Integrating tagging: tagging as integration Mark R. Lindner Visiting Serials Cataloger
Outline Quick overview of Integrationism “Community” as macrosocial Towards integration Tagging as integration
Integrationism theory of linguistics and communication opposed to segregational accounts Roy Harris, Professor Emeritus, Oxford
Time is the key factor in human communication Our senses are integrated across, through and in time.
Constraints on human communication Biomechanical Macrosocial Circumstantial
The Sign “A sign is integrational in the sense that it typically involves the contextualized application of biomechanical skills within a certain macrosocial framework, thereby contributing to the integration of activities which would otherwise remain unintegrated.” Harris, R. (1995) Signs of writing, pp
“Community” is the macrosocial Proficiency Practice Conformity
Towards integration Tennis (2006) Sen, et. al. (2006) Kipp (2007) Campbell (2007) Kipp (2008)
Tagging as integration Individual tagging Community tagging
Sources Campbell, D. G. (2007). The long tail of forgetting: Libraries, the Web 2.0, and the phenomenology of memory. In C. Arsenault & K. Dalkir (Eds.), Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Canadian Association for Information Science (p. 12). McGill University, Montreal, Quebec. Retrieved May 4, 2008, from acsi.ca/proceedings/2007/campbell_2007.pdf. acsi.ca/proceedings/2007/campbell_2007.pdf Harris, R. (1995). Signs of Writing. London: Routledge. Harris, R. (1996a). Signs, Language, and Communication: Integrational and Segregational Approaches. London: Routledge. Harris, R. (2005). Integrationism. Roy Harris Online. Viewed 26 Oct
Sources IAISLC, What is Integrationism? The International Association for the Integrational Study of Language and Communication (IAISLC) Viewed 26 Oct Kipp, M. E. I. (2007). Tagging practices on research oriented social bookmarking sites. In C. Arsenault & K. Dalkir (Eds.), Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Canadian Association for Information Science (p. 13). Mcgill University, Montreal, Quebec. Retrieved May 4, 2008, from Kipp, M. E. I. and Cool : Subjective, Affective and Associative Factors in Tagging. In Proceedings Canadian Association for Information Science/L'Association canadienne des sciences de l'information (CAIS/ACSI) (p. 7). Vancouver, British Columbia: Cambridge University Press. Retrieved September 7, 2008, from
Sources Sen, S., Lam, S. K., Rashid, A. M., Cosley, D., Frankowski, D., Osterhouse, J., et al. (2006). tagging, communities, vocabulary, evolution. In Proceedings of the th anniversary conference on Computer supported cooperative work (pp ). Banff, Alberta, Canada: ACM. Retrieved October 24, 2008, from &coll=portal&dl=ACM&CFID= &CFTOKEN= &coll=portal&dl=ACM&CFID= &CFTOKEN= Tennis, J. T. (2006). Comparative Functional Analysis of Boundary Infrastructures, Library Classification, and Social Tagging. In H. Moukdad (Ed.), Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Canadian Association for Information Science (p. 10). York University, Toronto, Ontario. Retrieved May 4, 2008, from acsi.ca/proceedings/2006/tennis_2006.pdf. acsi.ca/proceedings/2006/tennis_2006.pdf
Thank you! Mark R. Lindner Visiting Serials Cataloger and Visiting Assistant Professor of Library Administration University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Certificate of Advanced Study candidate, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, UIUC