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The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) has been employed by the world's public health officials to chart the nature, frequency, and geographic origins of diseases and causes of death in human populations since the late nineteenth century. The ICD has been modified every decade since the 1890s, and a study by Bowker and Star of
these changes, in concert with the work of others on the practices employed in information mapping, can be used to better understand the organization of large-scale web sites.
Specifically, web designers must adapt classification schemes to fit multiple social worlds. Additionally, we need to understand that these systems can become so entrenched in our thinking that they become "invisible," thus undermining our ability to adapt them as future needs or insights arise. View all eight works by Applen, J.D. View all 34 works published by IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication |
 Disease Classification and the Organization of Large-Scale Web Sites http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/47/20887/00968109.pdf
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Applen, J.D. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication 2001
Abstract: The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) has been employed by the world's public health officials to chart the nature, frequency, and geographic origins of diseases and causes of death in human populations since the late nineteenth century. The ICD has been modified every decade since the 1890s, and a study by Bowker and Star of
these changes, in concert with the work of others on the practices employed in information mapping, can be used to better understand the organization of large-scale web sites.
Specifically, web designers must adapt classification schemes to fit multiple social worlds. Additionally, we need to understand that these systems can become so entrenched in our thinking that they become "invisible," thus undermining our ability to adapt them as future needs or insights arise.
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