Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

March 6, 2010

Subject Headings and the Semantic Web

Filed under: Indexing,LCSH,Subject Headings — Tags: , , , , — Patrick Durusau @ 5:08 pm

One of the underlying (and false) presumptions of the Semantic Web is that users have a uniform understanding of the world. One that matches the understanding of ontology authors.

The failure of that presumption was demonstrated over a decade ago in rather remarkable research conducted by Karen Drabenstott (now Marley) on user understanding of Library of Congress subject headings.

Despite the use of Library of Congress subject headings for almost a century, no one before Drabenstott had asked the fundamental question: Does anyone understand Library of Congress subject headings? The study, Understanding Subject Headings in Library Catalogs found that:

Overall percentages of correct meanings for subject headings in the original order of subdivisions were as follows: children, 32%, adults, 40%, reference 53%, and technical services librarians, 56%.

The conclusions one would draw from such a result are easy to anticipate but I will quote from the report:

The developers of new indexing systems especially systems aimed at organizing the World-Wide Web should include children, adults, librarians, and even subject-matter experts in the establishment of new terms and changes to existing ones. Perhaps there should be separate indexing systems for children, adults, librarians, and subject-matter experts. With a click of a button, users could choose the indexing system that works for them in terms of their understanding of the subject matter and the indexing system’s terminology.

Hmmm, users “…choose the indexing system that works for them…,” what a remarkable concept. Topic maps anyone?

March 2, 2010

Skillful Semantic Users?

Filed under: Usability — Tags: , , , , — Patrick Durusau @ 9:05 am

I recently discovered one reason for my unease with semantic this and that technologies, including topic map interfaces. A friend mentioned to me that he wanted users to do more than enter subject names in their topic map interface. “Users need to also enter….”

The idea of users busily populating a semantic space is an attractive one, but it hasn’t been borne out in practice. So I don’t think my friend’s interface is going to prove to be useful, but why?

Then I got to thinking, how many indexers or librarians do I know? The sort of people whose talents combined together to bring us the Reader’s Guide to Periodic Literature and useful back of the book indexes. Due to my work in computer standards I know a lot of smart people but very few of them strike me as also being good at indexing or cataloging type skills.

Any semantic solution, RDFa, RDF/OWL, SUMO, Topic Maps, etc., will fail from an authoring standpoint due to a lack of skill. No technology can magically make users competent at the indexing or cataloging skills required to enable access by others.

Semantic interface writers need to recognize most users are simply consumers of information created by others. I would not be surprised if the ratio of producers to consumers is close to the ratio in open source projects between contributors and the consumers in those projects.

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