Index
An index provides a list of content-elements in a document in a certain order (alphabetical, systematical or chronological). The elements may be authors, titles or subjects). The index of a printed bibliography often represents the other possible ways the bibliography could have been organized.
An index may be
either a part of a document, for example, back-of the book-index, or an
independent publication such as "Index Medicus", "Science Citation
Index" and "Bibliographic Index"
"In publishing,
an index is a guide to the contents of a book, publication, or multimedia
collection. It is prepared for the reader, to help the reader more quickly and
easily find information. An index is not simply a list of the major terms in a
publication. Rather, it is an organized map of the contents of a book, arranged
to make the contents clearly visible and comprehensible to the reader. " (Wikipedia,
2005)
Literature:
Enser, P. G. B.
(1985). Automatic Classification of Book Material Represented
by Back-of-the-book index. Journal of Documentation, 41, 135-155.
SpangHanssen, H. (1989). Registre på Brugernes niveau. IN: Orden i papirerne - en hilsen til J. B. FriisHansen. Redigeret af Ole Harbo & Leif Kajberg. København, Danmarks biblioteksskole. (Pp. 149-155).
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (2005). Index (publishing).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_%28publishing%29
See also: Indexing (Lifeboat for KO); Order
Birger Hjørland
Last edited: 02-05-2006