Participants in Networked Knowledge Organization Systems/Services (as of March 14, 2000)
(back to NKOS page)

Abbing, Ralph
Allard, Suzie
Ardoe, Anders
Babamov, Vasil
Bargmeyer, Bruce
Bartolo, Laura M.
Bechhofer, Sean
Bedford, Denise A. D.
Betz, Anne
Bivona, Eric J.
Blum,  Stan
Busch, Joseph A.
Chipman, Alison
Daniel Jr., Ron
Davies, Ron
DiPietro, Deanne
Doerr, Martin
Domenico, Ben
Eliasen, Karen
Futornick, Michelle
Gagnon, Stuart
Geber,  Ecaterina
Goble, Carole
Hammond, Joel
Hart, Quinn
Hill, Linda
Hodge, Gail
Hower, Paul
Koch, Traugott
Laurent, Sciboz
Lehmann, Fritz
Lima, Tarcisio
Lussier, Steve
Maguire, Marsha
Markham, Jim
Méndez. Eva
Miller, Paul
Milstead, Jessica
Nair, Gopi
Nolting, Daniel
Ostergren, Marilyn
Pease, Bill
Prescott, Leah
Purat, Jacek
Raugh, Michael
Schwartz, Candy
Shiri, Ali Asghar
Soergel, Dagobert
Spasser, Mark
Spencer, Linda Hill
Staples, Thornton
Starr, Lori J.
Theobald, Matt
Thomas,Judith
Paul Thompson
Thompson, Roger
Treesh, Erica
Tudhope, Douglas
Vizine-Goetz, Diane
Vogel, Claude
Vogel, Ron
Weland, Madi
White, Richard
Zeng, Marcia Lei
Zhang, Paul



Ralph Abbing is a graduated computer scientist from Duisburg University (Germany) working at the European Patent Office in The Hague, Netherlands, as a examiner in the field G06f17/30 (Databases and Information Retrieval) for several years now. Before that he has been working at a German university at the technology transfer office, helping and assisting computer scientist to get national and international funding. (added 8/17/99)

Homepage of the EPO: http://www.european-patent-office.org
Email: rabbing@epo.nl



Suzie Allard is a doctoral student in the College of Communications and Information Science at the University of Kentucky working with Dr. Donald Case. Her professional background includes 18 years as a media consultant studying end-user reaction to various stimuli. Her research interests are human communication through electronic channels leading to integration of knowledge across disciplinary barriers.  She has joined this group to learn.  (added 8/17/99)

Homepage: http://sac.uky.edu/~slalla0/index.html
Email: slalla0@pop.uky.edu



Anders Ardoe has a background in Computer Systems with a Ph.D. 1986 from Lund University. He has been working with networked computers since 1980 and during 1986 - 1994 as Ass. Professor in Computer Engineering at Lund University. The last years he has been involved in introducing the concept of networked information in libraries. Since 1992 he is working with developing electronic library services first at Lund University Library, Development Department (LUB NetLab) were he was department head from 1994 - 1996. From 1996 he is head of development at the Technical Knowledge Center & Library of Denmark. The European Union projects he is currently involved in are: DESIRE II, UNIverse, GAIA and EULER. (See statement with Traugott Koch).

Homepage: http://nwi.dtv.dk/anders/
Email: and@dtv.dk



Vasil Babamov is the Editor of the Chemical Abstracts Thesaurus.  He oversees the development of the Thesaurus, which currently has about 15,000 preferred terms, and its integration into the building of the CA database.  A particularly concern is the implications that the expanded networked applications of thesauri will have on the development of the thesaurus structure and content to ensure that the thesaurus remains a useful tool for purposes beyond its traditional implementation.  Another concern is with providing networked thesaurus access to the analysts involved in building the database and maximizing the benefits of using the thesaurus in the database building process.  The CA Thesaurus is presently fully accessible only internally: on STN via the existing STN thesaurus software; via an Intranet web-based hypertext thesaurus tool; and via a couple of internally developed tools that partially integrate the thesaurus into the database building process.  We are anticipating incorporating the thesaurus into the public access to the CA database on STN, the web-based STN-easy and Scifinder that provide access to multiple databases, and into other planned CAS products. Additional work needs to be done on the thesaurus to enable automatic backfile search in light of the major changes our vocabulary has undergone. The only public assess to the thesaurus is a restricted version of the internal web thesaurus hypertext tool that provides only a listing of the thesaurus terms. This listing can be accessed at: http://www.cas.org/vocabulary/ .  Dr. Babamov received a Ph.D. in Chemical Physics from the University of Illinois in 1977 and was engaged in research and teaching in that field at several universities before joining Chemical Abstracts as a Scientific Information Analyst in 1986.

Email: vbabamov@cas.org



Bruce Bargmeyer is a Computer Scientist at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Guest Researcher at the National Institute of Standards and Technology.  Bruce is chair of the ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 32 (Data Management and Interchange) and vice chair of the NCITS L8 group for Data Representation. Bruce is interested in the use of metadata registries for knowledge organization services. Current operational and research work involves the Environmental Data Registry www.epa.gov/edr, the EPA Terminology Reference System www.epa.gov/trs  and the Environmental Data Exchange Network (EDEN). EDEN is a collaborative effort between the European Environment Agency, the Environmental Protection Agency, the US Department of Defense and the US Department of Energy. It involves work on standardizing metadata and includes a demonstration of the use of an ontology for querying widely distributed databases using request brokers, agents, mediators, and related intelligent information services technology. (added 8/17/99)

Email: bargmeyer.bruce@epamail.epa.gov



Laura M. Bartolo is an Associate Professor in Libraries and Media Services at Kent State University. Her primary focus in the ALCOM/NIST Heterogeneous Structures Project is network-accessible information description and retrieval. Specific groups of terms in related areas have been developed among the scientists with the growth of the Liquid Crystalline Optical Materials (ALCOM) subject domain. A next step in the project is to develop a knowledge organization structure related to liquid crystal research building upon the thesaurus and classification tools in place.  The knowledge structure will incorporate the multiple domains represented within the project, the interests and needs of applied and basic research, and will capitalize on distributed information services.

Email:  lbartolo@kent.edu



Sean Bechhofer is a Research Fellow in the Information Management Group at the University of Manchester. He received a B.Sc. degree in Mathematics from Bristol University in 1988 and has been a researcher in the University of Manchester Department of Computer Science since 1993, working initially with the Medical Informatics Group on the GALEN project (http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/mig/galen). His main research interests are in the applications of description logics, particularly as a delivery mechanism for terminologies and semantic metadata, and their use in indexing and retrieval. He is currently involved with the STARCH (http://potato.cs.man.ac.uk/starch) and TAMBIS (http://img.cs.man.ac.uk/tambis) projects. STARCH is concerned with using DL models to support querying over picture archives, while TAMBIS uses a conceptual model to provide unified access to multiple biological information sources. [added 11/20/98]

Email: seanb@cs.man.ac.uk
Homepage: http://potato.cs.man.ac.uk/seanb/



Denise A. D. Bedford is currently Thesaurus Manager/Developer for The World Bank in Washington, DC.   She is responsible for the development of the forthcoming 1998 edition of The World Bank Group's Thesaurus.  The Thesaurus takes the form of electronic and print editions, as well as serving as the intelligence behind the "smart" RetrievalWare search engine. She has earned Ph.D. (Information Science, UC Berkeley), MS (Librarianship, Western Michigan University), MA and BA (Russian;  German;  History, University of Michigan).  Other employment highlights include:   Catholic University of America (Adjunct Faculty), Intel Corporation, NASA GSFC and STI Program, Stanford University, University of California Systemwide Administration, University of Michigan, as well as consulting projects for International Monetary Fund, and federal agencies.

Objectives for the workshop:   (1) learn which of the NISO-defined thesaurus relationships other organizations and researchers are using in mapping thesaurus content to semantic network structures, as well as relationships in use beyond this set;  (2) determine whether there is practical consistency in the naming conventions for semantic relationships, and (3) learn how other organizations have "packaged" semantic network relationships to search strategies for end-users.

Email: dbedford@worldbank.org



Anne Betz graduated in Library and Information Studies at the University of Applied Sciences in Cologne, Germany, Department of Library and Information Studies (LIS), in September 1997. From October 1997 on she is working half-time at DEUTERM, the recently founded German Information and Documentation Centre for Terminology. DEUTERM is to represent the German node in a European Terminology Documentation Centre Network (TDC-net) being established in the course of a European Union project which started in August this year. The TDC-net Project is an activity within the framework of the European MLIS Programme (MultiLingual Information Society).

