Research on the Construction and Evolution Analysis of the Subject Theme Network of Domestic Archives
NIU Li1, 2, 3, DU Lihua2
1. Key Laboratory of Ministry of Education for Data Engineering and Knowledge Engineering, Renmin University of China, Beijing 100872; 2. School of Information Resource Management, Renmin University of China,Beijing 100872; 3. CIO Research Center , Renmin University of China,Beijing 100872
Abstract: Under the background of the rapid development and change of the subject of archival science, the paper analyzes the theme structure and evolution of archival science in a certain time window, and sorts out the development of domestic archives in the past two decades. Obtain the key words of the core journals of archival science from 1998 to 2017, construct the theme network according to the key words co-occurrence relationship in different periods, and show the theme structure of archival science in different periods; judge the evolution between subject according to similarity, and outline the dynamic changes of the research content of the archival science. According to the evolution of the subject, seven evolutionary paths are derived and the laws of evolution are summarized; the causes of changes in subject themes are economic, cultural, social and technological forms and the influence of modern information technology; Predicting the research focus of the subject are still archives culture, archive public services, development, utilization and integration of archives information resources, etc. More emphasis is placed on providing archives information services and knowledge services to the public, further cross integration with other disciplines, and the interdisciplinary scope is more and more extensive. The research results are conducive to the scholars in the field of archival science to grasp the development of the discipline and better discover new growth points of the discipline.
NIU Li, DU Lihua. Research on the Construction and Evolution Analysis of the Subject Theme Network of Domestic Archives. Archives Science Study, 2020, 34(2): 12-18.