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Building Taxonomies Part 3. Alice Redmond-Neal Access Innovations, Inc . Enterprise Search Summit New York City, May 21, 2006. Build a taxonomy – simple steps. Get paper and pencil Sharpen pencil Define subject field Collect terms Organize terms Fill in gaps
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Building Taxonomies Part 3 Alice Redmond-Neal Access Innovations, Inc. Enterprise Search Summit New York City, May 21, 2006
Build a taxonomy – simple steps • Get paper and pencil • Sharpen pencil • Define subject field • Collect terms • Organize terms • Fill in gaps • Flesh out and interrelate terms You’re done!
Define subject field Sociology Psychology Education Law • Review representative collection of content • Determine: • Core areas • Peripheral topics • Scope can be modified later
Before you go on: Build or buy? • Survey existing thesaurus/taxonomy resources for your domain • Test for • Scope • Depth • Make-or-break terms • Cost Don’t reinvent the wheel!
Collect terms • Your documents and databases • Departmental terminology • Text books and their indexes (indices) • Book tables of contents and indexes • Journal quarterly indexes • Encyclopediae • Lexicons, glossaries on the topic • Web resources • Users and experts • Search logs
Gather terms from search logs Beyond the Spider: The Accidental Thesaurus(Richard Wiggins, Information Today, Oct 2002) Top ~100 search terms from search logs Match to web site with appropriate answer Basis for favorites or best bets, presented at the top of results list. (AKA behavior-based taxonomy) Not a thesaurus or taxonomy, but still a useful source of terms.
Organize terms – roughly • Sort terms into several major categories – logical groups of similar concepts as Top Terms • Identify core areas and peripheral topics • 10 – 20 to start • Consider moving proper names to authority files • Result: loose collection of terms under several main headings • Rough and tentative – see how it fits as you go • Initial gap analysis • Add / modify / delete as needed
Labelling a concept – cognitive linguistics • Most-used labels are middle in range from abstract to specific --- relates to search • Linguistic universal – true across cultures • Unique beginner • Life form • Generic • Specific • Varietal Practical application? Insurance Health insurance Group health insurance
Craft the Top Terms • Toughest job and most important step! • Dictates further organization • Determines how browsers/searchers perceive the taxonomy • Coverage • Formality • Establish the concept first, tweak the wording later
The term record = subject term, heading, node, category, descriptor, class • Main Term (MT) • Top Term (TT) • Broader Terms (BT) • Narrower Terms (NT) • Related Terms (RT) • See also (SA) • Scope Note (SN) • History (H) • NonPreferred Term (NP) • Used for (UF), See (S) TAXONOMY THESAURUS see Lexicographer’s lexicon
Usefulness of a term – the “duh” factor • Some terms are so basic for a domain that they have little or no value • “Sports” in Sports Illustrated • “Technology” in Technology Review • “Golf” in Golf Magazine • How useful will the term be for indexing? • Apply to everything in the domain? • Distinguish important concepts? • If term is needed, specify limited use conditions in Scope Note
Hierarchy structures – variations on a theme • Not pre-determined • Winestypevarietyregioncost • Or Winescosttype…. • Varies by user group and needs • May have multiple views of same content • Standard alpha view or customized notation • Affects information architecture, i.e. how web site functions
How do terms relate? • Hierarchical relationships -- Parents and their children • Equivalence relationships -- Aliases • Associative relationships -- Cousins TAXONOMY THESAURUS
Hierarchical relationships • Broader Term represents the category • Narrower Term represents the specific • Three types: • Generic relationship (BTG/NTG) • Whole-part relationship (BTP/NTP) • Instance relationship (BTI/NTI) • BTs/NTs have a reciprocal relationship
Broader to Narrower Terms Politics Elections Presidential elections Gubernatorial elections Mayoral elections Generic Specific Varietal
