E. J. Coates: E. J. Coates developed Kaiser's
"Thing-Process" breakdown into a more precise formula for British
Technology Index (BTI), distinguishing between properties, actions,
materials and parts of a thing or entity. E. J. Coates apply his idea
of subject indexing- Things, Property, Material, Action on British
Technology Index (now Current Technology Index) of which he had been the editor
from its inception in 1963 until his retirement in 1976.
Popular Books of E.J. Coates includes - Subject Catalogues: Headings and
Structure, 1989. 2010-D-P-II-Q-42, 2011-J-P-II-Q-20, 2012-J-P-II-Q-5, 2012-J-P-III-Q-71, 2012-D-P-III-Q-70, 2015-D-P-III-Q-56
E. Wyndham Hulme: The term "literary warrant" as well
as the basic principle underlying this expression was introduced in the
literature of Library and Information Science (LIS) by E. Wyndham Hulme in
1911. E. Wyndham Hulme authored "Statistical Bibliography in relation
to the growth of modern civilization" (1922) and initiated the term
"statistical bibliography". 2006-D-P-II-Q-3, 2012-J-P-III-Q-62, 2014-J-P-II-Q-3, 2015-J-P-III-Q-20, 2015-D-P-III-Q-55
Edgar Frank "Ted" Codd: Edgar Frank "Ted"
Codd (19 August 1923 – 18 April 2003) was an English computer scientist
who, while working for IBM, invented the relational model for database
management, the theoretical basis for relational databases. Codd's twelve
rules (12 rules) are a set of thirteen rules (13 rules) [numbered zero (0) to
twelve (12)] proposed by Edgar F. Codd in 1985. 2009-J-P-II-Q-14, 2013-J-P-II-Q-13,
2016-J-P-III-Q-14
Elias
St. Elmo Lewis:
Elias St. Elmo Lewis (March 23, 1872–March 18, 1948) was an American
advertising advocate. He developed Attention, Interest, Desire, Action (AIDA) model
which is a historical model that describes a common list of events that may
occur when a consumer engages with an advertisement. 2016-J-P-II-Q-30
Ernest Cushing Richardson: Ernest
Cushing Richardson (February 9, 1860 - June 3, 1939) was an American librarian,
theologian and scholar.

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