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Our Changing World: Tales from the Field Marjorie Hlava, President Access Innovations, Inc. www.accessinn.com

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Our Changing World:Tales from the Field

Marjorie Hlava, PresidentAccess Innovations, Inc.

www.accessinn.com

Miles Conrad Presentation - 2014

• Tales from the field

– The case of the missing abstracts

– Russian information

– USPTO

– Getty adventures

– Vatican bibles

• Where are we now?

• Future directions

The Cutting Edge

• Figure out the client needs

• Figure out the specifications

• Get approval on the specifications

• Figure out how to deliver the data following the specs

• Quality control the data delivery

…. But then life happens

The Case of the Missing Abstracts

• Tests showed that just searching the indexing did not provide the full answers users wanted.

• Searching the titles and abstracts as well would improve search.

• Enough space could be found on servers if the data were moved to in-house from Dialog and Orbit.

• New platform going into production

• New format – Messenger

• Specifications written, test file approved

Specifications

792,000 abstract tapes destroyed

1970 – 1982 data

Need 99.998% accuracy for user acceptance

Left tagged ASCII

Triple key - double proof

Two sets of volumes

Office in Mexico City – Access de Mexico

Access de Mexico

7:17AM Shift change

September 19,1985

8.7 earthquake

Assassination of Benigno Aquino, Jr., former

Philippine Senator. Protests against Marcos

continued to grow stronger and more active.

CAS to Philippines

Limo from the airport with the remaining volumes

CAS to Philippines

Typhoon Dot

October 12, 1985

Clark Air Force base evacuated

Power out for weeks

Beijing, China November 1985

• NOTHING HAPPENED

• Finished

• On time

• Under budget

• At promised accuracy level

• Client said “ when I read your contract I thought you had an unusual level of detail on the Acts of God clauses….

• But I didn’t expect you to use every one of them!”

Jamaica

Hurricane Kate November 1985

4 inches of water in the

computer room

No power on the island

Russian Information

Implementing Information Theory

Viniti Maxwell

Information map

PDP-8s

Microfilm machines – no batteries

Glasnost – open but no trust

Payroll in cash… in our shoes …

This is an office???

Three flights down metal stairs…

a full well equipped office.

Puzzles, Keys, and Digitization

• Photocomposition keys

• Science typographers

• Puzzles – SGML

• Encyclopædia Britannica

• Marquis Who’s Who

• Designing the Chicago Research and Trading “desks” now a familiar brokerage view

One mile back in the cave

US Patents staging for scanning

Fragile pages – air fed – double sided

USPTO Conversions

• Scan at 300 dpi• OCR to 97%• 5,400,000 patents• Create the machines• Test• QC algorithms• Display image• Search dirty OCR• Spell right once in 30 pages = findable

Perugia Bible 12” VideoDisc

British Library Map Collection

225,000 maps pre-1850

From printed catalog to

digital catalog

Getty AAT to AATA

All projects use classification

• To organize the job• To organize the information • To allow the finding of the items once digital • Apply term tags

– Thesaurus-based and controlled• Apply notation

– Not necessarily classification– Just reflects the content

• The classification is NEVER done– Needs to reflect the ever-changing data

Theoretical Underpinnings

• Outlines of Knowledge– Thomas Aquinas– John Knox (Bacon)– Morton Taube - Encyclopædia Britannica

• Organization of Knowledge– Cutter – 1896– COSATI – 1964

• Alvin Weinberg– Cranfield Institute papers

• Cleverdon, Aitchison, Vickery

Theory of knowledge …. began early

• Plato et al. - BC

– Knowledge of reality is philosophy

• Realism

– St. Augustine 354 - 430 AD

– St. Thomas Aquinas 1225 -1274 AD

– Characteristics common in particulars

– Not the same object without them

37

John Locke 1632 - 1704

Classification of

kinds of

knowledge

Some Thoughts

Concerning

Education38

Philosophy of knowledge divides

• 20th century thought

– Memory

– Perception and memory

– Religion

– Linguistic analysis

– Classification of knowledge

• Vocabulary control

• Linguistic analysis 39

Rise of Classification

• Charles Ammi Cutter 1837 - 1903– Cutter Classification System

• Melville Dewey 1851 - 1931– Dewey Decimal Classification

• Vladimir Lenin 1870 – 1924 – Rubricon - Russia– Rubricator

• S. R. Ranganathan – India, 1892 – 1972– Faceted Classification System– Colonicity

40

Charles Ammi Cutter

• Harvard College, index catalog,

– using cards instead of published volumes,

– an author index

– and a “classed catalog” or subject index.