"In general, my interest in the NKOS initiative is exchanging professional information on a high level and learning more about the methodical and technical aspects of realizing multilingual access to databases and Web sites by means of controlled vocabulary systems.  As DEUTERM offers a list of thesauri, thesaurus maintenance software and classification schedules browsable by languages and by subject (http://www.fbi.fh-koeln.de/labor/Bir/thesauri_new/indexen.htm) which is to be represented by means of systematic categories one day, I am especially interested in the discussion about and the development of the Thesaurus Registry."  (added 10/23/98)

e-mail: anne.betz@fh-koeln.de



Eric J. Bivona is a Senior Programmer in the Information Systems group at Dartmouth College.  Eric has been involved with the development of Z39.50, and network information systems at Dartmouth. (added 8/17/99)

Email Eric.J.Bivona@Dartmouth.EDU



Stan Blum is the Research Information Manager at the California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco. By academic training he is a systematic ichthyologist (the classification of fishes; Ph.D. Zoology, University of Hawaii, 1988). Since 1990, however, he has been working full-time in biodiversity and natural history collections informatics. The two most important themes in his work have been: 1) designing integrated information systems for natural history museums (i.e., systems that support a wide variety of collection disciplines, collection management practices, and uses of collection information), and 2) developing data standards and software architectures that will enable data to be integrated across distributed and heterogeneous collection databases. He recently organized "A Workshop on the Compilation, Maintenance, and Dissemination of Taxonomic Authority Files." The purpose of the workshop was to provide an initial forum for members of the systematics and library/information science communities to discuss concepts, practices, and technologies that will promote consistency in the cataloging, indexing, and retrieval of biological information. Workshop results indicated that biological taxonomy and classification would provide a challenging test bed for cross-discipline work involving thesaurus development, authority control, cooperative cataloging, and multi-thesaurus integration. Participants recommended that the dialog between the communities continue, particularly under the framework of DL research. (Added 8/3/98; updated 3/4/99.)

Email: sblum@calacademy.org
Taxonomic Authority Files Workshop website: http://research.calacademy.org/taf/
California Academy of Sciences website: http://www.calacademy.org


Joseph A. Busch is currently the Vice President for Information Product Development at Metacode Technologies, Inc., a software company developing search and content management products that integrate metathesaurus and metadata technologies. Prior to joining Metacode in 1998, Mr. Busch was the Getty Information Institute's program manager for standards and resources projects including the Art & Architecture Thesaurus and Thesaurus of Geographic Names. His domain experience ranges from the arts and humanities to business and law. Over the past 25 years as an information professional, he has worked in a wide variety of institutional settings including academic, private, and public libraries, as well as management consulting organizations. Mr. Busch organized and led the DL 97 workshop on Metadata and Thesauri. He is currently the President-elect of the American Society for Information Science (http://www.asis.org/). Metacode is working to operationalize cross-domain metathesaurus technology as an incremental distributed resource. As such, Metacode aims to be a leader in the development of standards to support this objective, and an early implementor of them. To support this goal, Metacode is a member of the W3C, and has a particular interest in developing XML architectures. (revised 3/14/00)

Metacode website: http://www.metacode.com/

Email: JBusch@metacode.com



Alison Chipman is an editor at the Getty Information Institute Vocabulary Program. Specifically she is the editor primarily (not solely) responsible for the Art & Architecture Thesaurus (AAT). Discussions at the scholarly/professional level (or any for that matter) on topics relating to the creation, distribution, and use of thesauri are of vital interest to her and her Program. In particular, they are concerned with the topic of online, Internet, and other electronic applications of thesauri, and how the unique and powerful features of their semantic structure can be fully utilized in information retrieval. The NKOS list offers a chance to listen in and participate in just such discussions. (added July 13, 1998)

Email: AChipman@getty.edu



Ron Daniel Jr. is a Senior Information Scientist at DATAFUSION, Inc. - a start-up software company developing knowledge management products that integrate metathesaurus, metadata, and systems modeling technologies. Prior to joining DATAFUSION, Ron was a Technical Staff Member at Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he began his active participation in the working groups that produced the RDF specifications. Ron has also been active in the Dublin Core
and URN efforts. He is currently active in the XML Linking standardization effort, where he is co-editor of the XPointer specification draft and chairs the associated interest group. (added July 6, 1999)

Email: rdaniel@datafusion.net


Ron Davies is Senior Systems Librarian at the International Labour Office in Geneva Switzerland, a UN specialized agency that has published the ILO Thesaurus for more than twenty years. As a consultant with Bibliomatics, Inc. from 1987 to 1999, he designed and developed thesaurus management systems for the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (Paris) and the International Development Research Centre (Ottawa), and led a project to create a subject classification system for United Nation's
information available over the Internet. (revised 7/9/99)

Email: davies@ilo.org



Deanne DiPietro is Technical Projects Coordinator for the California Resources Agency's CERES Program, the California Environmental Resources Evaluation System. The goal of CERES is to facilitate access to environmental data and information, and one of the major efforts toward this goal is the development of information cataloging and indexing technology for use on the World Wide Web. Deanne's role with CERES is in user interface design and partnership project coordination, as well as assisting in directing the efforts of the web development and programming team. She is co-lead with Quinn Hart in CERES' partnership with the USGS Biological Resource Division to develop an environmental theme thesaurus for linking distributed thesauri, and an application programming interface for accessing and manipulating descriptors from the distributed thesauri.

Email: deanne@ceres.ca.gov
CERES: http://ceres.ca.gov
CERES Thesaurus page: http://ceres.ca.gov/thesaurus
CERES Catalog page: http://ceres.ca.gov/catalog



Martin Doerr is a Senior Application Scientist with the Centre for Cultural Informatics and Documentation Systems, Institute of Computer Science, Foundation for Research and Technology, Hellas (FORTH), Heraklion, Crete, Greece. He works on thesaurus management, ontologies and heterogeneous data access in close cooperation with cultural bodies and library organisations.

"Based on my experience from classification methods in software repositories, and with semantic network-based cultural documentation systems, I have led the development of a proof-of-concept prototype for a new vocabulary management system for the Getty Information Institute (former AHIP) in Los Angeles. This system demonstrated the capability of the Semantic Index System, product of ICS-FORTH, to manage effectively amounts of hundreds of thousands of terminological records in various schemata. With the AQUARELLE project as test bed, we have developed this prototype into a competitive thesaurus management system for multilingual thesauri, the "SIS-TMS". Its novel features is a partitioning and versioning mechanism, which allows for consistent cooperative development by semi-autonomous groups and integration of distributed "terminology servers" into heterogeneous
information environments. It is on product level since summer 1998, and has already found vivid interest in Greece, France, England, and Italy and at the European Commission.

"Recently, I have initiated and participate in the European Term-IT project in the Language Engineering Sector of TELEMATICS, which aims at combining language engineering and human processes for the more efficient production of terminological resources in the cultural domain. My interest in thesauri is complementary to my work on conceptual structures with respect to the general problem of information mediation in heterogenuous distributed environments. I do research and have published on questions of knowledge representation, cooperative development of thesauri and knowledge resources, effective information access and architectures for heterogeneous distributed information environments.

"I am member of ICOM-CIDOC and involved in the development of a domain ontology for the museums community, the oo CIDOC Reference Model, going to be presented in October in Melbourne." (added 9/9/98)

Some references:

P.Constantopoulos, M.Doerr, "Component Classification in the Software Information Base", appeared in : O.Nierstrasz, D.Tsichritzis, "Object-Oriented Software Composition", Prentice Hall, England, 1996

M. Doerr, "Reference Information Acquisition and Coordination", in: "ASIS'97 -Digital Collections: Implications for Users, Funders, Developers and Maintainers", Proceedings of the 60th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Information Sciences, "
November 1-6 '97, Washington, Vol.34. Information Today Inc.: Medford, New Jersey, 1997. ISBN 1-57387-048-X.

M. Doerr, I. Fundulaki, "SIS-TMS, A Thesaurus Management System for Distributed Digital Collections", Second European Conference on Digital Libraries, Heraklion, Sept. 1998, to be published.

