Expert answer:Examine citations or references taken from one iss

Answer & Explanation:this is the question:Short Paper #2. Examine citations or references taken from one issue of Journal of American Society for Information Science & Technology (JASIS&T). Avoid choosing any special issues of JASIS&T because they would normally focus on one topic and thus lack the subject diversity you look for. Identify and discuss the subject distribution of the cited publications (i.e., the citations listed at the end of each paper or article) after placing each into a category of your choosing. (This is a form of “Content Analysis,” a Knowledge Organization research technique that will be discussed in a preceding class lecture.) These categories will ultimately end up representing a discipline or sub-area commonly seen today in Information Studies, and will likely extend beyond the four sub-areas this seminar covers. You may use a table to present your result of the citation analysis, but don’t list all the citations you analyzed. Based on your citation analysis and our coverage of this seminar so far, discuss what Information Studies appears to encompass, and explain why you think this might beMy file . 1 AHMED_Tax_Ont_1.docx this is the journal what i used :https://www.dropbox.com/s/uonq0gip3rlbn3t/Doc1.docx?dl=0this is my classmate did with different journal    Geeta assignment Topics Academic.docx     (ONLY SAMPLE FOR YOU THIS WILL  TO DO MY WORK)another classmate did with also different journal25 BAHRI_Tax_Ont_1.docx                 (ALSO ONLY SAMPLE FOR YOU THIS WILL  TO DO MY WORK)he wants to do the column in the middle and write one page about what we learned and how we did that and conclusion. DEADLINE 2 DAYS. see all files and let me know if you can do it.see the attachment what i did and in the end of the page see the professor notemy first file i send by mane is Ahmed. I sent you my friends files to see it as example for you .i sent you my files and i sent you the link of my journal so each student have own topic and have own journal but the same digram and the same thing: Taxonomy and ontology and something in the middle I don’t know what i have to do thats why i told you read all files and check then let me know if you can do it
1_ahmed_tax_ont_1.docx

geeta_assignment_topics_academic.docx

25_bahri_tax_ont_1.docx

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Alzahrani, Ahmed
Professor: Jank
DIS 801 : Information Access and System
Short Paper 2
Taxonomy
Ontology
[these are all appropriate for a
taxonomy; mutually exclusive and
collectively exhaustive; nice]
[the ontology here is also appropriate;
these things are contextual, and apply
primarily to the taxonomic heading
under which they occur – (see note at
end)]
Interactive Learning
Human Computer Interaction
Information Retrieval
Knowledge Organization
Information Seeking
Worldwide Web Study
Regulation























Virtual vs physical environment
Learning models
Hypermedia
Hypertext
Usability
User test
Modeling
Cognitive work analysis
Recall
Precision
Search queries
Information retrieval system
Automated
Semantic Web
Online catalog
Knowledge mapping
Taxonomy of WWW use
Thesaurus of ERIC
Information seeking
Searching
Interaction environment
Internet
Web searching behavior