• Expansive Classification System (Cutter)

– seven levels of classification,

– each with increasing specificity

– use lower levels and still be specific

41

Points of knowledge

• Single point of knowledge

– Eve and the apple

– First organism

– All science

– Examples

• Linnean system

• Rubricator

• Locke system

• Dewey42

Points of knowledge

• Multiple points of origin– Several fields come together - Top terms – Should they be captured separately or together?– Facets or different views?– Anarchy in the universe– Examples

• Physical biochemistry• NICEM• Engineering

– Supporters = Cutter, COSATI, Ranganathan 43

Information access is changing

• Teletype

• Fax

• Online

• CD-ROM

• Downloading

• Internet

The players are changing

• Standalone publishers

• Aggregators

• Serials and book vendors

• Hosting services

• Cloud

• Disaggregation

• Everyone is an author

• Loss of quality, accuracy, review

Funding for clients is changing

• The US Government spends $17 BILLION a day more than it brings in

• 50% of the Republicans in the house have served 3 years or less (WSJ 9/23/2013)

• Public university funding - Illinois– State appropriated funds 18.9%

• Decreasing at 9.4% from 4 years previous – Tuition revenue 24.7 %– Governmental grants and contracts 17.9 %– Hospital income 12.4%– http://www.ibhe.org/Fiscal%20Affairs/PDF/FY12PublicRevExpRpt.pdf

University of California

• Handwritten

• Gutenberg

• Linotype

• Web Presses

– Photocomposition

Digital layout

Desktop publishing

Web publishing

The formats are changing

Storage is changing

• iPhone has 240,000 times the memory power of the Voyager 1 – 12 billion miles from earth (NY Times 9/13/2013)

Search is (finally) changing

• Online search

• Boolean search

• Cached search

• Bayesian

– Co-occurrence

– Neural nets

– Machine learning

• Faceted (fielded)

• Rules systems

• Stairs

• ELHILL

• Orbit

• String search

• Verity

• FAST

• Lucene

• MuseGlobal

• Perfect Search

Tagging is still debated

• Permuted indexes– Chem abs– Bio abs– Portals

• Permaterm indexes– IFI Predicasts

• Classification systems LC• Thesauri• Inverted files• Triples

Horizons are more complicated

• Field formatted data

• Relational and SQL databases

• Object oriented systems

• Semantic web

• Linked data

Formats just keep being added

• Photocomposition markup

• SGML

• XML

• JSON calls

• Big iron

• Server farms

• Cloud farms

Storage keeps changing

Telecommunications tries to keep up

• Party lines

• Direct connect lines

• Trunk lines

• Fiber optics

• Cell towers

• Wireless

Media

• Punch cards• 9 track tapes• Mountain tapes• Removable drives• Diskettes

– 8” –– 5.25 –– 3.5– Flash drives– Chips

72% of online Americans use

social networking in 2013, up

from 8% in 2005

Few differences by educational

attainment

67% are HS Dropouts

72% are college graduates (Pew Internet & American Life Project)

Indexes

• Pre-coordinate

– Back of the book

– Subject headings

• Post-coordinate

• Bayesian

• Co-occurrence

• Neural nets

• Machine learning

• Rules systems

Our Cozy World

Has CHANGED!

• The landscape is shifting in profound ways

• Funding models are changing

• Who will pay is changing

• Systems manipulating knowledge

• User needs and wants are changing

Challenge old assumptions

• In the olden days

– companies had “industries” that they worked within

– “markets” that they sold into, and

– “business models” that they pursued

– assumptions that drove their decisions

– and associations that represented them in

– a world that moved relatively slowly

• Now…every single assumption needs to be challenged

– rapid change in future trends

– innovation is constant

– we need to find the growth opportunities

Doing Business at the speed of thought

• Communicating in 140 characters

– Twitter

– Text

• Small screens

• Small thoughts

• Always connected

• Social networking

Where are we headed?

• An Australian study predicted that 65 percent of preschoolers would eventually work in jobs and careers that do not currently exist.