I.Dionissiadou, M.Doerr, "Mapping of material culture to a semantic network", in : Automating Museums in the Americas and Beyond, Sourcebook, ICOM-MCN Joint Annual Meeting, August 28-September 3, 1994

Doerr M. (1996). "Authority services in global information spaces". Heraklion - Crete, Greece: FORTH, Institute of Computer Science - Technical Report FORTH-ICS/TR-163. also on: Workshop for Networked Information Retrieval, SIGIR '96, Zurich, August 1996  (http://www.ics.forth.gr/proj/isst/Publications/TechnicalReports.html)

Martin Doerr, Irini Fundulaki "The Aquarelle Terminology Service", ERCIM News Number 33, April1998, p14-15

M. Doerr and I. Fundulaki. "A proposal on extended interthesaurus links" Technical Report ICS-FORT/TR-215, March 1998.

Email: martin@ics.forth.gr
Website: http://www.ics.forth.gr/proj/isst/



Ben Domenico is Deputy Director of the Unidata Program. Unidata (University Data) provides software and systems which enable nearly 200 participating university departments to receive, analyze, and display real-time environmental data from a variety of sources (weather station observations from around the world, satellite imagery, data from weather radars, lightning strike observation, output from supercomputer weather prediction models, weather observations from instruments on commercial aircraft, etc.).  More recently, he has been involved in setting up a related program (PAGE, the Program for Advancement of Geosciences Education) which has recently received NSF funding to set up a Geosciences Digital Library (GDL).  I am hoping to learn about the important relevant current technologies that will enable PAGE to accomplish its objectives for the GDL. (added 8/12/99)

Email: ben@unidata.ucar.edu



Karen Eliasen leads Microsoft's vocabulary and meta-schema team within the Information Services Knowledge Architecture Group.  This work involves creating a corporate-wide set of controlled vocabularies that support search, browse, tagging, publishing, news push, and other features on a corporate intranet consisting of over 2 million documents.  In addition to building vocabularies, the Knowledge Architecture team is working with other groups across Microsoft to integrate existing thesauri, taxonomies, authority lists, and metadata schemata with a registry that will make necessary translations and connections among these various elements. Karen's special interest is measuring the value added by vocabulary control and schema utilization using both quantitative and qualitative methods. (revised 7/7/99)

Email: karenel@microsoft.com



Michelle Futornick is Senior Catalog Analyst at Aeneid Corporation in San Francisco, where she develops taxonomies for organizing Web resources. Aeneid is building a network of vertical portals to give business professionals access to the most recent and relevant industry-specific information. Before joining Aeneid, Michelle was an Editor at the Getty Information Institute, where she worked on three thesauri that are widely used in the documentation and retrieval of networked cultural heritage information. Michelle has a Master's in Library and Information Studies from the University of California at Berkeley. (revised 7/16/99)

Email: mfutornick@aeneid.com



Stuart Gagnon, Internet Librarian for Terminology Projects, works as a contractor with GCI Information Services for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) at the EPA Headquarters Information Resources Center.  A graduate of UNC-CH School of Information and Library Science (SILS), he has worked in libraries and/or with databases for over 5 years.  He recently supported development efforts for an EPA metadata catalog which will provide enhanced access to the Agency's Web resources.  [This metadata catalog is currently in an Intranet production phase.]  Mr. Gagnon leads a small team of  Internet librarians who support the work of EPA's Enterprise Information Management Division (EIMD) in their efforts to assist the European Environment Agency (EEA) in upgrading their thesaurus product, GEneral Multilingual Environment Thesaurus (GEMET).   He also leads the team's efforts on a collaborative project between EIMD and the EPA Superfund Information Management Center (IMC) which would integrate a coordinated electronic tool in which related information, including data, subject terminology and metadata, will be collected and shared between many systems, across the Web.  State-level agencies that collect hazardous waste clean-up (Superfund-related) data will be invited to participate in this project that is designed to enhance the collection of similar data, help in the building of new databases and drive search engines.  The project includes a working component that would allow users to query disparate legacy databases in a networked environment.  Components of this project are: the Environmental Data Exchange Network (EDEN), the Environmental Data Registry (EDR) and the Terminology Reference System (TRS).  This project espouses a 'registry' approach
to standardization. [added 4/9/99]

Email: gagnon.stuart@epa.gov



Ecaterina Geber is carrying out research in the area of Intellectual Access to Cultural Information at CHIN. Her work at ARTEXPO Foundation and the Information Center for Culture and Heritage Romania, for over 15 years, focused on three main areas: definition of communication and information sharing procedures, data modeling and development of standards, access to and integration of resources in a distributed multicultural environment. Ecaterina was responsible for the design implementation, administration and evolution of the Romanian National Cultural Heritage Information System from over 300 cultural institutions in Romania. Ecaterina initiated and managed the development of a series of CD-ROMs and imaging projects focusing on cultural topics.

The launch of ARTEFACTS CANADA in April, 1998 by the Canadian Heritage Information Network (CHIN) signaled the first step towards integrated access to information about objects held in Canadian museum collections. Artefacts Canada, formerly the National Inventories, is the product of decades of collaboration between the Canadian museum community and CHIN, and contains millions of records describing objects, natural science specimens and archaeological sites. Effective access into an information environment containing a diversity of resources and over twenty million of information items strongly revealed the necessity of terminology and classification tools to support both description and retrieval.

The integration of The Art & Architecture Thesaurus with Artefacts Canada is one of the most significant improvements to access and retrieval. The thesaurus, used as a behind-the-scenes retrieval tool, enables access to objects through hierarchies. This integration has permitted a conceptual structure, that embeds art history knowledge, to be applied to the terminology used in the existing information collections, without the need to modify the resource itself or to impose vocabulary or category structures on those participating in the building of this collective resource. The architecture enables the potential addition of other authorities and organized information resources, including geographical or temporal perspectives, or offering alternative views for search results categorization.

To enable access in both French and English, a multilingual thesaurus was developed using The Art & Architecture Thesaurus as a base. The most frequently used terms in the Humanities database were identified and a French equivalent term was defined. Currently, there are 2,600 French terms available and active during the retrieval process.

Email: Kati_Geber@pch.gc.ca



Carole Goble  is affiliated with the University of Manchester U.K. Her work over the last eight years has been in clinical technologies and controlled vocabularies and in the last two years on terminologies for works of art. They use Descriptor Logics and terminological reasoning to build self-organizing compositional schemes. She is just starting to work on a funded project in collaboration with the Getty Images to classify the subjects of the Hulton-Getty Picture Archive.

Email: carole@cs.man.ac.uk



Joel Hammond is in the Abstracting and Indexing Department for BIOSIS. He was instrumental in the design of the new BIOSIS relational indexing system.

EMail: jkhammond@mail.biosis.org 



Quinn Hart is a Technical Researcher for the California Resources Agency's CERES Program, the California Environmental Resources Evaluation System.  Quinn is responsible for review and implementation of standards and applications relating to metadata, indexing, and cataloging issues. CERES' thesaurus project  is part of an effort to standardize the language used when indexing, and searching for environmental data products in California.  In addition to the generation of a thesaurus of environmental terms, CERES is developing a toolkit that will allow for distributed access to thesauri in a consistent manner for application development.  This toolkit is based on an object-oriented paradigm, abstracting a thesaurus into a set of objects and methods. A toolkit in PERL has been developed and one for JAVA is underway.

Email: quinn@ucdavis.edu
CERES: http://ceres.ca.gov
CERES Thesaurus page: http://ceres.ca.gov/thesaurus



Linda L. Hill is a Research Specialist with the Alexandria Digital Library Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She has worked extensively with thesaurus and metadata development and digital library projects. She has worked extensively with gazetteer design and implementation as interactive digital library services. Part of the gazetteer work has included the development of a Thesaurus of Feature Types.

"My personal goal in relation to this workshop is to get thesaurus principles and practices enabled within digital libraries so that existing thesauri can be more known and accessible, so that developing projects will recognize the value of the thesaurus approach and will develop and use thesauri according to established standards. Also, to evaluate the usefulness of thesauri and classification systems for networked information discovery."

Alexandria Digital Library website: http://www.alexandria.ucsb.edu
Email: lhill@alexandria.ucsb.edu
Homepage: www.alexandria.ucsb.edu/~lhill



Gail Hodge, Information International Associates (IIa), has been involved with production systems for abstracting/indexing services for 20 years. She's currently working as a consultant to USGS on a biodiversity vocabulary for the National Biological Information Infrastructure (NBII). She previously held positions with the NASA Center for AeroSpace Information and with Biosis.

"My main goal is to promote this discussion at a high level so that what we do within the U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division (BRD) context is based on where we are within the technical community. We know that we can't wait until all the problems are solved, but we want to be in synch as much as possible. We need an understanding of the issues involved in using distributed thesauri: How do we handle rights management, authentication, etc. and charging for commercial databases? What will users want to do with these distributed thesauri?  This effects navigation, searching, "transfer," etc. What do we need to know about other thesauri and vocabularies in order to use them in a distributed fashion? Is a registry both of thesaurus elements and of particular thesauri necessary to this effort? Where does this effort intersect with the efforts of others: RDF, XML, metadata schema, metadata registries, Z39.19, Z39.50, search engine vendors, etc.? I would like to come out of this with at least a start toward a way to deal with the architecture so that we can move forward and integrate this effort with other metadata and Internet efforts."

