4.1 Article

Information Retrieval and Knowledge Organization: A Perspective from the Philosophy of Science

Journal

INFORMATION
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/info12030135

Keywords

information retrieval; knowledge organization; philosophy of science; classification; knowledge organization systems; ontologies; Kuhnian paradigm theory; pragmatism

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Information retrieval (IR) focuses on using techniques to search for information, while knowledge organization (KO) aims to reflect contemporary scholarship. The two fields are related but have different research focuses.
Information retrieval (IR) is about making systems for finding documents or information. Knowledge organization (KO) is the field concerned with indexing, classification, and representing documents for IR, browsing, and related processes, whether performed by humans or computers. The field of IR is today dominated by search engines like Google. An important difference between KO and IR as research fields is that KO attempts to reflect knowledge as depicted by contemporary scholarship, in contrast to IR, which is based on, for example, match techniques, popularity measures or personalization principles. The classification of documents in KO mostly aims at reflecting the classification of knowledge in the sciences. Books about birds, for example, mostly reflect (or aim at reflecting) how birds are classified in ornithology. KO therefore requires access to the adequate subject knowledge; however, this is often characterized by disagreements. At the deepest layer, such disagreements are based on philosophical issues best characterized as paradigms. No IR technology and no system of knowledge organization can ever be neutral in relation to paradigmatic conflicts, and therefore such philosophical problems represent the basis for the study of IR and KO.

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