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Discipline of Organizing: 4th Professional Edition

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Glushko, Robert J., author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Information technology--Textbooks.
Information technology.
Computer science--Textbooks.
Computer science.
Databases--Textbooks.
Databases.
Physical Description:
1 online resource
Place of Publication:
[Place of publication not identified] University of California, Berkeley [2013]
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
We organize things, we organize information, we organize information about things, and we organize information about information. But even though “organizing” is a fundamental and ubiquitous challenge, when we compare these activities their contrasts are more apparent than their commonalities. We propose to unify many perspectives about organizing with the concept of an Organizing System, defined as an intentionally arranged collection of resources and the interactions they support. Every Organizing System involves a collection of resources, a choice of properties or principles used to describe and arrange resources, and ways of supporting interactions with resources. By comparing and contrasting how these activities take place in different contexts and domains, we can identify patterns of organizing. We can create a discipline of organizing in a disciplined way. The 4th edition builds a bridge between organizing and data science. It reframes descriptive statistics as organizing techniques, expands the treatment of classification to include computational methods, and incorporates many new examples of data-driven resource selection, organization, maintenance, and personalization. It introduces a new “data science” category of discipline-specific content, both in the chapter text and in endnotes, marked with [DS] in editions that contain endnotes.
Contents:
I. Foundations for Organizing Systems
II. Design Decisions in Organizing Systems
III. Activities in Organizing Systems
IV. Resources in Organizing Systems
V. Resource Description and Metadata
VI. Describing Relationships and Structures
VII. Categorization: Describing Resource Classes and Types
VIII. Classification: Assigning Resources to Categories
IX. The Forms of Resource Descriptions
X. Interactions with Resources
XI. The Organizing System Roadmap
XII. Case Studies
Notes:
Description based on print resource

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