17
The evolving relationship between Terminology and Technology Nicholas Crofts Chair ICOM CIDOC Rio de Janeiro August 2013

Terminology and technology

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The influence of technology on the practice of terminology. Presentation ny Nick Crofts, chair of CIDOC, from ICOM Rio 2013, joint meeting of CIDOC, ICOFOM and ICTOP. August 15th 2013. UNIRIO, Urca, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Citation preview

Page 1: Terminology and technology

The evolving relationship between Terminology and Technology

Nicholas CroftsChair ICOM CIDOC

Rio de Janeiro August 2013

Page 2: Terminology and technology

Premises

1. Words are a special case of signs or symbols• “any means of expression accepted in a society rests

in principle upon a collective habit, or on convention”Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics

• Signifier (1,n) signifies (0,n) Signified

Page 3: Terminology and technology

Premises

1. “For a large class of cases—though not for all—in which we employ the word ‘meaning’ it can be defined thus: the meaning of a word is its use in the language”Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations

• Naming is one type of use • Not all uses involve naming…

– and, but, although, however, usually, therefore…– Functional and performative words

Page 4: Terminology and technology

Premises

1. Terms are a subclass of names :– Generic names– Proper names

• Terminology = an organized system of names• A “term” is a name used in a terminology• Term (1,1) signifies (0,n) Signified

Page 5: Terminology and technology

Themes

• Historical development of “terminology”• Terms and Concepts• Internal and External representation

(technical view vs end user view)

Page 6: Terminology and technology

Phases of terminology

1. Pre terminological2. Terminological3. Automation

a) Codes for conceptsb) Container / contentc) Post-terminology

Page 7: Terminology and technology

1. Pre-terminological

• Socrates …– what is beauty?– what is truth?...

• not a terminology debate• not a system of terms• focus is on concepts, the signified• Words have ambiguous relations with concepts…• 1 word means many things, 1 thing represented

by many words

Page 8: Terminology and technology

Jacques-Louis David, La mort de Socrate

Page 9: Terminology and technology

2. Terminological

• 18th Century …– Enyclopaedias, dictionaries

• Carl von Linné (Linneus)– System of botanical taxonomy– Systematic classification

• Taxon = a class of objects, not an individual.

• Unambiguous representation 1 term means 1 thing

• Term is an identifier

Linnaea borealis (twinflower)

Page 10: Terminology and technology

3. Automated terminology

• Data = propositions represented in a machine processable form

Page 11: Terminology and technology

Phase 1. Codes = concepts

• Internal representation = external representation

• Non human-readable form• Code book needed for

interpretation• Dewey decimal classification• Totally unambiguous• No misleading connotations• Language neutral

Page 12: Terminology and technology

Phase 2: Container/content model

• “it is important that each user employ the same terms to designate the same type of objects, hence the usefulness of creating a standard vocabulary…”Africom Handbook of Standards

• Machine readable and human readable…

• CIDOC terminology standards WG• Getty AAT, TGN, ULAN

Elings, M.W. and Waibel, G. Metadata for all…

Page 13: Terminology and technology

Drawbacks

• Developing a terminology is hard work– AAT 15 year period

• Inflexible, when terms evolve• Natural language is polysemic and

ambiguous – Terminology is unnatural language

• Experts’ mind set– Steve project revealed 86% mismatch

http://www.museumsandtheweb.com/files/trantSteveResearchReport2008.pdf

• Barriers to discovery

Page 14: Terminology and technology

Phase 3. Post terminology

• Internal representation = codes• User view = words• RDF – SKOS• Multiple discovery paths• Language neutral• Terminology control

unnecessary

Page 15: Terminology and technology

Sports reference example

Page 16: Terminology and technology

Ontology model

took place at

had durationPeriod

Place

had member

had participantActor Event

Individual Group

52 classes

~500’000 named entities

Page 17: Terminology and technology

Still plenty of work…

• Concept management =/= terminology angst