North American Symposium on Knowledge Organization

June 13-14, 2013

Milwaukee, Wisconsin USA

Location:

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 161 West Wisconsin Ave, Room 7970, Milwaukee, WI 53203, USA

Program

Thursday, June 13
8:30-11:00 Registration
9:00-10:30 Doctoral Symposium [PDF Program] NOTE: This session is open only to invited participants.

Rachel Ivy Clarke (University of Washington)
Heidi Overhill (University of Toronto)
Guo Zhang (Indiana University)
Jihee Beak (University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee)
Elizabeth Milonas (Long Island University)
Raphael Afonja (Long Island University)
Inkyung Choi (University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee)
Ann Graf (University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee)

Moderator: Kathryn La Barre
10:30-11:00 Coffee break & poster session Coffee provided by the School of Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
11:00-12:30 Paper session 1: Revealing Transitions through Domain Analysis Is FRBR A Domain? Domain Analysis Applied to the Literature of The FRBR Family of Conceptual Models
Richard Smiraglia

Transition in Education: Domain Analysis from the Encyclopedia of Milwaukee
Ann Graf & Richard Smiraglia

Boundary Objects: CWA, an HR Firm, and Emergent Vocabulary
Chris Marchese & Richard Smiraglia

International Comparative Domain Analysis in Knowledge Organization Research Topics in Four Countries - Brazil, South Korea, Spain and the United States
Jihee Beak, Jeanette Glover, Daniel Martinez-Avila, Suellen Oliviera Milani
12:30-2:00 Lunch
2:00-3:30 Paper session 2: Tagging as Transition The Impossible Decision: Social Tagging and Derrida’s Deconstructed Hospitality
Melodie Fox & Austin Reece

Genre Tag … Tag Genre
Lei Zhang, Margaret Kipp, & Hur-Li Lee

A Comparison of Descriptive Tagging Practices by Library, Archive, and Museum Professionals using an Inter-Indexing Consistency Approach
Christine Marie Angel

Blog, news, ecommerce:  Does genre matter for taggers?
Lala Hajibayova
3:30-4:00 Coffee break & Poster session Coffee provided by the School of Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
4:00-5:00 Paper session 3: Transitions in archives and the history of KO Diplomatics as a methodological perspective for archival knowledge organization
Natália Bolfarini Tognoli, José Augusto Chaves Guimarães, & Joseph T. Tennis

Contributions of Julius Otto Kaiser to the theoretical framework of Knowledge Organization: basis for the analytical-synthetic method
José Augusto Chaves Guimarães, Rodrigo de Sales

Classification and the Social Transcript, or Dewey and the Red Librarian
Chloë Edwards
5:00-7:00 ISKO C-US business meeting
Friday, June 14
8:30-9:00 Registration
9:00-10:30 Paper session 4: Subject analysis & cognition How are cookbooks classified in libraries? An exploration of three standards for subject access
Gretchen Hoffman

Collocative Integrity and Our Many Varied Subjects: What the Metric of Alignment between Classification Scheme and Indexer Tells Us About Langridge’s Theory of Indexing
Joseph T. Tennis

Logic and The Organization of Information: An Introduction
Martin Frické

Bibliographic Induction:  How KO Systems Can Enable Optimized Browsing By Supporting Library Users' Prior Knowledge
Jonathan Schatz, Nadia Stennes-Spidahl, Samantha Mills, & Aaron J. Loehrlein
10:30-11:00 Coffee break & Poster session Coffee provided by the School of Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
11:00-12:00 Paper session 5: Postmodernist transitions Revealing Perception: Discourse Analysis in a Phenomenological Framework
Daniel Martínez-Ávila & Richard Smiraglia

Contextualizing the Author: A Foucauldian Reflection on Selected Vocabularies and Projects
Heather Lea Moulaison, Felicity Dykas, & John M. Budd

A Space of Transition: Rethinking Surrogates
Hope A. Olson & Lynne C. Howarth
12:00-1:30 Lunch
1:30-3:00 Paper session 6: Pushing boundaries in KO today Classification for Diversity
Rick Szostak

Toward a Taxonomy of Harm
Melissa Adler & Joseph T. Tennis

KO and Classification Education Objectives: Are we keeping up with the transformation of our field?
Michèle Hudon

The role of virtual boundaries in knowledge sharing and organization
Elin Jacob & Guo Zhang
3:00-3:30 Coffee break & Poster session Coffee provided by the School of Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
3:30-5:00 Unconference Theme: Belonging
Moderator: Patrick Keilty