National Biological Information Infrastructure website: http://www.nbii.gov/
Email: gailhodge@aol.com



Paul Hower is with Intermedia Marketing & Production, Inc. in Atlanta. He says: "My first brush with information science was when I took courses at the UC Berkeley School of Library and Information Studies in 1977. After turning down a generous offer by Dr. Maron to stay at Berkeley, I went on to get a Masters degree in something called "Interactive Telecommunications" at NYU. The philosophy of that program was to provide students with the requisite tools and knowledge to understand all aspects of interactive services, from the technical and social to the legal and economic. This background has served me well as an IT consultant, corporate manager and in my own businesses.

I have enjoyed something of a retirement for the past few years, but have continued to consult at the request of associates and referrals. IMP's latest client is Consumers Union - the non-profit publisher of Consumer Reports - who hired us to help them understand "post Web site" Internet opportunities. We are urging them to keep an eye on developments affecting the "semantic interoperability" of the Internet, and have described how metadata, vocabulary control and personal 'bots' may change the way people shop over the next 5 years - and the way information providers like CU distribute their wares.

While I am most interested in what [which] users will want to do with [what] thesauri, dictionaries, etc., my background inclines me to be curious about the other 'straw topics' as well. One topic of interest not mentioned in the workshop's advance materials is the interaction of human-generated with machine-generated vocabularies. Might strengths of the one correct weaknesses in the other? Should current work on standards consider how these discrete technologies may interoperate in the future?

I am currently a member of the ACM and SIGIR, and will be attending DL '98. I hope it is still possible to participate in the workshop, because it seems like a rare opportunity to meet with a geographically dispersed group of people face to face."

Email: hower@mindspring.com
Phone: 404-256-1313



Traugott Koch is Senior librarian, Electronic Information Services at NetLab, Lund University Library Development Department, Sweden. He has developed digital library services during the last six years in European, Nordic and Swedish projects (among others the European DESIRE project and the Nordic Metadata Project). The focus in these projects is on resource discovery and retrieval, on resource description and metadata, knowledge organization, indexing and search services. During 1998 he is visiting scholar at OCLC Office of Research, Dublin, OH, working on problems in the intersection between metadata production, automatic classification and the retrievability of highly qualified subject information from heterogeneous Internet and metadata databases. He is a member of the Dublin Core Policy Advisory Committee.

We (Traugott and Anders Ardoe) expect the workshop to start an initial discussion on what vocabulary related operations have to be agreed upon as a basis for standards for using (distributed) vocabulary support over the Internet. In addition an orientation would be valuable what syntaxes and formats are promising for the task to encode and exchange the data. We hope a working group will be started to further this and related tasks.

Digital library research description:  dl98ws-applfinal.html
Homepage: http://www.ub2.lu.se/koch.html
Email: Traugott.Koch@ub2.lu.se



Sciboz Laurent is in charge of the research institute ICARE from the School of Engineering of Valais, Switzerland. Current work, Harmony Village Project, stresses the design and implementation of information business systems with a focus on integrating knowledge organization systems with specific information retrieval systems. (added 8/17/99)

Homepage of the Harmony Project : http://www.harmony-village.com
Email: laurent.sciboz@icare.ch



Fritz Lehmann is interested in formal conceptual descriptions of geographic concepts, and in cross-linking different standards, ontologies, gazetteer-formats, thesauri, and data dictionaries to each other accurately.  He is Senior Ontologist at Cycorp (creators of the Cyc common-sense knowledge program), in Austin, Texas, and does outside consulting on ontologies and automated information integration.  He has an ongoing personal project to cross-link the feature terms (and concepts and encodings) used in all major geographic information systems, databases, and thesauri, along with terms for concepts like organizations, persons, titles etc. that might be used in any address (postal or electronic) worldwide. (He isn't trying to do that for instance data, just for the feature types, concepts and data elements.)  He recently proposed adding (optional) formal logical concept descriptions to the ISO 11179 Data Element registry standard.  (added 4/20/99)

Email(in 1999): fritz@cyc.com



Tarcisio Lima is, from Aug/98 to Aug/2000, a Visiting Faculty at the LSDIS (Large-Scale Distributed Information Systems Lab), at
the Computer Science Department of the UGA (University of Georgia). His MS and PhD backgrounds are in the database area and his primary interest is semantic integration and correlation of information. His research is now directed towards the ADL/ADEPT projects (Alexandria Digital Library/Alexandria Digital Earth Prototype Modeling System), where he is coordinating the implementation of the 'iscapes' (information landscapes), a collection of semantically related information assets, along with the ways to analyze and visualize them, that facilitate learning about the Digital Earth. His interest in the NKOS workshop is discussing the information integration in DL's using ontologies/meta thesauri inter-relationships across multiple learning domains. (added 8/12/99)

Email: tarcisio@cs.uga.edu



Steve Lussier is a Master's student in UC Berkeley's School of Information Management and Systems (SIMS), where he is studying the
development of digital libraries and documents, user interface design methods, and other shifting targets in informatics.  He is interested in the promise
of XML and RDF for combining flexibility with standardization in information systems.  He has had the opportunity to work this past Spring and
Summer with Dr. Stanley Blum at the California Academy of Sciences, deploying Academy collections-related databases, mostly of taxonomic
specimen  collections, on the Web, and doing planning and analysis toward the development of authority files and the resolution of other database integration issues.

"I believe the ongoing development of metadata and schema standards, in combination with work on thesauri and ontologies, will enable researchers
especially but by no means exclusively in the sciences to pursue new kinds of in-depth collaboration as well as solo research.  One area that has my
attention is bioinformatics (see http://www.eionet.eu.int/gbif/ for a current initiative).  I'm really interested in a whole raft of changes facing academic
and scientific information-sharing.  I suspect that we're going to see some disciplinary boundaries being rewritten as the task of integrating information
resources across those boundaries becomes a (relatively) more transparent one.  Helping enable those kinds of innovations while respecting the
complexity of the data is my goal.  I'm attending this (1999) NKOS workshop to learn more about what people are up to and how I can contribute." (added 8/13/99)

Email: slussier@sims.berkeley.edu



Marsha Maguire is the Collections Librarian at the Experience Music Project, The Experience Music Project is an interactive, music-related museum opening next year at Seattle Center.  We (specifically, a team consisting of EMP librarians, programmers, and digitization and web technologists) are in the early stages of designing a digital library consisting of still images of our collections artifacts, and audio and moving image files made from our sound recordings and videos.  We hope to link these digital reproductions to our catalog records as well as to additional information prepared by the staff (interactive exhibit labels, kiosk presentations, web pages, etc.) and maybe OCR-scanned text such as notes, clippings, and the like.

EMP is developing an in-house thesaurus based on the Art & Architecture Thesaurus and incorporating ANSI thesaurus construction standards, although we have not yet linked the thesaurus database (which utilizes Liu Palmer's commercial thesaurus construction software) to our collections catalog database (an in-house, networked SQL Server database with Microsoft Access input forms and reporting capabilities} -- although we expect to redesign that database soon.  Work on the creation of name authority records has begun; these will be based on, but not always adhere to, AACR2/MARC.  Name authority records will be structured hierarchically to an extent, since we'll be creating authority records for, say, rock bands and the individual members of those bands, and providing links to other bands in which those musicians have performed. We have not developed a search interface yet, but are hoping to develop a very user-friendly searching/browsing/linking system to offer visitors to the museum, serious researchers, and users of the World Wide Web. We're interested in how Z39.50, XML, and other emerging standards might improve access not only to our digital resources, but to the vast store of cultural information held by institutions throughout the world.

Email: marsham@experience.org
Website: www.experience.org



Jim Markham has been the Aquatic Sciences/Biology/German Librarian, as well as the Original Cataloger for Science and German at the University of
California, Santa Barbara, since 1986. In his first career, he was a grant-supported research marine botanist (Ph.D. University of British Columbia) at UBC, Vancouver, B.C.; NRC Canada Atlantic Regional Lab, Halifax, N.S.; and Biologische Anstalt Helgoland, Helgoland, Germany.

