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Joan P. Lussky
College of Information Science and Technology
Drexel University
“The Index Catalogue and Historical Shifts in
Medical Knowledge"
Monday, February 21, 2005
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
Room 501, IS Building
Abstract: Faithful aggregated accounts
of the advancement of science are invaluable for those
setting scientific policy as well as scholars of the
history of science. The scholarly community’s determination
of the accepted knowledge of science undergoes shifts
as science develops. Within medicine these shifts include
our understanding of what can cause disease and what
defines specific disease entities. Shifts in accepted
medical knowledge are captured in the medical literature.
The Index Catalogue of the Library of the Surgeon General’s
Office, United States Army, published from 1880 -1961,
is an extremely large index to medical literature. The
newly digitized form of this index, referred to as the
IndexCat, allows us a way to generate faithful accounts
of the development of medical science during the late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-centuries. My data looks
at shifts within the IndexCat surrounding three disease
entities: syphilis, Huntington’s chorea, and beriberi,
and their interactions with two disease causation theories:
germ and hereditary from 1880-1930. Temporal changes
in the prominent subject heading words and title words
within the literature of these diseases and disease theories
corroborate qualitative accounts of this same literature,
which reports the complex and sometimes oblique process
of knowledge accretion. Although preliminary, my results
indicate that the IndexCat is a valuable tool for studying
the development of medical knowledge.
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