Document
From GM-RKB
A document is an information resource that is a written information resource and that contains a discourse.
- AKA: Whole Document.
- Context:
- It must have one or more authors.
- It must have a Document Body (that contains document sections).
- It can have Metadata (such as Author Name and Document Title).
- It can Reference another Document.
- It can range from
- being an Unstructured Document (such as a Text Document) if it only contains written expressions)
- to being a Semi-Structured Document (such as an Annotated Document) if contains Semi-Structured Data, such as document tables, hyperlinks, and document figures.
- It can range from being a Physical Document to being an Electronic Document (such as a hyperlinked document).
- It can range from being a Fiction Document to being a Non-Fiction Document.
- It can range from being an Unpublished Document to being a Published Document.
- It can range (based on the Time required to Compose or Read) from
- being a Small-sized Document, e.g. an Email or Publication Abstract.
- to being a Medium-sized Document, e.g. an Essay or a Research Paper.
- to being a Large-sized Document, e.g. a PhD Thesis or a Monograph.
- It can be located/retrieved through an Document Retrieval Task.
- It can be indexed through an Document Indexing Task.
- It can belong to a Document Set (such as a Corpus).
- It can be classified into a Document Category (by a Document Classification Task).
- It can contain:
- a Figures
- an Illustration.
- a Tabular Figure
- Example(s):
- a Book such as as Novel in PDF Format.
- a Research Document (that likely contains an Abstract and a Bibliography).
- a Discourse Webpage (as opposed to, for example, a Video Webpage)
- an Email (but maybe not Spam Email)
- a Transactional Document: Cheque, Contracts, Prescription, Receipt, Form (document), Postage Stamp
- a Wordprocessor File with a Discourse.
- a Post in a Internet Forum.
- a Business Memo.
- a Business Whitepaper.
- Counter-Example(s):
- a sentence.
- a Text Item (does not require a Discourse).
- a Business Brochure.
- a Spreadsheet File (e.g. in Open Office Calc format).
- a Photograph.
- a Painting.
- a Map.
- a Recorded Speech.
- a Data Record.
- See: Document Engineering.
References
2009
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/document
- Noun
- 1. An original or official paper relied upon as the basis, proof, or support of anything else, including any writing, book, or other instrument conveying information pertinent to such proof or support. Any material substance on which the thoughts of men are represented by any species of conventional mark or symbol.
- Noun
- (Wikipedia, 2009) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document
- A document (noun) is a bounded physical representation of body of information designed with the capacity (and usually intent) to communicate. A document may manifest symbolic, diagrammatic or sensory-representational information. To document (verb) is to produce a document artifact by collecting and representing information. In prototypical usage, a document is understood as a paper artifact, containing information in the form of ink marks. Increasingly documents are also understood as digital artifacts.
- Colloquial usage is revealed by the connotations and denotations that appear in a Web search for document. From these usages, one can infer the following typical connotations:
- Writing that provides information person's thinking by means of symbolic marks.
- A written account of ownership or obligation.
- To record in detail; "The parents documented every step of their child's development".
- A digital file in a particular format.
- To support or supply with references; "Can you document your claims?".
- An artifact that meets a legal notion of document for purposes of discovery in litigation.
- The variety of usage reveals that the notion of document has rich social and cultural aspects besides the physical, functional and operational aspects.
- Empirical characterization
- In light of the polysemy of the core concept of document, it is useful to note a number of examples ranging from instances commonly understood as prototypical documents, to instances that are understood as documents only in specialized or rare situations.
- Prototypical Documents: Letters, memos, legal forms, Instruction manual
- Documents of Record: Newspapers and magazines
- Books: Text book, Novels, Recipe books, Encyclopedia, Comic books
- Canonical Documents: The Bible,Iliad and Odyssey,Vedas, Ramayana, Mahabharata, Quran, Code of Hammurabi,Tao Te Ching
- Transactional Documents: Cheque, Contracts, Prescription, Receipt, Form (document), Postage Stamp
- Functional Documents: PDF files, PostScript files, XML files, Email
- Non-Prototypical Documents: Post-it notes, Fortune cookie strips, Maps, Paintings, milk cartons, cereal boxes
- Non-Classical Digital Documents: Web Page, Weblog, Wiki
- Boundary Examples: The plaque on the Pioneer 11 spacecraft, designed by astronomer Carl Sagan, and using information assumed to be universal is an extreme example of a document that is intended to communicate with aliens. Conversely, the recorded and printed signals of the SETI project would constitute documents if they were discovered to contain alien communication.
2008
- (Dextre Clarke & al, 2008) ⇒ Stella Dextre Clarke, Alan Gilchrist, Ron Davies and Leonard Will. (2008). "Glossary of Terms Relating to Thesauri and Other Forms of Structured Vocabulary for Information Retrieval." Willpower Information
- document
- (use for information resource)
- item that can be classified or indexed in order that it may be retrieved
- This definition refers not only to written and printed materials in paper or microform versions (for example, books, journals, diagrams, maps), but also to non-printed media, machine-readable and digitized records, Internet and intranet resources, films, sound recordings, people and organizations as knowledge resources, buildings, sites, monuments, three-dimensional objects or realia; and to collections of such items or parts of such items.----
- document
2005
- (ANSI Z39.19, 2005) ⇒ ANSI. (2005). "ANSI/NISO Z39.19 - Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and Management of Monolingual Controlled Vocabularies." ANSI.
- QUOTE: "document Any item, printed or otherwise, that is amenable to cataloging and indexing. The term applies not only to written and printed materials in paper or microform versions (e.g., books, journals, maps, diagrams), but also to non-print media (e.g., machine-readable records, transparencies, audiotapes, videotapes) and, by extension, to three-dimensional objects or realia (e.g., museum objects and specimens). A document is a content object. drop-down menu See pick list.