Since 1985 he has been a member of IAMSLIC (International Association of Aquatic and Marine Science Libraries and Information Centers) and since 1987 Chair of the IAMSLIC Coordinating Committee on Subject Analysis. The CCSA is concerned with the ASFIS (Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Information System) Thesaurus, which is used for indexing and searching  the international database Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts (ASFA), as well as for cataloging of aquatic science materials in many countries where Library of Congress Subject Headings are not used. The ASFIS Thesaurus is the most widely used thesaurus worldwide for aquatic
science. The Committee was formed as a result of a paper presented by Jim Markham at IAMSLIC 1987, comparing Library of Congress Subject Headings with the ASFIS Thesaurus, for the benefit of catalogers who find the ASFIS Thesaurus more appropriate for aquatic or marine science materials, but are required by cataloging rules to use LCSH when cataloging these materials.

The Committee was formed October 1987 with the following charges:
"1.  To act as a clearinghouse and lobbying focus for IAMSLIC members' suggestions to add or change subject terms in both the ASFIS Thesaurus
and the Library of Congress Subject Headings and;
2.  Coordinate production of a document to map the ASFIS Thesaurus terms with LCSH."

Various approaches have been tried to carry out the second charge. At first, a long table was nearly finished, which simply matched ASFIS terms with their nearest LCSH equivalent, but it was never completely finished and while it was being prepared, both LCSH and ASFIS were updated. It is meant to be a working tool for catalogers, but publication, distribution and updating were not resolved. With the advent of the World Wide Web, it now seems that the best approach would be a searchable Web page, listing all ASFIS terms (some 6000+) and as many LCSH as are necessary to provide equivalents. We note that approximately half of the ASFIS terms still do not have adequate LCSH equivalents. We are still searching for a practical way to build this Web page. Meanwhile, IAMSLIC members worldwide are
eagerly awaiting the finished product.

Reference:
Markham, J.W. (1990).  "Library of Congress subject headings and the ASFIS thesaurus."  In: Oceans From a Global Perspective: Marine Science
Information Transfer (ed. by C.P. Winn), pp. 89-95. Woods Hole, MA : IAMSLIC. (added 9/13/99)

Email:  markham@library.ucsb.edu



Eva Méndez has a Bachelor of Librarianship and Information Science and was in the first class of librarianship specialists graduated in Spain. She is working toward a PH.D. in Information Science from the Carlos III University of Madrid (Spain). She has been working on various Information Services.

She has been a teacher and researcher at the Carlos III University since March 1997. She teaches Information Technologies, Thesaurus Construction, Special Materials Cataloging, and Information Policies in the Information Science Department of that University. Currently, she is working on her theses about "Metadata and Information Retrieval" and she is very interested in all the topics that could be discussed on the "Networked Knowledge Organization Systems/Services" list.

Email: emendez@bib.uc3m.es
Web page: http://porky.uc3m.es/~mendez/profesional/index.html



Paul Miller holds the post of Interoperability Focus at the UK Office for Library and Information Networking (UKOLN). This post is responsible for encouraging the development and deployment of interoperable services across the range of memory organizations, such as libraries, archives, and the cultural heritage community.

Paul is involved in a range of standardization activities, including the work of the Consortium for the Computer Interchange of Museum Information (CIMI), the Z39.50 Implementer's Group (ZIG), and the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, within which he serves on the Executive Committee. (added 1/27/00)

Email: P.Miller@ukoln.ac.uk
UKOLN: http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/
Interoperability Focus: http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/interop-focus/



Jessica Milstead is Principal of The JELEM Company, a consulting firm specializing in index and thesaurus design, and in development of machine-aided indexing systems.  She took her masters and doctorate in information science and librarianship from Columbia University.  She taught cataloging, indexing and information science on library school faculties for a number of years before going into industry, where she was developer and editor of a number of indexes to newspapers and scholarly works.  In 1986 she founded The JELEM Company, and has served clients as an independent consultant since then.  She has been active in NISO standards work, has published extensively in the field, and offers workshops on vocabulary management.

Interest statement:  The environment within which vocabularies for providing access to information are developed and used is undergoing dramatic change. The old pattern of development by a single organization for its own use, with application by specially trained experts, is no longer viable. Creator-applied metadata and machine-aided and automatic indexing are just two developments which are having a major impact on vocabulary development -- and of course the use of natural language processing sometimes replaces
use of any indexing vocabulary at all.  I am concerned with all of these developments; I wish both to remain current with this rapidly changing area and to contribute to its growth. (revised June 14, 1999).

E-mail:  milstead@jelem.com
Web page: www.jelem.com



Gopi Nair is with Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC) and is responsible for their new electronic document management system for processing government reports and other defense documents.

Email: gnair@dtic.mil



Daniel Nolting, Visual Resources Curator at the University of Pittsburgh, and am active in many aspects of establishing digital and data standards to be applied to retrievable images. I am formerly an LC cataloger, and have also worked as an indexer for the Getty Information Institute. I am in the beginning stages of setting up policies and procedures for utilizing the AAT, LCTGM, ICONCLASS, and other useful controlled vocabulary enhancers. I am also in charge of 2 servers, both  networked and running many images through the ethernet and the internet.  ImageAXS Pro and File Maker Pro are the two databases that I am working with, and I eventually hope to link up and/or export to a larger database.  I have been in this position for almost one year (being the first professional librarian) having inherited one of the largest slide collections in the country (650,000) that has evolved without any classification standards. I am currently working with Ph.D. candidates who are performing studies on "content" vs. "concept"-based image bases.

Slide Library: http://www.pitt.edu/~dnolting/slide.html
Email: dnolting@unixs1.cis.pitt.edu



Marilyn Ostergren is a Field Director for the NPS (National Park Service) Natural Resource Bibliography Project. She oversees the development of bibliographic databases of natural resource management and research documents for Park Service units. This includes creating and maintaining a thesaurus of relevant terminology. She has also helped create a web interface for this thesaurus (http://165.83.36.151/nrthes/thes.htm).

"My goal is to coordinate the process of  thesaurus development in the area of natural sciences with others involved with similar projects. I'm particularly interested in joint efforts to create a system of verifying terminology with existing authoritative sources and subject specialists and make the results of that work accessible and available to all interested parties without copyright restrictions." (added 8/20/98)

Email: Marilyn_Ostergren@nps.gov



Bill Pease is the architect of the Environmental Defense Fund's online environmental information service, scorecard.org.  This database-backed website integrates over 200 governmental and scientific datasets covering various environmental issues (primarily related to the human health impacts of chemical pollution).  It attempts to provide profiles of local environmental quality which are easily accessible to the general public via maps and zipcode reports.  The system is currently organized using  FIPS geospatial and CAS chemical informatics standards; it also is in the process of integrating GEMET environmental subject indexing and CRS Legislative Indexing Vocabulary.  Scorecard is expanding rapidly into a national environmental atlas, and work is currently underway to create a global environmental atlas using the same web infrastructure.  A variety of software agents are being developed to extend the site's current rudimentary "enviroguide" by conducting dynamic geospatial and subject indexing of online environmental resources.

Dr. Pease is a toxicologist who also has an adjunct appointment at UC Berkeley's School of Public Health, where he teaches chemical risk
assessment and risk management.  He is an active participant in a number of enviro-informatics issues, including the OECD's IUCLID system for collecting chemical risk assessment data and both state and national efforts to conduct comparative risk assessments and set environmental priorities. (added 6/11/99)

Email: billp@edf.org
Homepage: http://scorecard.org


Leah Prescott works at Mystic Seaport Museum, Inc.  as Collections Information Technology Coordinator and is responsible for the coordination and implementation of data standards across all library and curatorial divisions. She is the chief authority within the museum for controlled vocabulary and terminology issues.  She is currently chairman of the Controlled Vocabulary Special Interest Group for the Museum Computer Network and will be leading a conference session concerning term research for thesaurus construction.  For several years she has collaborated with the Getty Information Institute's Art and Architecture Thesaurus on term research needed to incorporate maritime vocabulary into the AAT and more recently the Thesaurus of Geographic Names.

Mystic Seaport is currently involved in an ambitious project to create an integrated information system which will effectively tie together at least two major databases, a library system (VOYAGER by Endeavor) and a collections maintenance system (MULTIMIMSY by Willoughby Associates).  As our goal is to provide effective access for a broad range of users, we have spent considerable time over the past several years defining and refining our controlled vocabulary both for internal use and to contribute to standards within the domain of maritime history.  We are currently struggling with finding effective ways to enable our component systems to access shared authority files as well as thesauri so that we can offer high precision/controlled vocabulary information retrieval, as well as more effective keyword search strategies.  This workshop will be highly relevant to our efforts as well as of great interest to me.

