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Information Today, Inc.

Information Today Inc is the official publisher of ASIS&T books and monographs.
 

In Association with Amazon.com

NEW TITLES

* 2008 ASIS&T Book of the Year *

Scholarship in the Digital AgeScholarship in the Digital Age
Information, Infrastructure, and the Internet
by Christine Borgman

Scholars in all fields now have access to an unprecedented wealth of online information, tools, and services. The Internet lies at the core of an information infrastructure for distributed, data-intensive, and collaborative research. Although much attention has been paid to the new technologies making this possible, from digitized books to sensor networks, it is the underlying social and policy changes that will have the most lasting effect on the scholarly enterprise. In Scholarship in the Digital Age, Christine Borgman explores the technical, social, legal, and economic aspects of the kind of infrastructure that we should be building for scholarly research in the twenty-first century.

Borgman describes the roles that information technology plays at every stage in the life cycle of a research project and contrasts these new capabilities with the relatively stable system of scholarly communication, which remains based on publishing in journals, books, and conference proceedings. No framework for the impending "data deluge" exists comparable to that for publishing. Analyzing scholarly practices in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities, Borgman compares each discipline's approach to infrastructure issues. In the process, she challenges the many stakeholders in the scholarly infrastructure—scholars, publishers, libraries, funding agencies, and others—to look beyond their own domains to address the interaction of technical, legal, economic, social, political, and disciplinary concerns. Scholarship in the Digital Age will provoke a stimulating conversation among all who depend on a rich and robust scholarly environment. 

2007/336 pp/hardbound, ISBN: 0-262-02619-8

 

 

 

Copies:

 

 

 

 Members  

$30.00

 

 

 Non-members

$35.00

 


AM08 Annual Meeting Proceedings2008 Proceedings of the 71st Annual Meeting (Vol. 45)
Columbus, Ohio
©2008, CD-ROM, ISBN: 0-87715-540-2

A great deal of attention has been paid to the rapid growth of the internet, proliferation of information - especially born-digital content, and the development of technologies in response to these trends. Viewing this changing landscape through a lens of the human and social condition would lead to better understanding how human needs drive, are served by and change information and technology. We anticipate an exploration of the human condition from the individual to society as a whole.

ASIS&T 2008 will focus on how people transform information as well as how information transforms people. Submissions by researchers and practitioners are solicited on a wide range of human-centered approaches to topics including but not limited to the following: 

  • Individual identities and how they are transformed by the impact of information technologies
  • The societal archive – is it disappearing and/or being marginalized?
  • Societal attentions and how emphasis on information technology either allows or hinders these
  • Openness, access and privacy issues
  • Generational, economic, and socio-cultural dimensions of impact of information on people’s lives
  • Cognitive and emotional aspects of interactions with information
  • Reshaping the boundary between personal and public information space
  • The effect of collective information creation on authority and trust
  • Information by the people for the people
  • The role of information in connecting people and community building
  • How well is current technology meeting human needs, and what should future technology research and development involve to better meet our needs?

 

 

 

Copies:

 

 

 

 Members  

$30.00

 

 

 Non-members

$45.00

 


DDesigning Web Navigationesigning Web Navigation:  Optimizing the User Experience
by James Kalbach

Thoroughly rewritten for today's web environment, this bestselling book offers a fresh look at a fundamental topic of web site development: navigation design. Amid all the changes to the Web in the past decade, and all the hype about Web 2.0 and various "rich" interactive technologies, the basic problems of creating a good web navigation system remain. Designing Web Navigation demonstrates that good navigation is not about technology-it's about the ways people find information, and how you guide them.

2008/456 pp/paperback, ISBN 978-0596528102

 

 

 

Copies:

 

 

 

 Members  

$39.99

 

 

 Non-members

$49.99

 


IA for the World Wide Web, 3rd EditionInformation Architecture for the World Wide Web
3rd Edition
by Louis Rosenfeld and Peter Morville

In this post-Ajaxian Web 2.0 world of wikis, folksonomies, and mashups, well-planned information architecture has never been more essential. This classic primer shows information architects, designers, and web site developers how to build large-scale and maintainable web sites that are easy to navigate and appealing to users. The third edition is updated to address emerging technologies while maintaining its focus on fundamentals.

2006, 526 pps/softbound • ISBN: 0-596-52734-9

 

 

 

Copies:

 

 

 

 Members  

$39.99

 

 

 Non-members

$49.99

 


Mental ModelsMental Models:  Aligning Design Strategy with Human Behavior
by Indi Young

There is no single methodology for creating the perfect product--buy you can increase your odds. One of the best ways is to understand users' reasons for doing things. Mental Models gives you the tools to help you grasp, and design for, those reasons. Adaptive Path co-founder Indi Young has written a roll-up-your-sleeves book for designers, managers, and anyone else interested in making design strategic, and successful. 


