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2005 June UGC NET Previous Years Solved Paper II
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Question 1 of 50
1. Question
1 pointsThe fundamental equation of Information Science has been put forward by :
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Question 2 of 50
2. Question
1 pointsSource, Message, Transmitter and receiver are the components of communication model developed by :
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Question 3 of 50
3. Question
1 pointsWho said that Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves or we know where we can find information about it ?
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Question 4 of 50
4. Question
1 pointsThe acronym for Association for Information Management is :
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Question 5 of 50
5. Question
1 pointsCensus Atlas National Volume is an example of _________ Atlas :
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Question 6 of 50
6. Question
1 pointsCOMPENDEX is the on-line Database on the subject :
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Question 7 of 50
7. Question
1 pointsRouting of periodicals is :
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Question 8 of 50
8. Question
1 pointsThe subject “Research Methodology” has been formed by which of the following modes ?
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Question 9 of 50
9. Question
1 pointsBoolean Logic was propounded by :
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Question 10 of 50
10. Question
1 points“IMCE” Stands for :
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Question 11 of 50
11. Question
1 pointsAn indispensable function of Thesaurus is :
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Question 12 of 50
12. Question
1 points“Book Number” helps in :
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Question 13 of 50
13. Question
1 pointsThe library budget prepared without considering the previous years budget is :
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Question 14 of 50
14. Question
1 pointsThe abbreviation MB to state the storage capacity refers to :
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Question 15 of 50
15. Question
1 pointsData about data is known as :
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Question 16 of 50
16. Question
1 pointsThe concept of Micro photography was developed by :
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Question 17 of 50
17. Question
1 pointsWhich among the following is a digital library software used in the creation of an inhouse digital library :
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Question 18 of 50
18. Question
1 pointsSSDC referred to the National Documentation Centre now known as
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Question 19 of 50
19. Question
1 pointsAnnual Convention of INFLIBNET organised to discuss the progress of the library automation and library services is known as :
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Question 20 of 50
20. Question
1 pointsFormulation of Research Hypothesis implies :
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Question 21 of 50
21. Question
1 pointsThe Study of Epistemology deals with :
I. Modes of formation of subjects
II. Classification of Knowledge
III. Cataloguing of composite books
IV. Origin, Source and nature of Knowledge In the types of items, there may be more than one answer.
Identity the correct combination :
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Question 22 of 50
22. Question
1 pointsThe Compact Disk is conceptually referred to as:
I. Magnetic Storage
II. Compact Storage
III. Optical Storage
IV. All the above In the type of items, there may be more than one answer.
Identity the correct combination :
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 23 of 50
23. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 Abbreviations Meaning I) Ibid a) See II) Loc. cit. b) Previously cited III) Op. cit c) Same reference cited immediately above IV) Vide d) The same place cited Correct
Incorrect
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Question 24 of 50
24. Question
1 pointsMatch the following:
List - 1 List - 2 Types of users of information Purpose of use of information I) Students a) Decision Making II) Professionals b) To impart Knowledge III) Government Officials c) To prepare for the course programmer IV) Teachers d) To pursue their respective vocation Correct
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Question 25 of 50
25. Question
1 pointsMatch the following:
List - 1 List - 2 Writing Materials Place of Origin I) Clay Tablet a) Algeria / Babylonia II) Palm Leaves b) Egypt III) Paper c) Ninveh IV) Papyrus d) China e) India Correct
Incorrect
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Question 26 of 50
26. Question
1 pointsMatch the following:
List - 1 List - 2 Database Supplier I) ERIC a) American Chemical Society, USA II) C A Search b) Bowker & Saur London III) Books in Print c) R R Bowker USA IV) LISA d) National Institute of Education, USA Correct
Incorrect
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Question 27 of 50
27. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 I) ILRC (Inter Library Resource Centre) a) Science and Technology II) NISSAT b) Indexing Service III) Journal of Librarianship c) UK IV) INIS Atomindex d) Delhi Correct
Incorrect
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Question 28 of 50
28. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 I) POPSI a) P M Roget II) Citation Indexing b) H P Luhn III) Key word Indexing c) Eugene Garfield IV) Thesaurus d) G. Bhattacharyya Correct
Incorrect
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Question 29 of 50
29. Question
1 pointsMatch the following:
List - 1 List - 2 I) DDC a) J.D. Brown II) Expansive Classification b) H.E. Bliss III) Subject Classification c) Melvil Dewey IV) Bibliographic classification d) C.A. Cutter Correct
Incorrect
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Question 30 of 50
30. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 Technical Terms Meaning I) Thesaurus a) Collection of programmers for the Computer System II) Windows b) A revolving Disc on which data is stored III) Microprocessors c) A graphical user interface created as DOS Extension by Microsoft IV) Software d) A multi user Operating System e) A classified dictionary of synonyms Correct
Incorrect
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Question 31 of 50
31. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 I) Browser a) Google II) Operating System b) ‘ C ’ III) Programming Language c) Internet Explorer IV) Search Engine d) Windows Correct
Incorrect
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Question 32 of 50
32. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 I) INIS a) Ohio II) AGRIS b) Delhi III) OCLC c) Vienna IV) NICNET d) Rome Correct
Incorrect
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Question 33 of 50
33. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 I) Observation (Senses) a) Knowledge II) Organization (Logical Relation) b) Data / Ideas III) Learning and Assimilation c) Wisdom IV) Judgement Correlation d) Information (application of content) Correct
Incorrect
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Question 34 of 50
34. Question
1 pointsMatch the following :
List - 1 List - 2 I) Mysticism a) Y7 II) Useful Arts b) Y III) Sociology c) ∆ IV) Anthropology d) M Correct
Incorrect
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Question 35 of 50
35. Question
1 pointsAssertion (A) : Library cooperation is the prime need of the day.