Email: leah@mysticseaport.org



Jacek Purat is Doctoral Student at the School of Information Management and Systems at UC Berkeley.  He currently works as a research assistant for the SIMS Search Support for Unfamiliar Metadata Vocabularies Project. His work includes: organization of environmental terminologies, multilingual environmental thesauri, and history of environmental classifications.  In addition he is currently developing a Polish language
version of the GEMET Thesaurus. (added 8/10/99)

Email: purat@SIMS.Berkeley.EDU
Homepage: http://www.sims.berkeley.edu/~purat/



Michael Raugh is vice president and chief technology officer at Interconnect Technologies Corporation, Mountain View, CA.  He has worked in advanced technology at Stanford University and HP Labs.  Before joining Interconnect, he served as chief scientist at the Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science where he developed innovative methods for organizing online information.  He leads Interconnect's products and services for information organization and analysis.

"It appears to us at Interconnect that the use of metadata standards in combination with thesauri to help describe and control the vocabulary used for indexing Internet resources would go a long way towards simplifying and accurately focusing searches.  As the Internet continues to expand, and the resources become more varied, the need for such focusing tools will probably increase.  To better understand how to create and make good use of a thesaurus, Interconnect is researching the use of a thesaurus for indexing computer system vulnerabilities for NIST.  In related earlier work, Interconnect, with the cooperation of Linda Hill, developed a prototype thesaurus directory.  If there is sufficient interest in that work, we would like to make it available for wider inspection and use."

Email:    raugh@interconnect.com
Web:   http://www.interconnect.com



Candy Schwartz is on the Faculty at the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at Simmons College, in Boston, Massachusetts. She teaches in the areas of cataloguing and classificiation, indexing, database management, Web site design, and digital libraries. Candy has a BA in Linguistics and an MLS, both from McGill University in Montreal, and a PhD in Information Transfer (yes, that's what they call it) from Syracuse University - her dissertation topic was post-retrieval clustering (1986). Candy's publications relevant to NKOS interests include a chapter on subject access in the Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (many years ago), a recent article in JASIS on search engines, an upcoming article in the Journal of Academic Librarianship on digital libraries, and a just-submitted (January 5) manuscript for a book called "Sorting Out The Web", which is about the application of "traditional" library organizing tools to collections of networked resources. Candy has a lifelong interest
in classificiation and indexing, is excited by current interactions between intellectual and machine-driven organizing methods, and sees NKOS as a community of like-minded people.

Email: candy.schwartz@simmons.edu
Homepage: http://www.simmons.edu/~schwartz/



Ali Asghar Shiri received his BS and MS in library and information science from Tehran University and currently is a PhD student in the Department of Information science, University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. He has worked for seven years in Jahad Scientific Information Services (JSIS), an Iranian nationwide governmental information service. He has been involved with database and Internet based information service provision to the researchers in agricultural as well as science and technology fields. He is very interested in the role and application of thesauri in new information environments, mainly the Internet, and their impact on retrieval performance. He is planning to do his PhD research in this area. (added 2/2/00)

Email: shiri@dis.strath.ac.uk


Dagobert Soergel has been working in the area of thesauri both practically and theoretically for over 30 years. He is the author of the still standard text- and handbook Indexing Languages and Thesauri. Construction and Maintenance (Wiley 1974) and of Organizing Information (Academic Press 1985), which received the American Society of Information Science Best Book Award, and numerous papers and presentation on the theory and practice of thesaurus construction. He has taught courses in thesaurus development at several universities in the U.S. and Germany and he offers a tutorial on Thesauri for knowledge based assistance in searching digital libraries, which will be offered again at the European Digital Library Conference in Crete in September 1998. He has developed a number of thesauri. From 1989 to the present, he has guided the development of the Alcohol and Other Drug Thesaurus. He also chairs NIAAA's Thesaurus Advisory committee. He has developed TermMaster, a thesaurus management software package that can handle an integrated database of multiple thesauri and that is used in the development and maintenance of the AOD Thesaurus. He has proposed SemWeb, an open, multifunctional, multilingual, system for integrated access to knowledge about concepts and terminology (ISKO proceedings 1996). In 1997, Dr. Soergel received the highest award of the American Society for Information Science, the Award of Merit.

Email: ds52@umail.umd.edu



Mark Spasser is currently a research scientist at the Center for Botanical Informatics (CBI) at the Missouri Botanical Garden. He has a background in the organization of knowledge with a Ph.D. in Library and Information Science from University of Illinois. Given that much work in botany presupposes diverse taxonomic viewpoints that structure existing information about plants in different ways, CBI is developing computer-based tools to help represent differing taxonomic viewpoints to provide orienting taxonomic feedback to users navigating floristic digital libraries.  Moreover, CBI is exploring collaborative research arrangements with various institutions, such as the Center for Tele-Information in Denmark whose research involves studying the construction and use of "natural" classification schemes in order to develop multimedia technologies that provide novel means of creating classification systems that evolve through highly distributed processes. (added 10/13/98)

Email: mspasser@cbi.mobot.org



Linda Hill Spencer
Dr. Spencer is the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Project Manager for the development of the U.S. English portion of the General European Multilingual Environmental Thesaurus (GEMET) System.  As a representative on the GEMET Expert Work Group and on the Work Group of the Asian and Pacific Economic Cooperation' s Virtual Center, she is involved in the development of the GEMET system beyond its current European context into a truly international environmental terminological system.  On behalf of U.S. EPA, Dr. Spencer also chairs the Ontology Work Group for the Environmental Data Exchange Network (EDEN).  EDEN is a collaborative endeavor with the Department of Defense, Department of Energy and European Environmental Agency to pilot new technology that will enable users to query across heterogeneous databases.  From 1992-1996, Dr. Spencer was the Director of the United Nations Environment Programme's Environmental Information Exchange Network (INFOTERRA).  At UNEP she supervised the development of a multilingual environmental thesaurus which served as the backbone for the GEMET system.  Prior to her work at UNEP, Dr. Spencer supervised environmental information exchange activities at U.S. EPA.

"I would like to understand how to bring together a multilingual thesaurus and the newest and best in technology to retrieve information in a way that is targeted, reliable and efficient.  How can search engines employ specialized thesauri? Can/should thesauri be deconstructed into topics functions? How can a thesaurus assist in the better organization of metadata inventories/registries?  How can a thesaurus assist in the construction of ontology agents employed in data base integration?"

Email: Spencer.Linda@epamail.epa.gov



Thornton Staples is the Director of Digital Library Research and Development at Alderman Library of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. He is currently in the process of assembling a digital library management system that consolidates the collections created in the library's digital centers since 1992 and positions the library for future developments. The system that is currently under construction is using an object-oriented repository that should be able to include higher-level data structures, such as thesauri and ontologies, as objects integrated into the system.

Prior to this, he was the Chief of the Office of Information Technology at the National Museum of American Art of the Smithsonian Institution. In that position he was extensively involved in metadata issues, participating in the Dublin Core workshop series and the CIMI Dublin core testbed project. Previously, he was the Project Director at the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities at the University of Virginia. In that capacity he was involved in many large-scale humanities research projects, including the Rossetti Archive, the Valley of the Shadow project, the Pompeii Forum project and the Blake Archive. In both of these last two positions he was active in the Museum Educational Site Licensing project, first from the university side, then for the museum. (added 8/6/99)

Email: tls@virginia.edu



Lori J. Starr serves as Head of the Thesaurus Section of the Indexing Branch at the National Agricultural Library.  The Thesaurus Section works cooperatively with CAB International to develop and maintain the CAB Thesaurus, which is the controlled vocabulary for indexing records contained in NAL's bibliographic database, AGRICOLA (Agriculture OnLine Access). The Thesaurus Section maintains an internal thesaurus file for NAL staff.  Additionally, Lori serves as a consultant to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations for maintenance of the English version of AGROVOC, which is the controlled vocabulary of the multilingual AGRIS database.  NAL, in partnership with FAO and CAB International, initiated a Unified Agricultural Thesaurus Project in 1989 which resulted in (1) a classified version of AGROVOC and (2) an overall UAT Classification that encompasses the subject areas of both AGROVOC and CAB Thesaurus.  Lori's next challenge is to provide a classification structure for AgNIC (Agriculture Network Information Center).  NAL is anticipating the release of AGRICOLA on the Internet.

"With the introduction of NAL's database, AGRICOLA, on the Internet, this raises questions of how NAL can most effectively aid retrieval in this large (3 million+ records) database to a variety of users.  I believe that thesauri are generally undervalued and they are usually seen as monsters that slow database production, are not used by searchers, and eat up staff resources to maintain.  My personal goal is to bring the positive aspects of thesauri "out of the closet" and demonstrate how the hierarchical structure and relationships contained in the thesaurus can positively enhance retrieval in an Internet environment.  Other databases on the Internet are already doing this.  How can a network of thesauri further enable retrieval?  What structure needs to be in place at NAL for data exchange?  Listening to what others envision for the future and how I can apply this to the AGRICOLA database are my goals at the workshop."

