Relevancy and pertinency in indexing

Underlying all types of subject analysis—descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic ing, etc.—is the fundamental problem of selection of significant concepts and characteristics from a document to be recorded as reference points for use in future retrieval operations. Faced with several th...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inAmerican Documentation Vol. 13; no. 1; pp. 93 - 94
Main Author Rees, Alan M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 01.01.1962
American Documentation Institute
Wiley Periodicals Inc
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0096-946X
0002-8231
1936-6108
1097-4571
DOI10.1002/asi.5090130113

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Underlying all types of subject analysis—descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic ing, etc.—is the fundamental problem of selection of significant concepts and characteristics from a document to be recorded as reference points for use in future retrieval operations. Faced with several thousands of words normally found in a typical document, the analyst selects those words and ideas which seem significant, based upon his subjective knowledge of the subject matter. Such a selection is conditioned by his academic training, observance of the frequency of occurrence of certain words, knowledge of the pattern of use of the literature, acquaintance with the terminology used in the phrasing of questions to be put to the file, and comparative knowledge and ignorance of the association of ideas or relationships between the concepts recorded in the document. Pertinency is therefore in the eyes of the beholder and is relevant to the state of knowledge at any given time. The difficulty in subject analysis is one of recording characteristics for retrieval at a later date when the implications inherent in future requests are unknown at the time of recording and when the terminology has not yet crystallized into any standardized form. In the absence of a permanent description, information requests can either be translated into the archaic language and frozen concepts of the file or the file itself can be updated to match modern concepts and associations and to bring out implications subsequently made apparent by continually evolving technology. The continuous shift in traditional interests is illustrated in the current awareness type of literature search where the constant rearrangement of concepts is seen in the attempt to define interests whose relevance is not yet established. Superimposed on this is the problem of finding suitable words which characterize these shifting concepts. The words of the document are not necessarily those which are in current use, nor will they always be the same words used to characterize an information request put to the file at a later date. Thus it is necessary to use an artificial language (code, authority, list, notation, etc.) into which the natural language of the text and the languge of the request can be converted. This language should be such that it would serve as a more permanent and regularized language which would cut through the tangle of synonyms and infinity of syntactic structures. The coded thesaurus is suggested as a means of providing for this intermediary language at the same time as performing the function of being a means of bringing into coincidence the vocabularies of the future searches and retrieval system and indicate networks of related meaning and associated ideas. The association of ideas in the semantic code is suggested as a yardstick of predetermined relevancy. Experimental data will be presented to facilitate the establishment of objective criteria of relevancy and pertinency in searching operations.
AbstractList Underlying all types of subject analysis—descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic abstracting, etc.—is the fundamental problem of selection of significant concepts and characteristics from a document to be recorded as reference points for use in future retrieval operations. Faced with several thousands of words normally found in a typical document, the analyst selects those words and ideas which seem significant, based upon his subjective knowledge of the subject matter. Such a selection is conditioned by his academic training, observance of the frequency of occurrence of certain words, knowledge of the pattern of use of the literature, acquaintance with the terminology used in the phrasing of questions to be put to the file, and comparative knowledge and ignorance of the association of ideas or relationships between the concepts recorded in the document. Pertinency is therefore in the eyes of the beholder and is relevant to the state of knowledge at any given time. The difficulty in subject analysis is one of recording characteristics for retrieval at a later date when the implications inherent in future requests are unknown at the time of recording and when the terminology has not yet crystallized into any standardized form. In the absence of a permanent description, information requests can either be translated into the archaic language and frozen concepts of the file or the file itself can be updated to match modern concepts and associations and to bring out implications subsequently made apparent by continually evolving technology. The continuous shift in traditional interests is illustrated in the current awareness type of literature search where the constant rearrangement of concepts is seen in the attempt to define interests whose relevance is not yet established. Superimposed on this is the problem of finding suitable words which characterize these shifting concepts. The words of the document are not necessarily those which are in current use, nor will they always be the same words used to characterize an information request put to the file at a later date. Thus it is necessary to use an artificial language (code, authority, list, notation, etc.) into which the natural language of the text and the languge of the request can be converted. This language should be such that it would serve as a more permanent and regularized language which would cut through the tangle of synonyms and infinity of syntactic structures. The coded thesaurus is suggested as a means of providing for this intermediary language at the same time as performing the function of being a means of bringing into coincidence the vocabularies of the future searches and retrieval system and indicate networks of related meaning and associated ideas. The association of ideas in the semantic code is suggested as a yardstick of predetermined relevancy. Experimental data will be presented to facilitate the establishment of objective criteria of relevancy and pertinency in searching operations.
