Subject indexing in humanities: a comparison between a local university repository and an international bibliographic service

被引:19
作者
Golub, Koraljka [1 ]
Tyrkko, Jukka [2 ]
Hansson, Joacim [1 ]
Ahlstrom, Ida [3 ]
机构
[1] Linnaeus Univ, Fac Arts & Humanities, Dept Cultural Sci, Vaxjo, Sweden
[2] Linnaeus Univ, Fac Arts & Humanities, Dept Languages, Vaxjo, Sweden
[3] Linnaeus Univ, Univ Lib, Vaxjo, Sweden
关键词
Digital libraries; Digital humanities; Institutional repositories; Humanities; Knowledge organization; Bibliographic databases; Subject indexing; ONLINE SEARCHING PROJECT; LARGE ACADEMIC-LIBRARY; DISCOVERY TOOLS; RETRIEVAL; BEHAVIOR; THESAURUS; SCHOLARS; ACCESS;
D O I
10.1108/JD-12-2019-0231
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Purpose As the humanities develop in the realm of increasingly more pronounced digital scholarship, it is important to provide quality subject access to a vast range of heterogeneous information objects in digital services. The study aims to paint a representative picture of the current state of affairs of the use of subject index terms in humanities journal articles with particular reference to the well-established subject access needs of humanities researchers, with the purpose of identifying which improvements are needed in this context. Design/methodology/approach The comparison of subject metadata on a sample of 649 peer-reviewed journal articles from across the humanities is conducted in a university repository, against Scopus, the former reflecting local and national policies and the latter being the most comprehensive international abstract and citation database of research output. Findings The study shows that established bibliographic objectives to ensure subject access for humanities journal articles are not supported in either the world's largest commercial abstract and citation database Scopus or the local repository of a public university in Sweden. The indexing policies in the two services do not seem to address the needs of humanities scholars for highly granular subject index terms with appropriate facets; no controlled vocabularies for any humanities discipline are used whatsoever. Originality/value In all, not much has changed since 1990s when indexing for the humanities was shown to lag behind the sciences. The community of researchers and information professionals, today working together on digital humanities projects, as well as interdisciplinary research teams, should demand that their subject access needs be fulfilled, especially in commercial services like Scopus and discovery services.
引用
收藏
页码:1193 / 1214
页数:22
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