Email: lstarr@nal.usda.gov



Matt Theobald is President & Chief Scientist at Interactive Nomenclature. Current professional roles include Information Specialist at the Indiana
Higher Education Telecommunication System, Internet Strategy Advisor at i-N.com, and a partner in City360.com. Matt holds a Masters in Science in Library & Information Science ('96) from Indiana University and a B.A. in History ('94) from Hanover College. He has had an active role
in public/private sector Internet development.

Previous positions:
Application Developer | Indiana Digital County Network (INDICO) | Indiana Interactive (I@I) | National Information Consortium (EGOV)
see http://www.indico.net

Webmaster | Access Indiana Information Network | I@I | EGOV
see http://www.state.in.us

Site Architect & Webmaster | IOWAccess Project 1 | Iowa Citizens Information Network, presented the Iowa State Governor's Award
for Outstanding Dedication and Service in Spring 1999. The project itself received the Armand Hammer Information Technology Award
from Vice President Gore in Fall 1999. | EGOV
see http://www.state.ia.us
(added 11/11/99)

Email: theobald@ihets.org
URLs: http://www.i-N.com, http://www.ihets.org,



Judith Thomas is the Associate Director for Digital Media at Clemons Library at the University of Virginia. She is currently developing an on-line archive of digital images, owned by or licensed to the University of Virginia, available for use to our academic community. This archive uses metadata based on the Visual Resources Association Core and implements a variety of classifications tools (especially the thesauri developed by the Getty Information Institute (http://www.gii.getty.edu/vocabulary/). This digital collection will be integrated with the electronic resources developed in the other electronic centers at the University Library - including SGML (TEI)-tagged texts at the Electronic Text Center and EAD-based materials at the Special Collections Digital Center - as the main focus of our Digital Library initiative. We are researching standards for metadata, descriptive terminology, and thesauri for this integrated, networked system.

Email:  jet3h@virginia.edu
Digital Image Center: http://www.lib.virginia.edu/dic
University of Virginia Library Electronic Centers: http://www.lib.virginia.edu/ecenters.html


Paul Thompson is an adjunct professor in the Graduate Programs in Software Engineering at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. He is currently working as a consultant in information retrieval and related areas. He received his Ph.D. from the School of Library and Information Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1986. He taught for two years in the College of Information Studies at Drexel University and then worked in research and development at PRC, Inc., and at West Group. His areas of research interest include: probabilistic information retrieval, question answering, information extraction, and machine learning / text categorization.

Email: PTHOMPSON@stthomas.edu



Roger Thompson is a Systems Analyst in OCLC’s Office of Research. He received his Ph.D. in Computer and Information Science from Umass/Amherst in 1989. Current work stresses the design and implementation of information delivery systems with a focus on integrating traditional knowledge organization systems with advanced information retrieval systems. (added 8/17/99)

Email: thompson@oclc.org



Erica Treesh is an editor at the American Theological Library Association working on the ATLA Religion Database and associated print products.  She has fifteen years experience in database indexing/abstracting.  ATLA has recently received a grant of $216,000 from the Lilly Endowment, Inc.  This grant will enable ATLA to develop its own Internet node with full transactional capabilities.  The grant will also support the purchase of CuadraSTAR, an indexing system with authority and thesaurus capabilities that will support full MARC indexing from local and remote sites.  Our intent is to mount the ATLA Religion Database and associated authority files on our website for access by our indexers and database subscribers, as well as by partner projects (such as the Catholic Periodical and Literature Index which is currently using the ATLA Religion Indexes: Thesaurus) and by others writing religion thesauri (such as the ETHERELI project of the International Council of Theological Library Associations).  My goal in relation to this workshop is educational: to gain a fuller understanding of what I as an indexer/editor need to consider as we plan for the new software implementation and website presence.  What specifications are other thesauri employing?  What emerging standards should we be aware of?  What technical considerations might govern future thesaurus structure and format?

Email: etreesh@atla.com
ATLA: http://atla.library.vanderbilt.edu/atla/home.html



Douglas Tudhope is with the Computer Studies Department at the University of Glamorgan, Wales, UK and is the Editor of New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia. Six years ago the University was commissioned to build a hypermedia museum exhibit on local history from the photographic archives of the Pontypridd Historical and Cultural Centre. This inspired a University research assistantship in collaboration with PHCC that resulted in Carl Taylor's PhD work on semantic modelling and navigation in museum hypermedia systems. As part of this work, a number of research prototypes were built investigating a hypermedia architecture with a semantic index space separate from the document space (Beynon-Davies et al 1994, Taylor et al 1994). A variety of conventional hypermedia navigation techniques were implemented with this architecture (Tudhope et al 1994). Primary access routes were time, space and as subject index the Social History and Industrial Classification (SHIC). Rather than using fixed embedded links, navigation was based on queries over an underlying semantic index space, with results post-processed for expression in a particular navigation tool. Queries to the database can be simple or complex. Conventional hypermedia navigation techniques, including both local and global browsers, guided tours, and Boolean queries can be implemented by relatively simple underlying queries. More complex queries return partial matches using measures of semantic closeness between terms in a semantic index space; advanced navigation options included query expansion when a query fails to return results and navigation via similarity to current item (Cunliffe, Taylor, Tudhope 1997).  Most existing commercial museum access systems using thesauri rely on interactive approaches or limited query expansion techniques. A classification system, or thesaurus, embodies a semantic network of relationships between terms, the three main thesaurus relationships being hierarchical, associative and equivalence. Thus there is some inherent notion of distance between terms, their 'semantic closeness'. Distance measurements can be exploited to provide more advanced navigation tools. A distance measurement between terms (and between sets of terms) offers the opportunity for imprecise information requests.  Semantic term expansion lies at the heart of the measures of closeness between terms in automated term expansion and similarity measures in retrieval tools.

The intention in future research is to build on the principles underlying the semantic index space, extending the semantic model to a full set of thesaurus relationships, and investigate the potential of intelligent navigation tools in a major museum which can facilitate evaluation. We are currently implementing underlying models in both relational and semantic database systems. One issue under consideration is how these tools can be utilised in a networked environment and how the thesaurus structure and query engine parameters should be visualised to the user. Our research focus and collaborations in the museum domain, where there has been recent work on user query analysis and modelling, may enrich discussion in the workshop.

Relevant publications

Beynon-Davies P., Tudhope D., Taylor C., Jones C. 1994.  A Semantic Database Approach to Knowledge-based Hypermedia Systems, Information and Software Technology, 36(6), 323-329.

Cunliffe D., Taylor C., Tudhope D. 1997. Query-based navigation in semantically indexed hypermedia. Proceedings 8th ACM Conference on Hypertext (Hypertext'97), Southampton. April, pp 87-95.

Jones C., Taylor C., Tudhope D., Beynon-Davies P. 1996. Conceptual, Spatial and Temporal Referencing of Multimedia objects. Advances in GIS Research II, Proceedings 7th International Symposium on Spatial Data Handling, (eds. Kraak and Molenaar) , August, Delf, pp 2.13-2.26.

Taylor C., Tudhope D., & Beynon-Davies P. 1994. Representation and Manipulation of Conceptual, Temporal and Geographical Knowledge in a Museum Hypermedia System. Proc. ACM European Conference on Hypermedia Technology (ECHT'94), Edinburgh, 239-244.

Tudhope D., Beynon-Davies P., Taylor C., Jones C. 1994. Virtual Architecture based on a Binary Relational Model: A Museum Hypermedia Application, Hypermedia, 6(3), 174-192.

Tudhope D., Taylor C., Beynon-Davies P. 1995. Taxonomic Distance: Classification and Navigation. Proceedings 3rd International Conference on Hypermedia and Interactivity in Museums: Multimedia Computing and Museums (ed. D. Bearman), San Diego,  October, pp 322-334.

Jones C., Beynon-Davies P., Taylor C., Tudhope D. 1995. GIS, hypermedia, and historical information access. Proceedings 7th International Conference of the Museum Documentation Association, Edinburgh, Nov, pp 109-113.
Tudhope D., Taylor C. 1996. Flexible Access to Multimedia Museum Collections. Proceedings Electronic Imaging and the Visual Arts (EVA'96), London, July, pp 7.1- 7.11

Tudhope D., Taylor C. 1996. A unified similarity coefficient for navigating through multi-dimensional information. Proc. 59th Conference of the American Society for Information Science (ASIS'96), 67-70.