Underlying all types of subject analysis-descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic abstracting, etc.--is the fundamental problem of selection of significant concepts and characteristics from a document to be recorded as reference points for use in future retrieval operations. Faced with several thousands of words normally found in a typical document, the analyst selects those words and ideas which seem significant, based upon his subjective knowledge of the subject matter. Such a selection is conditioned by his academic training, observance of the frequency of occurrence of certain words, knowledge of the pattern of use of the literature, acquaintance with the terminology used in the phrasing. of questions to be put to the file, and comparative knowledge and ignorance of the association of ideas or relationships between the concepts recorded in the document. Pertinency is therefore in the eyes of the beholder and is relevant to the state of knowledge at any given time.The difficulty in subject analysis is one of recording characteristics for retrieval at a later date when the implications inherent in future requests are unknown at the time of recording and when the terminology has not yet crystallized into any standardized form. In the absence of a permanent description, information requests can either be translated into the archaic language and frozen concepts of the file or the file itself can be updated to match modern concepts and associations and to bring out implications subsequently made apparent by continually evolving technology. The continuous shift in traditional interests is illustrated in the current awareness type of literature search where the constant rearrangement of concepts is seen in the attempt to define interests whose relevance is not yet established.Superimposed on this is the problem of finding suitable words which characterize these shifting concepts. The words of the document are not necessarily those which are in current use, nor will they always be the same words used to characterize an information request put to the file at a later date. Thus it is necessary to use an artificial language (code, authority, list, notation, etc.) into which the natural language of the text and the languge of the request can be converted. This language should be such that it would serve as a more permanent and regularized language which would cut through the tangle of synonyms and infinity of syntactic structures. The coded thesaurus is suggested as a means of providing for this intermediary language at the same time as performing the function of being a means of bringing into coincidence the vocabularies of the future searches and retrieval system and indicate networks of related meaning and associated ideas. The association of ideas in the semantic code is suggested as a yardstick of predetermined relevancy. Experimental data will be presented to facilitate the establishment of objective criteria of relevancy and pertinency in searching operations.
Underlying all types of subject analysis—descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic ing, etc.—is the fundamental problem of selection of significant concepts and characteristics from a document to be recorded as reference points for use in future retrieval operations. Faced with several thousands of words normally found in a typical document, the analyst selects those words and ideas which seem significant, based upon his subjective knowledge of the subject matter. Such a selection is conditioned by his academic training, observance of the frequency of occurrence of certain words, knowledge of the pattern of use of the literature, acquaintance with the terminology used in the phrasing of questions to be put to the file, and comparative knowledge and ignorance of the association of ideas or relationships between the concepts recorded in the document. Pertinency is therefore in the eyes of the beholder and is relevant to the state of knowledge at any given time. The difficulty in subject analysis is one of recording characteristics for retrieval at a later date when the implications inherent in future requests are unknown at the time of recording and when the terminology has not yet crystallized into any standardized form. In the absence of a permanent description, information requests can either be translated into the archaic language and frozen concepts of the file or the file itself can be updated to match modern concepts and associations and to bring out implications subsequently made apparent by continually evolving technology. The continuous shift in traditional interests is illustrated in the current awareness type of literature search where the constant rearrangement of concepts is seen in the attempt to define interests whose relevance is not yet established. Superimposed on this is the problem of finding suitable words which characterize these shifting concepts. The words of the document are not necessarily those which are in current use, nor will they always be the same words used to characterize an information request put to the file at a later date. Thus it is necessary to use an artificial language (code, authority, list, notation, etc.) into which the natural language of the text and the languge of the request can be converted. This language should be such that it would serve as a more permanent and regularized language which would cut through the tangle of synonyms and infinity of syntactic structures. The coded thesaurus is suggested as a means of providing for this intermediary language at the same time as performing the function of being a means of bringing into coincidence the vocabularies of the future searches and retrieval system and indicate networks of related meaning and associated ideas. The association of ideas in the semantic code is suggested as a yardstick of predetermined relevancy. Experimental data will be presented to facilitate the establishment of objective criteria of relevancy and pertinency in searching operations.