• “It’s going to be a move from a bad economy to the next economy.” - Mike Fleming, American Chamber of Commerce

Technology

• Cell phones• Netflix• iPod• Tablets• iPad• Digital journal collection

bundles• e-books• Google• Linked data

• Blackberry• E-mail• WebEx• Skype• Blogs• Twitter• LinkedIn• Facebook• YouTube• MySpace

The Landscape is Changing

• New fields driven by technology

– Information architects, KM, KOSs

• New associations, new companies

• Interests and focus - associations merge, fold, or morph

Systems Manipulating Knowledge

• Search domination

– Steering the Bayesian engines

– Tricking the search systems

• Google's personalization algorithms affect search results.

• Yahoo and Microsoft do the same thing

Filter Bubbles

Systems Manipulating Knowledge

• Knowledge is Power "The Filter Bubble: What The Internet Is Hiding From You"

by Eli Pariser – Chair of MoveOn.orghttp://www.ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles.html

Demographics

• World Population = 3,031,720,300 – July 1980• World Population = 6,775,235,300 – July 2009• World Population = 7,098,978,020 – February 2013 • World Population = 7,214,213,389 – February 2014• U.S.A. Population = 180,671,000 – July 1960• U.S.A. Population = 226,542,250 – July 1980• U.S.A. Population = 317,599,000 – February 2014*• U.S.A. Population = 321,666,147– February 2014*• New Mexico Population = 1,303,303 – July 1980• New Mexico Population = 2,085,287 – 2013 estimate

*Accounting for births, deaths, and net immigration, the population is expected to tick up by another person every 15 seconds.

Gross Domestic Product - USA

• 25% of global economy

• 20% of global manufacturing

• Government added 14% of USA GDP

• Not-for-profits added 5.5% of the USA GDP

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_the_United_States

Public finance - USA

• Public debt $17,322 trillion (2014)

• Revenues $2.5 trillion (2012)

• Expenses $3.54 trillion (2012)

• Economic aid (ODA) $30.7 billion (2011)

• Public and private US debt = 3.5 x GDP

• Public debt is growing at $2.44B each day

Total US revenue

http://www.usgovernmentrevenue.com/united_states_total_revenue_pie_chart

Federal only US revenue

http://www.usgovernmentrevenue.com/piechart_2014_US_fed

Our customers’ revenue

Who will pay? - Academic

• Demographics are increasingly challenging• We cannot continue to use eminent domain as a driver

– Build more– Consume more– Add more people– Increase the GDP– Increase taxes

• Research and universities dependent primarily on tax revenue– Grant funding– Government contracts– Donations– UNM: 25% from State for 2011-12, 12% for 2013-14– Funding models facing pressure to change

Who will pay? - Associations

• When the company pays for membership

– Most let membership continue indefinitely

– When a member, who first used his boss’s membership, then decided to pay for his own, didn’t think the $100 paid was worth it.

• Companies are changing association membership

• from company-paid to personal-paid

• causing problems for some of the biggest trade groups and membership societies.

Open Source Issues

But you know that discussion!

…..

Landscape forms

• More publisher consolidation

• E-book self-publishing is surging

• Publishers will use metadata in more sophisticated ways

• Expansion of peer power

• Less peer review, more self-publishing

Publishing today

http://www.worldometers.info/

Landscape Forms - Technology

• Increased content in the cloud

• Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)

– iPad Air, iPhone 6

– Widespread adoption of Android

• Increasing demand for mobile apps and websites

• Increase in software-as-a-service (SaaS) options

– Ubiquitous communications

• Increased implementation of cloud computing

• Widespread adoption of 3D technology

Landscape Forms - Apps

• Applications being “socialized”

• Enhanced/interactive/portable e-books

• Many options for low-priced standalone e-readers

• More legal disputes and patent wars

• More interest in open and linked data

• Search analytics

• Gradual adoption of HTML5

• Streaming content

• Information prices are rising,

– but content budgets aren’t keeping pace

Landscape Forms – Data

• Smartphone adoption • Blending of offline-online worlds• Gesture-based computing• Increased geo-tagging of information• Voice interfaces• Interactive Learning • MOOCs—Massive Open Online Courses

