IDB - Inter-American Development Bank

10/18/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 10/18/2024 13:23

Introducing Taxonomy Matters


This article welcomes a new Abierto al Público series focused on taxonomy as a key element for successful knowledge management. It provides structure, consistency, and promote common understanding. A taxonomy is an organization structure that consists of a set of term lists (controlled vocabularies) that are used to classify or tag content (e.g. documents, data, etc.) and enable its retrieval. For example, if you open your favorite music platform and select "Hip-Hop" or "Jazz", you've just used a genre taxonomy to find what you were looking for.

Taxonomy - How do they help?

In the context of knowledge management at the IDB, our knowledge product taxonomy serves several essential use cases. We use a taxonomy to enable the consistent tagging of knowledge products with relevant concepts to reflect their main focus. This allows us to provide a description of their attributes, to easily identify relationships between products, and enhance content discoverability.

A meaningful user experience relies on taxonomy for both content creation and consumption. Taxonomy ensures that the attributes of content are labeled with the same terms, leading to consistency across applications and better usability. Additionally, when aligned with international standards, this increases the scale of understanding a content's "about-ness" and strengthens interoperability with data aggregators and harvesters.

Taxonomy also serves as a key structural element to support the creation of knowledge graphs, especially when providing context for the relationships between terms within the taxonomy, or across multiple vocabularies, in the form of an ontology. This provides needed clarity within a knowledge graph by ensuring uniformity and reducing ambiguity.

From an SEO perspective, taxonomy is also incredibly important. Well-defined and structured tags aid in boosting visibility in search results by helping them understand what content is about and how it relates to other data on the web. Given the rate at which information is created and shared today, this is more important than ever. Taxonomy can enhance search performance and discoverability by organizing potential search results into meaningful categories, making it easier for crawlers and users to locate relevant information.

This year we began reviewing our taxonomy from all angles, including our processes, our systems, the content schemas, and the terms themselves, allowing us to chart a course that will modernize and better leverage this powerful aspect of information architecture.

Defining taxonomy terms

As part of our taxonomy roadmap, we realize that defining all the terms used is a must, and at Abierto al Público we believe that knowledge is most powerful when it is made open and shared widely. In that spirit, we are pleased to introduce a new article series that will delve deeper into our knowledge organization system: Taxonomy Matters. Each article will share the definition of a specific term along with a group of knowledge products whose main focus is described by that term.

The definitions are taken from multiple sources based on the fitness of purpose for the IDB's specific context. Some definitions come from established reputable sources, such as the AGROVOC, UNTERM, and EUROVOC controlled vocabularies, as well as the ILO Thesaurus, and the OECD Economic Glossary. The source's selection depends on the domain of the term, and the availability of a trusted definition.

Other definitions come from an IDB document, either directly from the text, or with the help of an advanced feature of our publications catalog that uses artificial intelligence to allow interaction with specific documents. We'll explain this process in detail in an upcoming Taxonomy Matters article.

What's next?

As we continue to modernize our taxonomy and enhance the discoverability of relevant knowledge, we invite you to join us on this journey of fostering an open, trusted, and well-defined knowledge environment.

Stay tuned for upcoming articles that will delve deeper into the terms that drive the IDB's mission of improving lives forward.

What terms would you define and from what source? Let us know what you think in the comments section below.

Taxonomy Matters article series

  • Watch this space for links to the articles as they are published.