UDC in Action
Richard Smiraglia, Andrea Scharnhorst, Almila Akdag Salah, Cheng, Gao

TL;DR
This paper explores the Universal Decimal Classification (UDC) as a complex network of concepts, analyzing library data to reveal its structure and potential for understanding knowledge organization through complexity theory.
Contribution
It applies complexity theory methods to analyze UDC strings from library holdings, revealing their structural properties and potential for knowledge system analysis.
Findings
UDC strings exhibit complex network characteristics.
Analysis of auxiliary signs shows diverse structural patterns.
Library UDC data reflects the complexity of knowledge classification.
Abstract
The UDC (Universal Decimal Classification) is not only a classification language with a long history; it also presents a complex cognitive system worthy of the attention of complexity theory. The elements of the UDC: classes, auxiliaries, and operations are combined into symbolic strings, which in essence represent a complex networks of concepts. This network forms a backbone of ordering of knowledge and at the same time allows expression of different perspectives on various products of human knowledge production. In this paper we look at UDC strings derived from the holdings of libraries. In particular we analyse the subject headings of holdings of the university library in Leuven, and an extraction of UDC numbers from the OCLC WorldCat. Comparing those sets with the Master Reference File, we look into the length of strings, the occurrence of different auxiliary signs, and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInformation Retrieval and Search Behavior · Optics and Image Analysis · Library Science and Information Systems