Landscape Forms – Data

• Data analytics

• More Big Data – Underneath, there are compelling applications to be

implemented

– Enterprise search and business insight technologies

• Intelligent objects—The Internet of Things• Work anywhere• More predictive personalization

Landscape Forms - Libraries

• Increased engagement with social media• Growing popularity of e-singles• Web-scale discovery for library collections• Facilitation roles for librarians• Monograph e-platforms ascendant

– Books at JSTOR, University Publishing Online, University Press Scholarship Online, University Press Content Consortium Book Collections of Project MUSE

Landscape forms - Politics

• WikiLeaks

• Net neutrality battles

• Government tries to regulate the internet (SOPA and PIPA, ACTA, WCIT)

• Privacy and security concerns dominate policy discussions

• Developments in discovery tools

• New legal platforms

• Ongoing focus on security/privacy issues—online• Newspapers and magazines online only• Information access regulation

Giants are moving

• Battling on hardware and search– Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon

• Battle of the mobile devices – Apple iOS, Google’s Android, Microsoft Windows

• Growth in open source innovation/problem solving• More installations of Solr

Power outages are much more a problem than data breaches!

New kinds of customers

• Publishers

• Information professionals

• CTO, CIO, Librarian

• Researchers

• Information consultants

• Information architects

• Taxonomists

• Library technical assistants

• Business owners

• Planners

• Work inside libraries

• Researchers

• Information consultants

• Knowledge managers

• Records managers

• User experience specialists

• Indexers

Where do we find such a diverse set of customers?

Thirst for knowledge

“The reality of the future of meetings is that learning is what most people will do for a living in the 21st century.

There will be a requirement to constantly replenish that knowledge, and a huge focus on knowledge delivery.” – Jim Carroll, Futurist

Daily changes

• More information

• More duplicates

• More forms for distribution

• More ways to consume the information

• More platforms to accommodate

Universe of Options

What should we do?

Publishers

• “publishers have behaved a bit like hunter-gatherers of research” *

• Become information providers

• Invest in search and data management tools

• Make sure relevant articles find their way to researchers

• Open article databases to software developers

• Build community apps on top of their content

• Drive readers to obscure content

• Open Access initiatives* (Economist, “One of the best media businesses is also one of the most resented,”Http://www.economist.com/node/18744177/)

“Ask an Expert” Sites

• 2005 – 15 % used such sites

• 2009 – 43% used them

• 2013 – 83% used them

• “librarian” usage is flat

• 83% of those who used librarian perceived value

• Embed ourselves in the expert sites!

• Add a taxonomy to leverage searchhttp://www.libraryjournal.com/lj/home/889752-264/stuck_in_the_past_.html.csp

What information format?

• Symposia

• Articles

• Databases

• Meet-ups

• Tweet-ups

• Virtual networking

• Short seminars

• Continuing education

• Workshops

• Webinars

• Blogs

• Free vs fee

• 12 x per year 4 x per year

• All day or two hours

Need trusted sources

• Semantic enrichment

• Make data findable

• Ensure trustworthy data

• Replicable search results

– Discovery

– Precision

– Recall

– Auto clustering frustrates researchers

• Aiding the human brain

• Automated efficient processing

Now!

• Changing the way we learn

• Changing the way we find things

• Easier to manipulate what we knowhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8ofWFx525s

• Comprehensive information / invasivehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNJl9EEcsoE

• People now know what search is.

Our Path

• Metadata 2.0– Taxonomies will lead innovative search– Publishers use increasingly sophisticated metadata– Add “Semantic Finger Prints” to everything

• Production will shift to web ready data– Publishers already had big data!– Accelerated repackaging and combining of existing

resources– Channeling of data will become more important– Semantic tagging will leverage product development – Selling more directly to the consumer

Our Path

• Markets– Publishers and enterprises will embrace the

web for distribution – Government funded sales will decrease– Enterprise sales will increase

• Reaching customers– It is hard to make ads reach the customer

reliably – Fewer will attend conferences– More personal approach

Future

• Information any place, any time

• A great big mess - unless we corral it.

– Tag it,

– Clean it,

– Weed it,

– Curate it.

• Everyone is creating content

• We know how to control and deliver it

The information explosion has just

begun

We are all part of it!

Marjorie M. K. Hlava

Access Innovations / Data Harmony

[email protected]

+1-505-998-0800

Thank you