety and Health Research Implements Taxonomy-based Navigation

By |June 2nd, 2014|Access Insights, News, Taxonomy|Comments Off on NIOSH’s Office of Mine Safety and Health Research Implements Taxonomy-based Navigation

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health’s (NIOSH) Office of Mine Safety and Health Research (OMSHR) has implemented a taxonomy-based navigation tool on their website -- called “Site Browser” -- that allows researchers and other users to browse content tagged with subject terms from their taxonomy.

Putting Human Intelligence To Work To Enhance the Value of Information Assets

By |May 26th, 2014|Access Insights, Featured, Taxonomy|Comments Off on Putting Human Intelligence To Work To Enhance the Value of Information Assets

Semantic enhancement extends beyond journal article indexing, though the ability of users to easily find all the relevant articles (your assets) when searching still […]

Taxonomist Position Open

By |May 20th, 2014|News, Taxonomy|Comments Off on Taxonomist Position Open

We are always excited to share with our readers career opportunities in the world of taxonomy, metadata, and semantic technology. Even if you aren’t in the market for a career move, it is good to stay on top of what is available and how the fields are changing.

The Size of Your Thesaurus

By |May 19th, 2014|Access Insights, Featured, Taxonomy|Comments Off on The Size of Your Thesaurus

During the initial stages of discussing a new taxonomy project, I am frequently asked questions like: How granular does my taxonomy need to be? How many levels deep should the vocabulary go? And especially: How many terms should my thesaurus have? The answer is—of course—it depends.

Access Innovations, Inc. Announces Release of the Smart Submit Extension Module to Data Harmony Version 3.9

By |May 12th, 2014|Access Insights, Featured, Taxonomy|Comments Off on Access Innovations, Inc. Announces Release of the Smart Submit Extension Module to Data Harmony Version 3.9

Access Innovations, Inc. announces the Author Submit extension module as part of their Data Harmony Version 3.9 release. Author Submit is a Data Harmony application for integration of author-selected subject metadata information into a publishing workflow during the paper submissions or upload process. Author Submit facilitates the addition of taxonomy terms by the author. With Author Submit, each author provides subject metadata from the publisher taxonomy to accompany the item they are submitting. During the submission process, Data Harmony’s M.A.I. core application suggests subject terms based on a controlled vocabulary, and the author chooses appropriate terms to describe the content of their document, thus enabling early categorization and selection of peer reviewers and support for trend analysis.

Identifying the Contributors

By |May 6th, 2014|Access Insights, indexing, News, Taxonomy|Comments Off on Identifying the Contributors

Collaboration is a key component of research. Original research papers with a single author are — particularly in the life sciences — a vanishing breed. This makes it difficult to identify author contributions and acknowledgements, as well as to mine any data from the unstructured information.

Hold the Mayo! A study in ambiguity

By |May 5th, 2014|Access Insights, Featured, Taxonomy, Term lists|Comments Off on Hold the Mayo! A study in ambiguity

When we (at least those of us in Greater Mexico) hear of or read about Cinco de Mayo there is no question in our minds that “Mayo” refers to the month of May. The preceding “Cinco de” (Spanish for “Fifth of”) pretty much clinches it. Of course, if the overall content is in Spanish, there might still might be some ambiguity about whether it is the holiday that is being referred to, or simply a date that happens to be the one after the fourth of May. (As in “Hey, what day do we get off work?” “The fourth of July, I think.”)