User:KYPark/2000

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John Brown

The Social Life of Information
(with Paul Duguid)
John Seely Brown Symposium on Technology and Society
The first held at the University of Michigan School of Information (the subsequent: 2002, 2006, 2008)

Barry Buzan

The Mind Map Book

James Gillies

How the Web was Born: The Story of the World Wide Web
Oxford University Press, 2000 (with Robert Cailliau)
Dedicated: To the Memory of Mike Sendall and Donald Davies
  • ``The World Wide Web is like an encyclopaedia, a telephone directory, a record collection, a video shop, and Speakers' Corner all rolled into one and accessible through any computer. It has become so successful that to many it is synonymous with the Internet; but in reality the two are quite different. The Internet is like a network of electronic roads criss-crossing the planet -- the much-hyped information superhighway. The Web is just one of many services using that network, just as many different kinds of vehicle use the roads. On the Internet, the Web just happens to be by far the most popular. The arrival of the Web in 1990 was to the Internet like the arrival of the internal combustion engine to the country lane. Internet transport would never be the same again.`` (opening paragraph, p. 1)
  • Cf.
    Michael L. Dertouzos
    )
  • Cf. What Are We Calling This Thing? (Chapter 5) [2]
  • Cf. Amazon.com [3]

Robert Jacobson

Information Design
(ed.) amazon.com
Foreword -- Richard Saul Wurman
  1. Introduction: Why information Design Matters -- Robert Jacobson
  2. Information Design: The Emergence of a New Profession -- Robert E. Horn
  3. Chaos, Order, and Sense-Making: A Proposed Theory for Information Design -- Brenda Dervin
  4. Human-Centered Design -- Mike Cooley
  5. Sign-Posting Information Design -- Romedi Passini
  6. The Uniquesness of Individual Perception -- Roger Whitehouse
  7. Information Design in Informal Settings: Museums and Other Public Spaces -- C. G. Screven
  8. Graphic Tools for Thinking, Planning and Problem Solving -- Yvonne M. Hansen
  9. Visual Design in Three Dimensions -- Hal Thwaites
  10. Collaborative Information Design: Seattle's Modern Odyssey -- Judy Anderson
  11. Information Interaction Design -- Nathan Shedroff
  12. Interactivity and Meaning -- Sheryl Macy, Elizabeth Anderson, and John Krygier
  13. The Role of Ambiguity in Multimedia Experience -- Jim Gasperini
  14. Sculpting in Zeroes and Ones -- Steve Holtzman
  15. Personal Reflection on the Development of Cyberspace -- Simon Birrell
  16. Rationalizing Information Representation -- Jep Raskin

Norman Johnson

Subplane Covered Nets
Google book

Shalom Lappin

The Structure of Unscientific Revolutions
Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 18: 665–671 (with Robert Levine and David Johnson)
  • ... Lappin et al. argue that the
    Minimalist Program
    is a radical departure from earlier Chomskian linguistic practice, but is not motivated by any new empirical discoveries, but rather by a general appeal to "perfection" which is both empirically unmotivated and so vague as to be unfalsifiable. They compare the adoption of this paradigm by linguistic researchers to other historical paradigm shifts in natural sciences and conclude that the adoption of the Minimalist Program has been an "unscientific revolution", driven primarily by Chomsky's authority in linguistics. The several replies to the article in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory Volume 18 number 4 (2000) make contradictory defenses of the Minimalist Program, some claiming that it is not in fact revolutionary or not in fact widely adopted, while others concede these points but defend the vagueness of its formulation as not problematic.

Robert Putnam

Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community
Simon & Schuster, New York

Robertson

Stephen E. Robertson

Salton Award Lecture on theoretical argument in information retrieval
ACM SIGIR Forum, Volume 34 Issue 1, April 2000. ACM

Jorgen Sandberg

Understanding Human Competence at Work: An Interpretative Approach
Academy of Management Journal, 2000, vol. 43, no. 1, pp. 9-25.
http://www.lerenvandocenten.nl/files/sandberg.pdf
http://74.125.155.132/scholar?q=cache:QeqEojtpc5sJ:scholar.google.com/&hl=en&as_sdt=2000
  • Human competence to optimize the heat engine in analogy to the information search engine
  • Compare three "conceptions" with M.E. Maron (1977)
    1. "separate qualities" vs. "Retrieval-about" (lexicographic)
    2. "interactive qualities" vs. "Objective-about" (syntactic)
    3. "customer's perspective" vs. "Subjective-about" (pragmatic)
  • Refer to contextualist "References" (p. 24).

Stiglitz

Joseph E. Stiglitz (2000).
The Contributions of the economics of information to twentieth century economics. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, November 2000, 1441-1478.
http://www.eui.eu/Personal/Courty/Stglitz2000.pdf

Willinsky

John Willinsky (2000).
If Only We Knew: Increasing the Public Value of Social Science Research. Routledge. ISBN 0415926521, 9780415926522

http://books.google.com/books?id=QeO54jEpEOUC

References

Footnotes


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