2008/299 pp/paperback, ISBN 1-933820-06-3 

 

 

 

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 Members/non-members 

$36.00

 


Knowledge Management in PracticeKnowledge Management in Practice:  Connections and Context
edited by T. Kanti Srikantaiah and Michael E.D. Koenig

Knowledge Management in Practice is unique in surveying the efforts of KM professionals to extend knowledge beyond their organizations and in providing a framework for understanding user context. The result is a must-read for any professional seeking to connect organizational KM systems with increasingly diverse and geographically dispersed user communities. 


2008/544 pp/hardbound, ISBN 978-1-57387-312-3 

 

 

 

Copies:

 

 

 

 Members  

$47.60

 

 

 Non-members

$59.50

 


Computerization Movements and Technology DiffusionComputerization Movements and Technology Diffusion
edited by Margaret S.. Elliott and Kenneth L. Kraemer

Computerization movement” (CM), as first articulated by Rob Kling, refers to a special kind of social and technological movement that promotes the adoption of computing within organizations and society. Here, editors Margaret S. Elliott and Kenneth L. Kraemer and more than two dozen noted scholars trace the successes and failures of CMs from the mainframe and PC eras to the current Internet era and the emerging era of ubiquitous computing.


2008/608 pp/hardbound, ISBN 978-1-57387-311-6 

 

 

 

Copies:

 

 

 

 Members  

$47.60

 

 

 Non-members

$59.50

 



Information and EmotionInformation and Emotion

by Diane Nahl and Dania Bilal

Information and Emotion introduces the new research areas of affective issues in information seeking and use, and the affective paradigm applied to information behavior in a variety of populations, cultures, and contexts. The book’s editors and authors are information behavior researchers at the forefront of charting the emotional quality of the information environment. Collectively, their contributions make Information and Emotion a unique source of research findings on the user perspective, the user experience, and how emotional aspects can be interpreted, mitigated, or enhanced through design that is informed by use and by users who directly participate in information design. 


2007/392 pp/hardbound, ISBN 978-1-57387-310-9

 

 

 

Copies:

 

 

 

 Members  

$47.60

 

 

 Non-members

$59.50

 


2007 Conference Proceedings of the 70th Annual Meeting (Vol. 44)
Milwaukee, WI
©2007, CD-ROM, ISBN: 0-87715-539-9

 

Copies:

 

 

 Members  

$30.00

 

 

 Non-members

$45.00

 


Communicating DesignCommunicating Design
by Dan M. Brown

Most discussion about Web design seems to focus on the creative process, yet turning concept into reality requires a strong set of deliverables—the documentation (concept model, site maps, usability reports, and more) that serves as the primary communication tool between designers and customers. Here at last is a guide devoted to just that topic. Combining quick tips for improving deliverables with in-depth discussions of presentation and risk mitigation techniques, author Dan Brown shows you how to make the documentation you're required to provide into the most efficient communications tool possible. He begins with an introductory section about deliverables and their place in the overall process, and then delves into to the different types of deliverables. From usability reports to project plans, content maps, flow charts, wireframes, site maps, and more, each chapter includes a contents checklist, presentation strategy, maintenance strategy, a description of the development process and the deliverable's impact on the project, and more.

 

Copies:

 

 

 Members  

$32.00

 

 

 Non-members

$39.99

 


2006 ASIS&T Best Information Science Book Award Winner 

Memory Practices in the Sciences - click to place orderMemory Practices in the Sciences - order now
by Geoffrey C. Bowker

Book Description
The way we record knowledge, and the web of technical, formal, and social practices that surrounds it, inevitably affects the knowledge that we record. The ways we hold knowledge about the past -- in handwritten manuscripts, in printed books, in file folders, in databases -- shape the kind of stories we tell about that past. In this lively and erudite look at the relation of our information infrastructures to our information, Geoffrey Bowker examines how, over the past two hundred years, information technology has converged with the nature and production of scientific knowledge. His story weaves a path between the social and political work of creating an explicit, indexical memory for science -- the making of infrastructures -- and the variety of ways we continually reconfigure, lose, and regain the past.

