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Designing for Digital Reading (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,025
Discovery Miles 10 250
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Designing for Digital Reading (Paperback)
Series: Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and Services
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Reading is a complex human activity that has evolved, and
co-evolved, with technology over thousands of years. Mass printing
in the fifteenth century firmly established what we know as the
modern book, with its physical format of covers and paper pages,
and now-standard features such as page numbers, footnotes, and
diagrams. Today, electronic documents are enabling paperless
reading supported by eReading technologies such as Kindles and
Nooks, yet a high proportion of users still opt to print on paper
before reading. This persistent habit of "printing to read" is one
sign of the shortcomings of digital documents -- although the
popularity of eReaders is one sign of the shortcomings of paper.
How do we get the best of both worlds? The physical properties of
paper (for example, it is light, thin, and flexible) contribute to
the ease with which physical documents are manipulated; but these
properties have a completely different set of affordances to their
digital equivalents. Paper can be folded, ripped, or scribbled on
almost subconsciously -- activities that require significant
cognitive attention in their digital form, if they are even
possible. The nearly subliminal interaction that comes from years
of learned behavior with paper has been described as lightweight
interaction, which is achieved when a person actively reads an
article in a way that is so easy and unselfconscious that they are
not apt to remember their actions later. Reading is now in a period
of rapid change, and digital text is fast becoming the predominant
mode of reading. As a society, we are merely at the start of the
journey of designing truly effective tools for handling digital
text. This book investigates the advantages of paper, how the
affordances of paper can be realized in digital form, and what
forms best support lightweight interaction for active reading. To
understand how to design for the future, we review the ways reading
technology and reader behavior have both changed and remained
constant over hundreds of years. We explore the reasoning behind
reader behavior and introduce and evaluate several user interface
designs that implement these lightweight properties familiar from
our everyday use of paper. We start by looking back, reviewing the
development of reading technology and the progress of research on
reading over many years. Drawing key concepts from this review, we
move forward to develop and test methods for creating new and more
effective interactions for supporting digital reading. Finally, we
lay down a set of lightweight attributes which can be used as
evidence-based guidelines to improve the usability of future
digital reading technologies. By the end of this book, then, we
hope you will be equipped to critique the present state of digital
reading, and to better design and evaluate new interaction styles
and technologies.
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