Author Rees, Alan M.
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Alan M.
  surname: Rees
  fullname: Rees, Alan M.
  organization: Center for Documentation and Communication Research Western Reserve University Cleveland 6, Ohio
BookMark eNqFkE1LAzEQhoNUsK1ePRf1unUm2c1ujqVqLVQFP6h4CWk2ka01rUmr7b83ZUXxIMLAMPA8M8zbIg03d4aQQ4QuAtBTFapuBgKQASLbIU0UjCccoWiQJoDgiUj54x5phTAFYEyIrElObs3MvCunNx3lys7C-GXlzHasXKzSrCv3vE92rZoFc_DV2-Th4vy-f5mMbgbDfm-UaMpzlpjcKqGLiQE0hVYMNQoEykRBFaQCi1zzCaPCoqBalFDaiQCuUFmaW8sVa5Ojeu_Cz99WJizldL7yLp6UKLI0ja8VETr-E4qf0wxowSPVrSnt5yF4Y-XCV6_KbySC3MYlY1zyJ64oiFr4qGZm8w8te3fDX25Su1VYmvW3q_yLjLnkmRxfD-Q4hSc8Y1cyZ59Vo3w_
Cites_doi 10.1002/asi.5090120403
10.1108/eb049778
10.1145/321033.321035
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright Copyright © 1962 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., A Wiley Company
Copyright Wiley Periodicals Inc. Jan 1962
Copyright_xml – notice: Copyright © 1962 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., A Wiley Company
– notice: Copyright Wiley Periodicals Inc. Jan 1962
DBID BSCLL
AAYXX
CITATION
AGQHT
AIATT
APEJR
FYSDU
GHEHK
HYQOX
HZAIM
K30
PAAUG
PAWHS
PAWZZ
PAXOH
PBHAV
PBQSW
PBYQZ
PCIWU
PCMID
PCZJX
PDGRG
PDWWI
PETMR
PFVGT
PGXDX
PIHIL
PISVA
PJCTQ
PJTMS
PLCHJ
PMFND
PMHAD
PMKZF
PNQDJ
POUND
PPLAD
PQAPC
PQCAN
PQCMW
PQEME
PQHKH
PQMID
PQNCT
PQNET
PQSCT
PQSET
PSVJG
PVKVW
PVMQY
PZGFC
~P4
~P5
3V.
