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Grounded in the user-centered design movement, this book offers a
broad consideration of how our civilization has evolved its
technical infrastructure for human purpose to help us make sense of
the contemporary world of information infrastructure and online
existence. The author incorporates historical, cultural and
aesthetic approaches to situating information and its underlying
technologies across time in the collective, lived experiences of
humanity. In today's digital information world, user experience is
vital to the success of any product or service. Yet as the user
population expands to include us all, designing for people who vary
in skills, abilities, preferences and backgrounds is challenging.
This book provides an integrated understanding of users, and the
methods that have evolved to identify usability challenges, that
can facilitate cohesive and earlier solutions. The book treats
information creation and use as a core human behavior based on acts
of representation and recording that humans have always practiced.
It suggests that the traditional ways of studying information use,
with their origins in the distinct layers of social science
theories and models is limiting our understanding of what it means
to be an information user and hampers our efforts at being truly
user-centric in design. Instead, the book offers a way of
integrating the knowledge base to support a richer view of use and
users in design education and evaluation. Understanding Users is
aimed at those studying or practicing user-centered design and
anyone interested in learning how people might be better integrated
in the design of new technologies to augment human capabilities and
experiences.
Grounded in the user-centered design movement, this book offers a
broad consideration of how our civilization has evolved its
technical infrastructure for human purpose to help us make sense of
the contemporary world of information infrastructure and online
existence. The author incorporates historical, cultural and
aesthetic approaches to situating information and its underlying
technologies across time in the collective, lived experiences of
humanity. In today's digital information world, user experience is
vital to the success of any product or service. Yet as the user
population expands to include us all, designing for people who vary
in skills, abilities, preferences and backgrounds is challenging.
This book provides an integrated understanding of users, and the
methods that have evolved to identify usability challenges, that
can facilitate cohesive and earlier solutions. The book treats
information creation and use as a core human behavior based on acts
of representation and recording that humans have always practiced.
It suggests that the traditional ways of studying information use,
with their origins in the distinct layers of social science
theories and models is limiting our understanding of what it means
to be an information user and hampers our efforts at being truly
user-centric in design. Instead, the book offers a way of
integrating the knowledge base to support a richer view of use and
users in design education and evaluation. Understanding Users is
aimed at those studying or practicing user-centered design and
anyone interested in learning how people might be better integrated
in the design of new technologies to augment human capabilities and
experiences.
The aim of this book is to present results of scientific research
on how digital information should be designed and how artifacts or
systems containing digital content should maximize usability, and
to explain how context can influence the nature and effectiveness
of digital communication. Using a philosophical, cognitive, and
technical standpoint, the book covers the issue of what digital
information actually is. The text also presents research outcomes
from the perspective of research in information science--broadly
construed--a term now used to cover a range of theoretical and
practical approaches. Creation, Use, and Deployment of Digital
Information is broken down into three parts: *Part I presents
information on how electronic documents can be realized--the
complexities, alternatives, functions, and restrictions are treated
here. *Part II discusses how human beings process information and
how technical solutions can satisfy human restrictions. *Part III
treats the context in which digital information processing and
deployment takes place. The book has much to offer to academics in
many disciplines, including science, the arts, psychology,
education, and the information and computing sciences.
The aim of this book is to present results of scientific research
on how digital information should be designed and how artifacts or
systems containing digital content should maximize usability, and
to explain how context can influence the nature and effectiveness
of digital communication. Using a philosophical, cognitive, and
technical standpoint, the book covers the issue of what digital
information actually is. The text also presents research outcomes
from the perspective of research in information science--broadly
construed--a term now used to cover a range of theoretical and
practical approaches. Creation, Use, and Deployment of Digital
Information is broken down into three parts: *Part I presents
information on how electronic documents can be realized--the
complexities, alternatives, functions, and restrictions are treated
here. *Part II discusses how human beings process information and
how technical solutions can satisfy human restrictions. *Part III
treats the context in which digital information processing and
deployment takes place. The book has much to offer to academics in
many disciplines, including science, the arts, psychology,
education, and the information and computing sciences.
The recent evolution of western societies has been characterized by
an increasing emphasis on information and communication. As the
amount of available information increases, however, the user --
worker, student, citizen -- faces a new problem: selecting and
accessing relevant information. More than ever it is crucial to
find efficient ways for users to interact with information systems
in a way that prevents them from being overwhelmed or simply
missing their targets. As a result, hypertext systems have been
developed as a means of facilitating the interactions between
readers and text. In hypertext, information is organized as a
network in which nodes are text chunks (e.g., lists of items,
paragraphs, pages) and links are relationships between the nodes
(e.g., semantic associations, expansions, definitions, examples --
virtually any kind of relation that can be imagined between two
text passages). Unfortunately, the many ways in which these
hypertext interfaces can be designed has caused a complexity that
extends far beyond the processing abilities of regular users.
Therefore, it has become widely recognized that a more rational
approach based on a thorough analysis of information users' needs,
capacities, capabilities, and skills is needed. This volume seeks
to meet that need.
From a user-centered perspective -- between systems and users --
this volume presents theoretical and empirical research on the
cognitive processes involved in using hypertext. In so doing, it
illustrates three main approaches to the design of hypertext
systems:
*cognitive, which examines how users process multilayered
hypertext structures;
*ergonomical, which explores how users interact with the design
characteristics of hardware and software; and
*educational, which studies the learning objectives, frequency and
duration of hypertext sessions, type of reading activity, and the
user's learning characteristics.
This volume also tries to provide answers for the questions that
have plagued hypertext research:
*What is hypertext good for?
*Who is hypertext good for?
*If it is useful for learning and instruction, then what type?
*What particular cognitive skills are needed to interact
successfully with a hypertext system? Anyone interested in the
fields of computer science, linguistics, psychology, education, and
graphic design will find this volume intriguing, informative, and a
definitive starting point for future research in the field of
hypertext.
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