User:Silviolorusso/thematic2/classification: Difference between revisions

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“The Atlas, wrote Warburg, was ‘a ghost story for adults’: it invents a kind of phantomic science of the image, a ghost dance in which the most resonant gestures and expressions its creator had discovered in the course of his career return with a spooky insistence, suddenly cast into wholly new relationships….
“The Atlas, wrote Warburg, was ‘a ghost story for adults’: it invents a kind of phantomic science of the image, a ghost dance in which the most resonant gestures and expressions its creator had discovered in the course of his career return with a spooky insistence, suddenly cast into wholly new relationships….


Five laws of library science by S. R. Ranganathan in 1931:
# Books are for use.
# Every reader his [or her] book.
# Every book its reader.
# Save the time of the reader.
# The library is a growing organism.


In 2004, librarian Alireza Noruzi recommended applying Ranganathan's laws to the Web in his paper, "Application of Ranganathan's Laws to the Web":
# Web resources are for use.
# Every user has his or her web resource.
# Every web resource its user.
# Save the time of the user.
# The Web is a growing organism.[3]


Bookmarks


== Bookmarks ==


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faceted_classification
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faceted_classification
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folksonomy
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folksonomy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content-based_image_retrieval
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content-based_image_retrieval
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_laws_of_library_science
* http://www.manystuff.org/?p=15401

Latest revision as of 18:37, 28 January 2012

Classification

Aim: understanding classification systems, then analyzing them or applying them to contents in order to highlight features, create narratives, develop meaning.

Notes

library classification: generally hierarchical tree structure

Folksonomy: collaboratively creating and managing tags to annotate and categorize content

Tag Clouds

classes and categories

document classification:

  • content based
  • request based

Content-based image retrieval: is the application of computer vision techniques to the image retrieval problem, that is, the problem of searching for digital images in large databases.

query/answer

http://demo.imgseek.net/#similar-0 (demo search image)

Aby Warburg’s Mnemosyne-Atlas

“The Atlas, wrote Warburg, was ‘a ghost story for adults’: it invents a kind of phantomic science of the image, a ghost dance in which the most resonant gestures and expressions its creator had discovered in the course of his career return with a spooky insistence, suddenly cast into wholly new relationships….

Five laws of library science by S. R. Ranganathan in 1931:

  1. Books are for use.
  2. Every reader his [or her] book.
  3. Every book its reader.
  4. Save the time of the reader.
  5. The library is a growing organism.

In 2004, librarian Alireza Noruzi recommended applying Ranganathan's laws to the Web in his paper, "Application of Ranganathan's Laws to the Web":

  1. Web resources are for use.
  2. Every user has his or her web resource.
  3. Every web resource its user.
  4. Save the time of the user.
  5. The Web is a growing organism.[3]

Bookmarks

Bookmarks