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Cultural Synergy in Information Institutions [electronic resource] / by Richard P. Smiraglia.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: VI, 82 p. 15 illus., 12 illus. in color. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781493912490
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 025.04 23
LOC classification:
  • QA75.5-76.95
Online resources:
Contents:
Chapter 1. Cultural Synergy and the Role of Information Institutions -- Chapter 2. The Nature of Information -- Chapter 3. What is (are) Information Studies? -- Chapter 4. The Synergistic Information Professions: Applications of the Information Process -- Chapter 5. Some History of Libraries, Library and Information Science, Information Technology -- Chapter 6. Gatekeepers: Information Dissemination -- Chapter 7. Knowledge Organization: Bibliography as Synergic Catalyst -- Chapter 8. Into the Future Boldly: The Imperative for Cultural Synergy.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Cultural forces govern a synergistic relationship among information institutions that shapes their roles collectively and individually. Cultural synergy is the combination of perception- and behavior-shaping knowledge within, between, and among groups. Our hyperlinked era makes information-sharing among institutions critically important for scholarship as well as for the advancement of humankind. Information institutions are those that have, or share in, the mission to preserve, conserve, and disseminate information objects and their informative content. A central idea is the notion of social epistemology that information institutions arise culturally from social forces of the cultures they inhabit, and that their purpose is to disseminate that culture. All information institutions are alike in critical ways. Intersecting lines of cultural mission are trajectories for synergy for allowing us to perceive the universe of information institutions as interconnected and evolving and moving forward in distinct ways for the improvement of the condition of humankind through the building up of its knowledge base and of its information-sharing processes. This book is an exploration of the cultural synergy that can be realized by seeing commonalities among information institutions (sometimes also called cultural heritage institutions): museums, libraries, and archives. The hyperlinked era of the Semantic Web makes information sharing among institutions critically important for scholarship as well as the advancement of mankind. The book addresses the origins of cultural information institutions, the history of the professions that run them, and the social imperative of information organization as a catalyst for semantic synergy.
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E-Book E-Book Central Library Available E-40248

Chapter 1. Cultural Synergy and the Role of Information Institutions -- Chapter 2. The Nature of Information -- Chapter 3. What is (are) Information Studies? -- Chapter 4. The Synergistic Information Professions: Applications of the Information Process -- Chapter 5. Some History of Libraries, Library and Information Science, Information Technology -- Chapter 6. Gatekeepers: Information Dissemination -- Chapter 7. Knowledge Organization: Bibliography as Synergic Catalyst -- Chapter 8. Into the Future Boldly: The Imperative for Cultural Synergy.

Cultural forces govern a synergistic relationship among information institutions that shapes their roles collectively and individually. Cultural synergy is the combination of perception- and behavior-shaping knowledge within, between, and among groups. Our hyperlinked era makes information-sharing among institutions critically important for scholarship as well as for the advancement of humankind. Information institutions are those that have, or share in, the mission to preserve, conserve, and disseminate information objects and their informative content. A central idea is the notion of social epistemology that information institutions arise culturally from social forces of the cultures they inhabit, and that their purpose is to disseminate that culture. All information institutions are alike in critical ways. Intersecting lines of cultural mission are trajectories for synergy for allowing us to perceive the universe of information institutions as interconnected and evolving and moving forward in distinct ways for the improvement of the condition of humankind through the building up of its knowledge base and of its information-sharing processes. This book is an exploration of the cultural synergy that can be realized by seeing commonalities among information institutions (sometimes also called cultural heritage institutions): museums, libraries, and archives. The hyperlinked era of the Semantic Web makes information sharing among institutions critically important for scholarship as well as the advancement of mankind. The book addresses the origins of cultural information institutions, the history of the professions that run them, and the social imperative of information organization as a catalyst for semantic synergy.

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