7WY
7WZ
7XB
87Z
8FK
8FL
ABUWG
AFKRA
AIMQZ
BENPR
BEZIV
CCPQU
DWQXO
FRNLG
F~G
K60
K6~
L.-
LIQON
M0A
M0C
PHGZM
PHGZT
PKEHL
PQBIZ
PQBZA
PQEST
PQQKQ
PQUKI
PRINS
PYYUZ
Q9U
DOI 10.1002/asi.5090130113
DatabaseName Istex
CrossRef
Periodicals Archive Online Foundation Collection 2
Periodicals Archive Online Collection 5 (2022)
Periodicals Archive Online Foundation Collection 2 (2022)
Periodicals Index Online Segment 07
Periodicals Index Online Segment 08
ProQuest Historical Periodicals
Periodicals Index Online Segment 26
Periodicals Index Online
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - West
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - International
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - MEA
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - Midwest
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - Northeast
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - Southeast
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - North Central
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - Southeast
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - South Central
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - UK / I
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - Canada
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - EMEALA
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - North Central
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - South Central
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - International
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - International
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - West
Periodicals Index Online Segments 1-50
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - APAC
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - Midwest
ProQuest One History
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - MEA
ProQuest Digital Collections
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - Canada
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - UK / I
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - EMEALA
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - APAC
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - Canada
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - West
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - EMEALA
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - Northeast
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - Midwest
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - North Central
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - Northeast
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - South Central
Primary Sources Access & Build (Plan A) - Southeast
Primary Sources Access (Plan D) - UK / I
ProQuest Historical Periodicals Collection
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - APAC
Primary Sources Access—Foundation Edition (Plan E) - MEA
PAO Collection 5
Periodicals Archive Online Collection 5
ProQuest Central (Corporate)
ABI/INFORM Collection
ABI/INFORM Global (PDF only)
ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)
ABI/INFORM Collection
ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)
ABI/INFORM Collection (Alumni)
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
ProQuest Central UK/Ireland
ProQuest One Literature
ProQuest Central
Business Premium Collection
ProQuest One
ProQuest Central
Business Premium Collection (Alumni)
ABI/INFORM Global (Corporate)
ProQuest Business Collection (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Business Collection
ABI/INFORM Professional Advanced
ProQuest One Literature - U.S. Customers Only
ABI/INFORM Global
ABI/INFORM Global
ProQuest Central Premium
ProQuest One Academic (New)
ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New)
ProQuest One Business
ProQuest One Business (Alumni)
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
ProQuest Central China
ABI/INFORM Collection China
ProQuest Central Basic
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
Periodicals Index Online Segment 26
Periodicals Index Online Segments 1-50
Periodicals Index Online
Periodicals Archive Online Foundation Collection 2
Periodicals Archive Online Collection 5 (2022)
Historical Periodicals Collection
ProQuest One History
Periodicals Archive Online Foundation Collection 2 (2022)
ProQuest Digital Collections
PAO Collection 5 (with 1996-2000 update)
PAO Collection 5
Periodicals Index Online Segment 08
Periodicals Index Online Segment 07
ProQuest Historical Periodicals
ABI/INFORM Global (Corporate)
ProQuest Business Collection (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest One Business
ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New)
ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest One Community College
ProQuest Central China
ABI/INFORM Complete
ProQuest Central
ABI/INFORM Professional Advanced
ProQuest Central Korea
ProQuest Central (New)
ABI/INFORM Complete (Alumni Edition)
Business Premium Collection
ABI/INFORM Global
ProQuest One Literature - U.S. Customers Only
ABI/INFORM Global (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central Basic
ProQuest One Literature
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition
ABI/INFORM China
ProQuest Business Collection
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
ProQuest One Business (Alumni)
ABI/INFORM Archive
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
Business Premium Collection (Alumni)
ProQuest One Academic (New)
DatabaseTitleList CrossRef
ABI/INFORM Global (Corporate)

Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: BENPR
  name: ProQuest Central
  url: https://www.proquest.com/central
  sourceTypes: Aggregation Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Engineering
Library & Information Science
EISSN 1936-6108
1097-4571
EndPage 94
ExternalDocumentID 639790231
10_1002_asi_5090130113
ASI5090130113
ark_67375_WNG_W40Z1D3M_7
Genre article
GroupedDBID --Z
-~X
.GJ
.Y3
186
1OB
1OC
23M
31~
3V.
5GY
7WY
8-1
8FL
8R4
8R5
8VB
ABJNI
ABUWG
ACBWZ
ACGFS
ACIOK
ACXQS
AFBPY
AFFNX
AFKRA
AI.
