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Let's Control Controlled Shorthand Vocabulary
The Journal of Business Education, 1976(1976). Let's Control Controlled Shorthand Vocabulary. The Journal of Business Education: Vol. 51, No. 6, pp. 272-274.
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On the Quality of Annotations with Controlled Vocabularies
2016Corpus analysis and controlled vocabularies can benefit from each other in different ways. Usually, a controlled vocabulary is assumed to be in place and is used for improving the processing of a corpus. However, in practice the controlled vocabularies may be not available or domain experts may be not satisfied with their quality.
Heidelinde Hobel, Artem Revenko
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Data Standards and Controlled Vocabularies for Proteomics
2008Proteomics data can be diverse and complex, and are typically produced on a large scale. To allow sharing and centralized storage and dissemination of such results, the Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) Proteomics Standards Initiative (PSI) has created a set of community standards for the exchange of mass spectrometry and protein interaction data.
Henning Hermjakob+2 more
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Controlled vocabularies for microbial virulence factors
Trends in Microbiology, 2009Knowledge about pathogenesis is increasing dramatically, and most of this information is stored in the scientific literature or in sequence databases. This information can be made more accessible by the use of ontologies or controlled vocabularies. Recently, several ontologies, controlled vocabularies and databases have been developed or adapted for ...
Tonia Korves, Marc E. Colosimo
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A Controlled Vocabulary? [PDF]
Mary H. Monahan, Faye H. Clark
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A new standard for controlled vocabularies [PDF]
This article reviews the changes in the information industry that led NISO (North American Information Standardization Organization) to propose a revision of ANSI/NISO Z39.19, Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and Management of Monolingual Thesauri, one of its most frequently requested Standards.
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Controlled Vocabularies for MEDLARS Databases
Medical Reference Services Quarterly, 1995For many years, searching medical and health-related topics has caused thousands of searchers to consult the well-known MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) controlled vocabulary. This plan works well for searching MEDLINE, but what about MEDLARS databases such as TOXLIT, BIOETHICSLINE, and POPLINE?
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Vocabulary control and information technology
Aslib Proceedings, 1986Writers on library automation such as Borko and Lancaster foresee an end to human‐based indexing and classification. They anticipate a time when users will be able to direct their subject enquiries at machine‐held files of keywords extracted automatically from the ‘natural uncontrolled language of the document’. Borko considers that this will allow the
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Controlled vocabularies, thesauri, and taxonomies
The Indexer, 2008Controlled vocabularies, thesauri, and taxonomies comprise a field that is closely related to indexing. Some indexers already do work in these areas, and others could find themselves called to do such work soon. Therefore, it is important for indexers to be familiar with these tools/methods for organizing information.
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Vocabulary building and control techniques
American Documentation, 1969AbstractThe rationale is given for creation and maintainance by an information center of a controlled indexing and retrieval vocabulary. Basic vocabulary principles are (1) use of natural language, (2) development of hospitality to new concepts, (3) provision of adequate cross‐referencing, and (4) formatting for easy use.
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