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Bibliographic Details
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1984
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED244636
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Table of Contents:
  • (Networking + Integrating) * (Systems + Society). Proceedings of the Annual Canadian Conference of Information Science (12th, Toronto, Ontario, May 14-16, 1984) = (Reseaux + Integration) * (Systemes + Societe). Comptes rendus de la conference annuelle Canadienne des sciences de l'information (12th, Toronto, Ontario, 14-16 mai, 1984). Cataloging Computer Software Databases Futures (of Society) Information Dissemination Information Networks Information Retrieval Information Science Information Storage Library Services Microcomputers Online Systems Professional Associations Technological Advancement User Satisfaction (Information) Seventeen papers from the 1984 annual conference of the Canadian Association for Information Science (CAIS) are presented in four broad topic areas. The first group, which focuses on changing roles in information access, includes the keynote address by Charles Meadow, "Integrating Access to Information Utilities: Promises, Problems, and Profiles of the Future." Other papers in this area are concerned with office automation, the role of the corporate database administrator, and database generation by end-users. The two papers in the second group provide a discussion of the potential impact of fifth-generation computers on library and information services, and a description of the proposed computerization of document management in a specialized center in Quebec. Focusing on systems and software in networking, papers in the third section address the application of Universal Relation Theory to bibliographic design, documents as arrays, costs of query processing in a distributed database, advantages and disadvantages of microcomputer systems for acquisitions, one-time use programs for special database applications, the CAIS Information Technology Special Interest Group (ITSIG), and the integration of Telidon with BASIS. Papers in the fourth section focus on the impact of information technology on society. Topics include informatics (the science of information technologies) and information dependency, communications systems for physicians, a network for occupational health and safety in Quebec, and individual privacy versus corporate and governmental information systems. The two papers describing programs in Quebec are in French, the remainder in English. Abstracts in both English and French are included for each paper, and an author index is provided. (DMC)