Hierarchy – Generic (genus-species) relationship • Inheritance or inclusion – what’s true of the parent (BT) is true for all children (NTs) • Applies to entities, actions, properties, agents – not just biological taxonomies Value Teachers Thinking Cultural value Adult educators Contemplation Economic value School teachers Divergent thinking Moral value Special ed teachers Lateral thinking Social value Student teachers Reasoning
Generic relationship test – 1 • Both terms in same fundamental category • “All-and-some” test Rodents SOME ALL Squirrels Pests SOME NOT ALL Squirrels
Generic relationship test – 2 Pests Squirrels Rodents • ALL squirrels are rodents • NOT ALL squirrels are pests • NOT ALL pests are rodents
Hierarchy – Whole-part relationship • Also known as meronymy or partonomy • Four types allowed in thesaurus standards • Body systems and organs • Ear Middle ear • Geographical locations • Bernalillo County Albuquerque • Fields of study • Geology Physical geology • Hierarchical organizational/corporate/social/political structures • Diocese Parish
Hierarchy – Instance relationship • General category (common noun) = BT • Individual example (proper noun) = NT Seas New York museums Baltic Sea Guggenheim Museum Caspian Sea Museum of Modern Art Mediterranean Sea Museum of Natural History Essentially identical to “final node” in taxonomies. Best practice: long list move to authority file
Polyhierarchical relationship • Term can logically fit under more than one Broader Term – can have Multiple Broader Terms (MBT) • New to ANSI/NISO standards Spoons Forks Sporks Sporks Nurses Health administrators Nurse administrators Nurse administrators Finance Careers Accounting Accounting
Equivalence relationship • Preferred Term • Thesaurus term and valid for indexing • Thesaurus notation: USE • NonPreferred Term • Not valid for indexing • An alias or imposter • Entry point, directs user to Preferred Term • Thesaurus notation: UF or NPT Spiders Plant pathology UF Arachnids USE Phytopathology
Equivalence – when to use • Synonyms, slang, quasi-synonyms • Scientific and trade names • Ibubrofen UF Motrin™ • Lexical variants • Fiber optics UF Fibre optics • Mouse UF Mice • Upward posting of narrow concepts not specified in taxonomy or thesaurus • Social class UF Elite, Middle class, Working class Get equivalent terms from search logs, brainstorming…
Associative relationship • Related Terms (RTs) ~ cousins • “…terms related conceptually but not hierarchically, and are not part of an equivalence set” (i.e. not synonyms) • Should siblings be Related Terms?? • Both terms are valid thesaurus terms for indexing, and have reciprocal relationship • Expands user’s awareness, reflects thesaurus coverage of unanticipated areas • Standards describe specific types (see Lexicon)
Sibling rivalry and facets • Format and sense of sibling terms should be consistent • If siblings don’t coexist well, separate them • Subdivide large groups of terms into facets, mutually exclusive subcategories • Growing demand with faceted navigation • Facet examples • Properties, Materials, Agents, Actions, Influence • Objects, Styles and periods, Color, Shape (Art & Architecture Thesaurus)
Faceted classification • Pharmaceuticals • (by action) • Anti-inflammatory agents… • (by chemical structure) • Alkaloids… • (by indication) • Pain… • (by use) • Immunosuppression… Facet indicators (aka Node labels), not to be used for indexing
Faceting challenge Propose facet indicators and subgroup these paint varieties into facets. • Paint • Oil paint • High-gloss paint • Interior paint • Matte paint • Latex paint • Semi-gloss paint • Exterior paint
Do you agree? • Paint • (by type) • Oil paint • Latex paint • (by use) • Interior paint • Exterior paint • (by surface) • High-gloss paint • Matte paint • Semi-gloss paint
Scope Notes (SN) • Indicate meaning of the term in the context of this thesaurus, for this audience • Stress – Metal, Psychological, Physiological • Indicate any restriction in meaning • Indicate range of topics covered • Provide direction for indexers; for terms often confused, may suggest an alternative term • Use only as needed – not for every term • Establish and stick with consistent format • Be concise