U.S. government
Alzahrani, Ahmed
Professor: Jank
DIS 801 : Information Access and System
Short Paper 2
NOTE: The above is nicely done; see if you can “create” a second, in between column, that
could be an “in-between level” of taxonomy.
NOTE FOR EVERYONE:
BTW, there is no requirement or expectation of “levels” of taxonomy or ontology. As long as
there are at least two, then as many more as you want are still appropriate.
Topics
Scholarly
Academic/Scholarly Research
Area
(Subdisciplines
constituting the
majority of
terminology
occurrence)
Information Retrieval
Systems
Latent semantic indexing,
LSI scaling,
Descriptive statistics
Online Database
Vendors
Dialog,
Data Star,
EPIC
Keyword extraction,
User interface,
Natural language interface,
Semantic processing
Natural language queries,
Clarification dialog,
Lexical units,
Scope of negation,
Variable scope
Boolean queries,
Target query formalism,
Parsing,
Syntax
Negation
Query
Literature
(Terminology classes with
majority of word
occurrence)
Indexing
Natural Language
Linguistic Study
Prominent/Thematic
Terminology Usage
Orthography
Letters,
Punctuation marks,
Spelling
Information
Retrieval Systems
Indexing,
Text strings,
Query terms
Latent semantic indexing,
Intermediate literatures,
Potential discovery
literature
Literature-Based
Discoveries
Text analysis
Name: BahriHaciibrahimoglu
Class: Information Access and Systems – DIS801
Id: 100507879
Assignment 2: Ontology on the Library Journal[ Just FYI: There actually IS a publication called
“Library Journal” which is different from what we are using, which we call “JASIST”]
Date: Oct 29th 2015
Academic Discipline
Arts
Business
Engineering
Research Area – Sub-discipline
Fine Arts
Visual Arts
Management Information
Systems
Human Resources Processing
[I might just leave this as
“Human Resources”]
Non-Profit Organizational
Management
Educational and For-Profit
Management
[these last two here: I might
use one single category called
“Management” and then the
ontological entities could be
“non-profit,” “for-profit,”
“educational,” etc.]
Artificial Intelligence /
Machine Learning
[here, “machine learning”
could be an ontological entry
under“AI”]
Computer Science
Information Technology
Digital Signal Processing
Computer and Information
Security
[these 3 (above) are good,
but remember about
hierarchy; I might keep
certain things under
Thematic Terminology (Words
of occurrence)
Artistic creativity, drawing,
literature review
Technology based information
processing, industrial
engineering, infrastructure, and
Industry psychology, sectors
[all are good and useful here,
but I would include the
breakdowns in the second
column
 ]
Query, measurement,
information system design,
artificial intelligence,
information architecture,
measurement, relevance,
hardware, software, inventors,
domain Knowledge, system
knowledge, metadata, Visual
C++ Compiler
“Engineering,” but then
create a new taxonomy for
“Computer Science” and then
include “info tech” and
“digital signal” and “CIS” etc,
as separate categories under
that]
You have good entries here;
they are just so precisely
exhaustive that now you’ve
created more work for
yourself, ha!
Education
Epistemology
Human-Computer Interaction
HCI could be a category under
computer science, or under LIS
below
Humanities
K-12 Education
Undergraduate Education
Graduate Education
Special Education
Reasoning
Application Interface
Programming
Ergonomics
Modeling
Usability
X-User Interface Design
Anthropology
Governmental Organization
Media / Press
Philosophy
Law
Legal Case Study
Library Information Systems
Cataloging / Indexing/ Archiving
The Literal Resources
I wouldn’t say “systems” but
Library and Information Science
(LIS)
Starting to include a bit too
much here, and some of the
third column items are a little
too imprecise, such as
“contemporary databases,”
“mental models,” etc.
Remember: precision, precision,
and you can actually include a
long, detailed list –that’s
Cognitive effect, information
resource
Empiricism, rationalism,
historicism, pragmatism
Representation of a User
Problem, augmented seriation,
application program interface,
domain knowledge,
metatheory, paradigm,
information literacy, context
Socio and cultural component,
life world, interaction,
theoretical synthesis, cognitive
principle of relevance, models,
demographic factor, journalistic
reporting
Copyright Protector,
Bibliometric Records
Bibliometric retrieval, The
Relevance Theory,
Classification, Information
Seeking, Information behaviors,
Mental Model, Declarative
Knowledge, Information Field,
Librarianship, Contemporary
databases.
actually preferable to more
narrative discussion
Medicine
Treatment
The reality of daily life
This isn’t really ontological, as it
isn’t a “thing” as much as an
idea; try to think of tangible,
identifiable single things
Sciences
Biological Sciences
Geography
Life Sciences
Mathematics
Physics
Interdisciplinary Sciences
Sociology
Socio-Cultural Studies
Tasks
Descriptive Actions
The Principle Least Effort,
organizational behavior,
industry psychology,
geographical position systems
(GIS), maps, matrix, null
hypothesis, phenomenon,
digital signal processing, query,
equilibrium, finite state,
Conceptual Framework,
Manifestations of Relevance,
The Invisible Hand of Relevance,
Effects of Relevance, Notions of
Relevance, Human Intelligence,
User View Point, Demographic
Factor
Consider, Explore, Scan, Scroll,
Select, Type
You’re thinking correctly and doing some good intellectual exercise here; just remember,
though, that you really want to just focus on the actual artifact you have to work with – the
issue of JASIST that each of you have.
Do not fall into the trap of trying to “Represent all Knowledge” – the big challenge here is to
JUST describe the item at hand. So, if you don’t see that particular concept identified in the
document you are examining, then don’t include it. This is the kind of thinking that
distinguishes ontology building from thesaurus construction. The former is artifact-oriented;
the latter is human intellect oriented.

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