Tudhope D.,  Taylor C. 1997. Navigation via Similarity: automatic linking based on semantic closeness. Information Processing and Management, 33(2), 233-242.

Email: DSTUDHOPE@GLAMORGAN.AC.UK
Homepage: http://www.comp.glam.ac.uk/pages/staff/dstudhope



Diane Vizine-Goetz is a Research Scientist in the OCLC Office of Research.  She is team leader of the knowledge organization research (KOR) team which has had a long-standing involvement in information organization using classification systems and controlled vocabularies. When Forest Press, publisher of the Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC), became a division of OCLC in 1988, the KOR team prototyped classifier-assistance tools based on the electronic version of the DDC. Electronic Dewey and Dewey for Windows are OCLC products that resulted from that research.

The KOR team is currently investigating techniques for automatically associating subject-access systems like the DDC and the Library of Congress Subject Headings for the purpose of expanding the vocabulary of the DDC.  Mapping between schemes is accomplished through the application of corpus-based natural language processing techniques and statistical information retrieval techniques. Terminology mapped in this way often represents current and popular topics not represented by existing captions or Dewey index terms but within the scope of Dewey knowledge structure. These new associations (from free text and controlled indexing systems) are being used to enhance the database components of automated and semi-automated systems that automatically assign subjects to electronic documents. This work and research to transform the captions of the DDC into end-user language are aimed at improving category-based access to electronic documents and making traditional subject access systems more hospitable for use in a distributed information environment.

Recent publications:

From Book Classification to Knowledge Organization: Improving Internet Resource Description and Discovery.  ASIS Bulletin.  October/November 1997. Volume 24, No. 1.  Accessible at: http://www.asis.org/Bulletin/Oct-97/vizine.htm

Evaluating Dewey Concepts as a Knowledge Base for Automatic Subject Assignment. Electronic version of the paper published in the Digital Libraries '97: 2nd ACM International Conference on Digital Libraries. Accessible at: http://orc.rsch.oclc.org:6109/eval_dc.html

Library Classification Schemes and Access to Electronic Collections: Enhancement of the Dewey Decimal Classification with Supplemental Vocabulary.  Published in Advances in classification research Volume 7: proceedings of the 7th ASIS SIG/CR classification research workshop, 20 October 1996, Baltimore, Maryland, Paul Solomon, ed., Medford, N. J.: Information Today, Inc.  Accessible at: http://www.oclc.org:5047/~vizine/sig_cr/sigcr_done_dvg.htm

Online Classification: Implications for Classifying and Document[-like Object] Retrieval. Electronic version of a paper published in Knowledge organization and change: proceedings of the 4th international ISKO conference, 15-18 July 1996, Washington, D.C., Rebecca Green, ed. Frankfurt/Main: INDEKS Verlag.  Accessible at: http://www.oclc.org:5047/~vizine/isko/dvgisko.htm

E-mail: vizine@oclc.org



Claude Vogel is the founder and Chief Technology Officer of Semio Corporation. Semio offers a service that creates and maintains browsable, searchable taxonomies for intranets and Web sites. These taxonomies are based upon concepts automatically extracted and organized from large collections of documents. He has a background in Anthropology (Ph.D. Social Anthropology, 1976, Ph.D. Cultural Anthropology, 1992, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris). He is a Professor and the Director of the Computational Semiotics Laboratory at the University Leonard de Vinci in Paris, and an Associate Professor of Computational Semiotics at the University of Montreal. He engages in ongoing research on the subjects of software engineering, cognitive design, social organizations, and semiotics.  (added 12/8/99)

Semio website: www.semio.com
Email: cvogel@semio.com



Ron Vogel is an oceanographer with NASA's Global Change Master Directory, an online directory for scientists to locate data sources in the Earth and environmental sciences.  He has worked on the development of a controlled vocabulary for Earth science metadata and on interoperability of metadata between various geospatial data providers.

By restructuring various classification schemes from multiple providers into a single metadata format (keeping each classification scheme distinct through the use of a database tag), metadata documents could thus be entered into a single database and searched.  However, users still had to select one of various classification schemes when conducting a search.

In order to allow seamless searching of all metadata documents, a mapping between vocabularies could allow documents from the various providers to be found.  While all the classification schemes are environmental, they do not all cover the exact same environmental domains.  In those instances where one classification scheme cannot be mapped 100% to another classification scheme, the documents must be retrieved by other means.

Furthermore, in order to move to a distributed search environment where users may search by one classification and retrieve documents indexed with another, metadata structures with increased flexibility are necessary.  Is it possible to incorporate multiple classification schemes into single or multiple metadata formats and still allow seamless document searches?

Global Change Master Directory: http://gcmd.gsfc.nasa.gov/
Email: vogel@gcmd.nasa.gov



Madi Weland is currently a Project Management Assistant with the Getty Information Institute.  Her primary project for the past year has been the "Digital Experience," a room in the J. Paul Getty Museum with fourteen computer workstations dedicated to helping the museum public access cultural content on the World Wide Web <http://www.getty.edu/digital>.  Prior to joining Getty in 1997, she spent seven years as Curatorial Assistant at The Eli Broad Family Foundation, a contemporary art foundation in Santa Monica <http://www.broadartfdn.org>.   This August, she will take on a new position of Associate with the Getty Information Institute, working more closely on projects with Standards and Vocabulary. (added July 14, 1998)

Email: mweland@getty.edu



Richard White graduated in Botany & Zoology from Bristol, UK, and completed a PhD in Liverpool, UK, on the local evolution of a colony-forming day-flying moth, relating population dynamics and colony separation to morphological differentiation.  However, since coming to Southampton in 1976, he has supported the use of computers in biodiversity research and teaching, specialising in software development for biological applications, including the design, organisation and implementation of biodiversity databases, pages and databases on the World-wide Web, and algorithms and software to make outline shape and pattern measurements from images of biological objects.

His work in biodiversity databases is currently focussed on ways to link them together on the Web. He built the Web version of the ILDIS database on the plant family Leguminosae (www.ildis.org), which is now a prototype component of the Species 2000 project to create a virtual catalogue of (eventually) all the world's species of plants and animals (www.sp2000.org).  It  will allow users to follow links to other sources of information about species.  The choice of the technology for Species 2000 and problems arising from certain ambiguities in the use of species names are being addressed in the SPICE (biodiversity.soton.ac.uk/spice/) and LITCHI (litchi.biol.soton.ac.uk) projects, respectively. (added 8/2/99)

Email: rjwhite@soton.ac.uk
Web page: http://www.soton.ac.uk/~rjwhite/



Marcia Lei Zeng is an Associate Professor in the School of Library and Information Science at Kent State University, with major research interests in knowledge organization and representation, thesaurus and other indexing languages, information storage and retrieval systems, indexing systems and software, and multilingual information processing.  Recently she has been working on three projects that are related to this workshop's theme: (1) the design and development of a visual terminology database for medicinal herbs which is one component of the Complementary and Alternative Medicine Digital Library, a joint project of her and three other P.I.s in Columbia University.  In this project she also developed an online-classification scheme which is used in guided Internet searching for alternative medicine, implemented through JavaScript;  (2) a pilot digital library project for a historical fashion collection at Kent State University, where specialized thesauri and metadata have been studied under her supervision; and (3) during the last two years, she has generated various HTML-based templates for publishing thesauri and indexes on the WWW.

Her major purposes of participating in this workshop are to share with others the specific considerations about presenting thesaurus/classification systems on networked environments and to contribute to the discussions of an XML definition for a thesaurus or a general scenario for searching and navigating a networked thesaurus or classification system.  In addition, she wishes to share experiences and explore alternative approaches to vocabulary control in the networked environment for specific subject areas which have strong multi-cultural and multi-lingual aspects.

Visual terminology database for medicinal herbs: http://web.slis.kent.edu/~mzeng/MeshNIH/welcome.htm (please contact her for the password)
Templates for publishing thesauri and indexes of the WWW: http://www.personal.kent.edu/~slis/zeng/template/intro/toc.html
Email: mzeng@kentvm.kent.edu



Paul Zhang is a research scientist at LEXIS-NEXIS. He is interested in technical aspects in the IR area, including search, indexing, thesaurus-building.  LEXIS-NEXIS, as a major information provider, is moving towards “drilling” deeper into the contents of documents.  Paul is currently involved in this effort, focusing on the analysis of text, data mining and information extraction. (added 8/17/99)

e-mail : paul.zhang@lexis-nexis.com
http://www.lexis-nexic.com