Reason (R) : It is impossible for an individual library to meet all the requirements of its users.
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Question 36 of 50
36. Question
1 pointsWhich one of the following pairs is NOT correctly matched?
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Question 37 of 50
37. Question
1 pointsAssertion (A) : Arrangement of documents by subject will satisfy more users.
Reason (R) : Many users search for documents by title.
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Question 38 of 50
38. Question
1 pointsAssertion (A) : A special library serves a specialist clientele.
Reason (R) : The collection of special library is relatively narrow in scope
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Question 39 of 50
39. Question
1 pointsAssertion (A) : Copyright Act safeguards the interest of the author.
Reason (R) : This Act is essential to maximise the circulation of documents.
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Question 40 of 50
40. Question
1 pointsArrange the following classification schemes according to the year of publication use the code below:
I. Color classification
II. Dewey Decimal Classification
III. Bibliographic Classification
IV. Subject Classification
Correct
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Question 41 of 50
41. Question
1 pointsIdentify the correct chronological order in which they were setup:
Correct
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Question 42 of 50
42. Question
1 pointsArrange the following units of storage capacity in increasing order of magnitude. Use the code given below:
I. Gigabyte
II. Kilobyte
III. Terabyte
IV. Megabyte
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 43 of 50
43. Question
1 pointsBased on the years of establishment arrange the following in chronological order. Use the code given below :
I. ASLIB
II. ALA
III. ILA
IV. IFLA
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 44 of 50
44. Question
1 pointsIdentify the correct order in which the commissions were set up. Use the code given below:
I. Roy Committee on State Universities Review
II. Radhakrishnan Commission on Education
III. Kothari Commission on Education
IV. Mudliar Commission of Secondary Education
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 45 of 50
45. Question
1 pointsArrange the following components in order in which they were used in computers. Use the code given below:
I. Transistors
II. Vacuum Tubes
III. Large Scale Integrated Circuit
IV. Very Large Scale Integrated Circuit
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 46 of 50
46. Question
1 pointsRead the passage given below, and answer the Questions that follow based on your understanding of the passage :
The growth of the Internet and its ubiquitous use in study and work creates new areas of concern. Town (2003) notes the problem of information illiteracy within higher education:
Students are relying uniformly on the web and show a lack of understanding about the resources available to them “because all the information is in the same place”. The web may have “changed everything” but in doing so it has created a new problem of information illiteracy; that of false confidence in the Internet as a complete information resource (Town, 2003).
There is such a proliferation of content across such a range of areas, available with such immediacy that the sheer volume of information can seem overwhelming. For sufferers of this “Information anxiety” the simplicity of the Google search interface must act as a claiming tonic. It is not demanding of the information seeker in the formation of search terms and almost always produces vast numbers of hits. It even helps out with your spelling.
Faced with such a bewildering array of electronic sources of information the ease and immediacy of retrieval becomes as important as the quality of the resources retrieved. This may be the most significant challenge to the information profession in the information society, to map and signpost the information landscape. This has been the traditional role of the librarian and whilst the information domain is changing the core principles of the profession remain as important to society as ever.Correct
Incorrect
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Question 47 of 50
47. Question
1 pointsRead the passage given below, and answer the Questions that follow based on your understanding of the passage :
The growth of the Internet and its ubiquitous use in study and work creates new areas of concern. Town (2003) notes the problem of information illiteracy within higher education:
Students are relying uniformly on the web and show a lack of understanding about the resources available to them “because all the information is in the same place”. The web may have “changed everything” but in doing so it has created a new problem of information illiteracy; that of false confidence in the Internet as a complete information resource (Town, 2003).