AIMQZ
AKVCP
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ASPBG
AVWKF
AZFZN
BDRZF
BENPR
BEZIV
BPHCQ
BSCLL
CCPQU
CMOOK
CS3
DWQXO
EBU
FEDTE
FRNLG
GODZA
GROUPED_ABI_INFORM_ARCHIVE
GROUPED_ABI_INFORM_COMPLETE
HVGLF
H~9
K1G
K60
K6~
L7B
LIQON
M0C
M59
MVM
O-F
OHT
PALCI
PQBIZ
PQBZA
PQQKQ
PROAC
PZZ
Q2X
QWB
RIWAO
SAMSI
VH1
WH7
WXSBR
ZCG
ZL0
~P4
~P5
AANHP
ACRPL
ACYXJ
ADNMO
AHQJS
AAYXX
AGQPQ
CITATION
PHGZM
PHGZT
PMKZF
AGQHT
AIATT
APEJR
FYSDU
GHEHK
HYQOX
HZAIM
K30
PAAUG
PAWHS
PAWZZ
PAXOH
PBHAV
PBQSW
PBYQZ
PCIWU
PCMID
PCZJX
PDGRG
PDWWI
PETMR
PFVGT
PGXDX
PIHIL
PISVA
PJCTQ
PJTMS
PLCHJ
PMFND
PMHAD
PNQDJ
POUND
PPLAD
PQAPC
PQCAN
PQCMW
PQEME
PQHKH
PQMID
PQNCT
PQNET
PQSCT
PQSET
PSVJG
PVKVW
PVMQY
PZGFC
7XB
8FK
AAWJA
L.-
PKEHL
PQEST
PQUKI
PRINS
Q9U
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c2673-e7fa9c8be01e8ca31c191023982a049187c6b329f192c9d0dfb906a1af27ff6a3
IEDL.DBID BENPR
ISSN 0096-946X
0002-8231
IngestDate Wed Aug 13 05:59:14 EDT 2025
Mon Jun 30 14:30:55 EDT 2025
Tue Jul 01 02:14:27 EDT 2025
Wed Jan 22 16:33:25 EST 2025
Wed Oct 30 09:57:28 EDT 2024
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly false
Issue 1
Language English
License http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c2673-e7fa9c8be01e8ca31c191023982a049187c6b329f192c9d0dfb906a1af27ff6a3
Notes Presented at the Annual Meeting of the ADI, Boston, Nov. 5-8, 1961.
ark:/67375/WNG-W40Z1D3M-7
ArticleID:ASI5090130113
istex:F9A5FA7BD73EDE841000A8FF03CFAC69417FFD5D
Presented at the Annual Meeting of the ADI, Boston, Nov. 5‐8, 1961.
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 14
ObjectType-Article-1
PQID 1301250286
PQPubID 1818555
PageCount 2
ParticipantIDs proquest_journals_195440138
proquest_journals_1301250286
crossref_primary_10_1002_asi_5090130113
wiley_primary_10_1002_asi_5090130113_ASI5090130113
istex_primary_ark_67375_WNG_W40Z1D3M_7
ProviderPackageCode CITATION
AAYXX
PublicationCentury 1900
PublicationDate 1962-01
January 1962
1962-01-00
19620101
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 1962-01-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 01
  year: 1962
  text: 1962-01
PublicationDecade 1960
PublicationPlace New York
PublicationPlace_xml – name: New York
– name: New York, N.Y
– name: Washington
PublicationTitle American Documentation
PublicationTitleAlternate Amer. Doc
PublicationYear 1962
Publisher Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
American Documentation Institute
Wiley Periodicals Inc
Publisher_xml – name: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
– name: American Documentation Institute
– name: Wiley Periodicals Inc
References Bornstein, Harry. A paradigm for a retrieval effectiveness experiment. Am. Document. 12: 254-259, October, 1961.
