학술논문

Expanding the scope of affect: taxonomy construction for emotions, tones, and associations
Document Type
JOURNAL
Source
Journal of Documentation, 2017, Vol. 74, Issue 2, pp. 383-397.
Subject
research-article
Research paper
cat-LISC
Library & information science
cat-IKM
Information & knowledge management
cat-RMP
Records management & preservation
cat-DOCM
Document management
cat-CCAT
Classification & cataloguing
cat-IBRT
Information behaviour & retrieval
cat-CBM
Collection building & management
cat-SCPG
Scholarly communications/publishing
cat-IMG
Information management & governance
cat-IMAN
Information management
cat-ICT
Information & communications technology
cat-INT
Internet
Reading
Taxonomy
Catalogues
Affect
Cataloguing
Social tagging
Language
English
ISSN
0022-0418
Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to provide an examination of emotional experiences, particularly how they are situated in the readers’ advisory (RA) literature and the literatures from a variety of outside disciplines in order to create taxonomies of affect from this context. Design/methodology/approach The approach of this study is twofold. First, this work reviews the literature on affect in Library and Information Science (LIS) and ancillary disciplines in order to understand the definition of affect. Second, using extant taxonomies and resources noted from the literature review, taxonomies are created for three aspects of affect: emotions, tones, and associations. Findings This paper contextualises and defines affect for the LIS discipline. Further, a result of the work is the creation of three taxonomies through an RA lens by which affective experiences can be classified. The resulting three taxonomies focus on emotion, tone, and associations. Practical implications The taxonomies of emotion, tone, and associations can be applied to the practical work of bibliographic description, helping to expand access and organisation through an affective lens. These taxonomies of affect could be used by readers’ advisors to help readers describe their desired reading experiences. As the taxonomies have been constructed from an RA perspective, and can be applied to the RA literature, they could expand the understanding of RA theory, especially that of appeal. Originality/value This study furthers the exploration of affect in LIS and provides tangible taxonomies of affect for the LIS discipline in an RA context, which have not been previously produced.