You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Searching for information--and succeeding in finding it--is a more interesting and complex process than is usually recognized. Even the most sophisticated automated retrieval systems often fail to incorporate all that we know about human searching behavior. These fifteen papers by Professor Marcia Bates of UCLA address these topics.
""Information" is a word that is much used and discussed, but with little agreement on its meaning. Yet it forms the professional focus and intellectual content of numerous disciplines and professions-information science, knowledge management, social studies of information, digital humanities, biomedical informatics, library science, records management, information systems, and dozens more. In this collection of eighteen professional papers and other texts by Marcia Bates, this pivotal concept is addressed in depth, and its relation to the information professions developed and discussed. Several professional and disciplinary issues are considered, including definitions of the fields, research paradigms and methodologies, the role of the doctorate in a profession, and the major research content areas of the several fields, with special attention to information science. Finally, the distinctive experience of being a woman graduate student and professor, when that was still rare in American universities, is described"--
Information is the focus of numerous disciplines and professions--information science, knowledge management, social studies of information, digital humanities, biomedical informatics, library science, archival science, information systems, and many more. In eighteen papers, Professor Marcia Bates of UCLA tackles many key questions in these fields.
Searching for information in an online retrieval system is part of a larger human process of problem solving, research, or entertainment that needs to be understood as a whole for good information system design. UCLA's Professor Marcia Bates addresses these design requirements and possibilities in the sixteen papers published here.
In order to be effective for their users, information retrieval (IR) systems should be adapted to the specific needs of particular environments. The huge and growing array of types of information retrieval systems in use today is on display in Understanding Information Retrieval Systems: Management, Types, and Standards, which addresses over 20 typ
In The Modern Invention of Information: Discourse, History, and Power, Ronald E. Day provides a historically informed critical analysis of the concept and politics of information. Analyzing texts in Europe and the United States, his critical reading method goes beyond traditional historiographical readings of communication and information by engaging specific historical texts in terms of their attempts to construct and reshape history. After laying the groundwork and justifying his method of close reading for this study, Day examines the texts of two pre–World War II documentalists, Paul Otlet and Suzanne Briet. Through the work of Otlet and Briet, Day shows how documentation and informati...
This unique book presents authoritative overviews of more than 70 conceptual frameworks for understanding how people seek, manage, share, and use information in different contexts. A practical and readable reference to both well-established and newly proposed theories of information behavior, the book includes contributions from 85 scholars from 10 countries. Each theory description covers origins, propositions, methodological implications, usage, links to related conceptual frameworks, and listings of authoritative primary and secondary references. The introductory chapters explain key concepts, theorymethod connections, and the process of theory development.
Emerging as a discipline in the first half of the twentieth century, the information sciences study how people, groups, organizations, and governments create, share, disseminate, manage, search, access, evaluate, and protect information, as well as how different technologies and policies can facilitate and constrain these activities. Given the broad span of the information sciences, it is perhaps not surprising that there is no consensus regarding its underlying theory—the purposes of it, the types of it, or how one goes about developing new theories to talk about new research questions. Diane H. Sonnenwald and the contributors to this volume seek to shed light on these issues by sharing r...
None