Maron, M. E., and Kuhns, J. L. On relevance, probabilistic indexing and information retrieval. Journal of the Assoc. for Computing Machinery 7: 216-244, 1960.
1961; 12
1961
1960
1960; 7
e_1_2_1_4_2
e_1_2_1_5_2
e_1_2_1_2_2
e_1_2_1_3_2
References_xml – reference: Maron, M. E., and Kuhns, J. L. On relevance, probabilistic indexing and information retrieval. Journal of the Assoc. for Computing Machinery 7: 216-244, 1960.
– reference: Bornstein, Harry. A paradigm for a retrieval effectiveness experiment. Am. Document. 12: 254-259, October, 1961.
– year: 1961
– volume: 12
  start-page: 254
  year: 1961
  end-page: 259
  article-title: A paradigm for a retrieval effectiveness experiment
  publication-title: Am. Document.
– volume: 7
  start-page: 216
  year: 1960
  end-page: 244
  article-title: On relevance, probabilistic indexing and information retrieval
  publication-title: Journal of the Assoc. for Computing Machinery
– year: 1960
– ident: e_1_2_1_4_2
  doi: 10.1002/asi.5090120403
– ident: e_1_2_1_2_2
  doi: 10.1108/eb049778
– ident: e_1_2_1_3_2
– ident: e_1_2_1_5_2
  doi: 10.1145/321033.321035
SSID ssj0033995
ssj0009965
Score 1.1525351
Snippet Underlying all types of subject analysis—descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic ing, etc.—is the fundamental problem of selection of significant...
Underlying all types of subject analysis—descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic abstracting, etc.—is the fundamental problem of selection of...
Underlying all types of subject analysis-descriptors, uniterms, subject headings, telegraphic abstracting, etc.--is the fundamental problem of selection of...
SourceID proquest
crossref
wiley
istex
SourceType Aggregation Database
Index Database
Publisher
StartPage 93
SubjectTerms Artificial languages
Associations
Documents
Frequency of occurrence
Grammatical subject
Knowledge
Language
Language history
Lexical access
Literary criticism
Literary translation
Natural language
Semantics
Speech acts
Subject heading schemes
Subject specialists
Synonyms
Syntactic structures
Terminology
Time
Title Relevancy and pertinency in indexing
URI https://api.istex.fr/ark:/67375/WNG-W40Z1D3M-7/fulltext.pdf
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002%2Fasi.5090130113
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1301250286
https://www.proquest.com/docview/195440138
Volume 13
