|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Despite the proliferation of smart technologies, the challenges of
information hygiene continue to wreak havoc on the information
landscape, hence the need to explore and analyze how such a
phenomenon can be handled. This book will explore the concept of
information hygiene in a time when citizens are deluged with an
avalanche of information from all angles, especially in the
COVID-1i pandemic and infodemic era. Information hygiene refers to
the experiences to the experiences of information users in an era
of information overabundance. If not handled well, it becomes an
infodemic. It is upon information and media practitioners to build
a capacity among citizens to become conscious consumers and
generators of information. While recognizing the convergence of
disciplines namely media, library science, records management, and
ICTs, this book analyzes the concept of information hygiene from
the perspectives of media and library science, ICT, and records and
archival science experts. It will identify and analyze challenges
and opportunities for information science practitioners and media
institutions in the fight against information disorder. This book
also explores the unhygienic practices in the information value
change. Information hygiene is critical if the world is to overcome
the challenges of overabundance and information in the current
dispensation.
Despite the proliferation of smart technologies, the challenges of
information hygiene continue to wreak havoc on the information
landscape, creating a critical need to explore and analyze how such
a phenomenon can be handled. Further research is required in order
to better understand the various difficulties and opportunities
within the field. Library and Media Roles in Information Hygiene
and Managing Information explores the concept of information
hygiene at a time when citizens all over the world are deluged with
an avalanche of information. The book also identifies challenges
and opportunities for information science practitioners and media
institutions in the fight against information disorder and explores
the unhygienic practices in the information value chain. Covering
topics such as information regulation, digital literacy, and
records management, this reference work is ideal for librarians,
computer scientists, researchers, academicians, scholars,
practitioners, instructors, and students.
|
|