There is such a proliferation of content across such a range of areas, available with such immediacy that the sheer volume of information can seem overwhelming. For sufferers of this “Information anxiety” the simplicity of the Google search interface must act as a claiming tonic. It is not demanding of the information seeker in the formation of search terms and almost always produces vast numbers of hits. It even helps out with your spelling.
Faced with such a bewildering array of electronic sources of information the ease and immediacy of retrieval becomes as important as the quality of the resources retrieved. This may be the most significant challenge to the information profession in the information society, to map and signpost the information landscape. This has been the traditional role of the librarian and whilst the information domain is changing the core principles of the profession remain as important to society as ever.Correct
Incorrect
-
Question 48 of 50
48. Question
1 pointsRead the passage given below, and answer the Questions that follow based on your understanding of the passage :
The growth of the Internet and its ubiquitous use in study and work creates new areas of concern. Town (2003) notes the problem of information illiteracy within higher education:
Students are relying uniformly on the web and show a lack of understanding about the resources available to them “because all the information is in the same place”. The web may have “changed everything” but in doing so it has created a new problem of information illiteracy; that of false confidence in the Internet as a complete information resource (Town, 2003).
There is such a proliferation of content across such a range of areas, available with such immediacy that the sheer volume of information can seem overwhelming. For sufferers of this “Information anxiety” the simplicity of the Google search interface must act as a claiming tonic. It is not demanding of the information seeker in the formation of search terms and almost always produces vast numbers of hits. It even helps out with your spelling.
Faced with such a bewildering array of electronic sources of information the ease and immediacy of retrieval becomes as important as the quality of the resources retrieved. This may be the most significant challenge to the information profession in the information society, to map and signpost the information landscape. This has been the traditional role of the librarian and whilst the information domain is changing the core principles of the profession remain as important to society as ever.Correct
Incorrect
-
Question 49 of 50
49. Question
1 pointsRead the passage given below, and answer the Questions that follow based on your understanding of the passage :
The growth of the Internet and its ubiquitous use in study and work creates new areas of concern. Town (2003) notes the problem of information illiteracy within higher education:
Students are relying uniformly on the web and show a lack of understanding about the resources available to them “because all the information is in the same place”. The web may have “changed everything” but in doing so it has created a new problem of information illiteracy; that of false confidence in the Internet as a complete information resource (Town, 2003).
There is such a proliferation of content across such a range of areas, available with such immediacy that the sheer volume of information can seem overwhelming. For sufferers of this “Information anxiety” the simplicity of the Google search interface must act as a claiming tonic. It is not demanding of the information seeker in the formation of search terms and almost always produces vast numbers of hits. It even helps out with your spelling.
Faced with such a bewildering array of electronic sources of information the ease and immediacy of retrieval becomes as important as the quality of the resources retrieved. This may be the most significant challenge to the information profession in the information society, to map and signpost the information landscape. This has been the traditional role of the librarian and whilst the information domain is changing the core principles of the profession remain as important to society as ever.Correct
Incorrect
-
Question 50 of 50
50. Question
1 pointsRead the passage given below, and answer the Questions that follow based on your understanding of the passage :
The growth of the Internet and its ubiquitous use in study and work creates new areas of concern. Town (2003) notes the problem of information illiteracy within higher education:
Students are relying uniformly on the web and show a lack of understanding about the resources available to them “because all the information is in the same place”. The web may have “changed everything” but in doing so it has created a new problem of information illiteracy; that of false confidence in the Internet as a complete information resource (Town, 2003).
There is such a proliferation of content across such a range of areas, available with such immediacy that the sheer volume of information can seem overwhelming. For sufferers of this “Information anxiety” the simplicity of the Google search interface must act as a claiming tonic. It is not demanding of the information seeker in the formation of search terms and almost always produces vast numbers of hits. It even helps out with your spelling.
Faced with such a bewildering array of electronic sources of information the ease and immediacy of retrieval becomes as important as the quality of the resources retrieved. This may be the most significant challenge to the information profession in the information society, to map and signpost the information landscape. This has been the traditional role of the librarian and whilst the information domain is changing the core principles of the profession remain as important to society as ever.Correct
Incorrect
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