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwhV1LS8QwEB5096IH8YnVVXqQ9VRtkjZtTrK-FXYRH7h4CWmSggj1sSvsz3eyze4qiB5Ln8w033yT5JsB2MsItbmxIqIqLaPEJjbKlaUREwoBU1jCC6dG7vb45UNy3U_7fsJt4LdVTjBxDNTmVbs58kPEWozFGA350dt75LpGudVV30JjHpoIwXnagObxWe_mdlZ2V_ApG2ZOxTllw7RuVYgM3nWZ70_qOcb0UA2eDzCMuiU9QtiPeNV0ph_9IKPfKe04Jp0vw5Ink2Gn9v4KzNlqFRa_lRhchR0vTAjboVceOU-Efkivwd6tE5g7iA1VZcIbt826cnLM8LnCO4wd4WPW4eH87P7kMvKdEyJNecYim5VK6LywMbG5VoxoTMucjDWnClMCkmeaF4yKEvmdFiY2ZSFirogqaVaWXLENaFSvld2EkGkdFxlmgZxhqiIs8hXNlEmN1khljA1gf2If-VYXyJB1KWQq0ZJyZskA2mPzTS9THy9uW1mWysfehXxM4idyyroyC6A1sa_0I2ogZ_4PYPuX0yJNXKqYB0DHHvnnY2Tn7mp2tPX3G7dhAYGK1jMvLWgMPz7tDnKRYbHrf7gvty7Txw
linkProvider ProQuest
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV1Nb9QwEB2V7gE4VFBAhLbgQymn0NhOnPiAUKEtu7S7qkqrrrgYx3akCin92CLKn-I3MrNJdlsJwanHKIkTzYxn3th-MwDrOReh8EHHwmZVnIY0xIUNIpbaosPUgauS2MjDkeofp5_H2XgBfndcGDpW2fnEqaP2Z47WyDfR12Isxmio3p9fxNQ1inZXuxYajVnshV8_MWWbvBtso35fC7G7c_SxH7ddBWInVC7jkFdWu6IMCQ-Fs5I7TFmI4lkIi3CZF7lTpRS6QuzjtE98VepEWW4rkVeVshLHvQc9hBkaZ1Hvw87o4HBe5lerGfqWxBqdoW_RtEbEjIG62o-7-pGJ2LST07cYtmkLkXN5Kz72SNXXt8DvTQg9jYG7j2CpBa9sq7G2x7AQ6mV4eKOk4TKstUQItsFaphNpnrUu5AmsHxKhnVw6s7VnB3Ssuyb6Jzut8Q0frnGYp3B8JzJ9Bov1WR2eA5POJWWOWaeSmBrpgPjISesz7xxCJx8ieNPJx5w3BTlMU3pZGJSkmUsygo2p-GaP2cvvdIwtz8zJ6JM5SZOvfFsOTR7Baidf087giZnbWwQrf7mts5RS0yICMdXIf37GbH0ZzK9e_PuLr-B-_2i4b_YHo70VeIBOUjSrPquweHX5I6whDroqX7bGx-DbXdv7H2K0EGs
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV1Lb9QwEB6VXQnRQ1UKqKEt-FDKKWxs5-UDQoXt0qV0tSpUXXExju1IFVL62CLKX-PXdWaT7LYSglOPUZ4aT775xvY3A7CdceFz51UoTFKGsY99mBsvQqkMAqbyPC1IjXw4SveP40-TZLIEf1otDG2rbDFxBtTuzNIceQ-xFmMxRsO0VzbbIsb9wbvzi5A6SNFKa9tOo3aRA__7F6Zv07fDPo71KyEGe18_7IdNh4HQijSToc9Ko2xe-Ij73BrJLaYvJPfMhUHqzPPMpoUUqkQeZJWLXFmoKDXclCIry9RIfO4D6GYYFfMOdN_vjcZHi5K_Kp0zcUkK0jkTF3WbRMweqMP9pK0lGYmemZ6-wRBOy4mcyzuxskvDfn2HCN-m07N4OFiFlYbIst3a8x7Dkq_WYPlWecM12GpEEWyHNaon8gLWwMkT2D4icTvBOzOVY2Pa4l2RFJSdVniH89f4mKdwfC82fQad6qzy68CktVGBxkWQwDRJeeRKVhqXOGuRRjkfwOvWPvq8Ls6h6zLMQqMl9cKSAezMzDe_zFz-oC1tWaJPRh_1SRx94315qLMANlv76uZvnuqF7wWw8ZfTKokpTc0DELMR-c_H6N0vw8XR83-_8SU8RD_Xn4ejgw14hHgp6gmgTehcXf70W0iJrooXje8x-H7f7n4DUu0Ulw
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Relevancy+and+pertinency+in+indexing&rft.jtitle=American+documentation&rft.au=Rees%2C+Alan+M.&rft.date=1962-01-01&rft.pub=Wiley+Subscription+Services%2C+Inc.%2C+A+Wiley+Company&rft.issn=0096-946X&rft.eissn=1936-6108&rft.volume=13&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=93&rft.epage=94&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Fasi.5090130113&rft.externalDBID=10.1002%252Fasi.5090130113&rft.externalDocID=ASI5090130113
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0096-946X&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0096-946X&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0096-946X&client=summon