All Stories

  1. Charles S. Peirce’s sign typology of 1903 and the semeiotic of universe, man, and culture
  2. Information as signs
  3. Clues as information, the semiotic gap, and inferential investigative processes, or making a (very small) contribution to the new discipline, Forensic Semiotics
  4. The meaning creation process, information, emotion, knowledge, two objects, and significance-effects: Some Peircean remarks
  5. Dynamics of the Collateral Encyclopedia
  6. The Fallacy of the Cognitive Free Fall in Communication Metaphor: A Semiotic Analysis
  7. The information concept of Nicholas Belkin revisited – some semeiotic comments
  8. Emotion, information, and cognition, and some possible consequences for library and information science
  9. Concept theory and semiotics in knowledge organization
  10. The significance-effect is a communicational effect: Introducing the DynaCom
  11. Formal conditions for the significance-effect
  12. The role of special language in relation to knowledge organization
  13. Problems concerning the process of subject analysis and the practice of indexing
  14. 86. Collateral Experience as a Prerequisite for Signification