At a time when memory is so cheap and its recording is so protean, Bowker reminds us of the centrality of what and how we choose to forget. In Memory Practices in the Sciences he looks at three "memory epochs" of the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries and their particular reconstructions and reconfigurations of scientific knowledge. The nineteenth century's central science, geology, mapped both the social and the natural world into a single time package (despite apparent discontinuities), as, in a different way, did mid-twentieth-century cybernetics. Both, Bowker argues, packaged time in ways indexed by their information technologies to permit traffic between the social and natural worlds. Today's sciences of biodiversity, meanwhile, "database the world" in a way that excludes certain spaces, entities, and times. We use the tools of the present to look at the past, says Bowker; we project onto nature our modes of organizing our own affairs.


Linked - Click to orderLinked: The New Science of Networks - order now
by
Albert-Laszio Barabasi

From Publishers Weekly
Information, disease, knowledge and just about everything else is disseminated through a complex series of networks made up of interconnected hubs, argues University of Notre Dame physics professor Barabasi. These networks are replicated in every facet of human life: "There is a path between any two neurons in our brain, between any two companies in the world, between any two chemicals in our body. Nothing is excluded from this highly interconnected web of life." In accessible prose, Barabasi guides readers through the mathematical foundation of these networks. He shows how they operate on the Power Law, the notion that "a few large events carry most of the action." The Web, for example, is "dominated by a few very highly connected nodes, or hubs... such as Yahoo! or Amazon.com." Barabasi notes that "the fittest node will inevitably grow to become the biggest hub." The elegance and efficiency of these structures also makes them easy to infiltrate and sabotage; Barabasi looks at modern society's vulnerability to terrorism, and at the networks formed by terrorist groups themselves. The book also gives readers a historical overview on the study of networks, which goes back to 18th-century Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler and includes the well-known "six degrees phenomenon" developed in 1967 by sociology professor Stanley Milgram. The book may remind readers of Steven Johnson's Emergence and with its emphasis on the mathematical underpinnings of social behavior Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point (which Barabasi discusses); those who haven't yet had their fill of this new subgenre should be interested in Barabasi's lively and ambitious account.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Ambient Findability - click to place orderAmbient Findability - order now
by Peter Morville

A thought-provoking book that describes the future of information and connectivity, examining how the melding of innovations like GIS and the Internet will impact the global marketplace and society at large in the 21st century. Research, stories, examples, and illustrations add depth and color to this important subject. Written by best-selling author Peter Morville.

 


2005 ASIS&T Best Information Science Book Award Winner 

Information Politics on the Web - order now
by Richard Rogers

Does the information on the Web offer many alternative accounts of reality, or does it subtly align with an official version? In Information Politics on the Web, Richard Rogers identifies the cultures, techniques, and devices that rank and recommend information on the Web, analyzing not only the political content of Web sites but the politics built into the Web's infrastructure. Addressing the larger question of what the Web is for, Rogers argues that the Web is still the best arena for unsettling the official and challenging the familiar.


Covert and Overt - order now
Recollecting and Connecting Intelligence Service and Information Science
Edited by Robert V. Williams and Ben-Ami Lipetz

Covert and Overt explores the historical relationships between covert intelligence work and information/computer science. Skillfully edited by Robert V. Williams and Ben-Ami Lipetz, the book features contributions by intelligence professionals and technologists from a range of U.S. and British agencies and armed services.

 

Theories of Information Behavior - Order Now!Theories in Informatin Behavior - Order Now! Theories of Information Behavior - order now
Edited by Karen E. Fisher, Sanda Erdelez, and Lynne McKechnie

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 wellestablished 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, theory–method connections, and the process of theory development.

"Theories of Information Behavior is much more than a research guide. It is a compendium and an encyclopedia of theories, philosophies, and experiments in information behavior research conducted over the past four decades or so. The presentations are concise, and many are a delightful read, written by protagonists of that research."

-Tefko Saracevic, School of Communication, Information and Library Studies, Rutgers University


2004 ASIS&T Best Information Science Book Award Winner 

History of Online Information Services 1963-1976
- order now
by Charles P. Bourne and Trudi Bellardo Hahn

Every field of history has a basic need for a detailed chronology of what happened: who did what when. In the absence of such a resource, fanciful accounts flourish. This book provides a rich narrative of the early development of online information retrieval systems and services, from 1963 to 1976--a period important to anyone who uses a search engine, online catalog, or large database. Drawing on personal experience, extensive research, and interviews with many of the key participants, the book describes the individuals, projects, and institutions of the period. It also corrects many common errors and misconceptions and provides milestones for many of the significant developments in online systems and technology.


Knowledge Management:  Lessons Learned; What Works and What Doesn'tKnowledge Management Lessons Learned; What Works and What Doesn't - order now
Edited by Michael E.D. Koenig and T. Kanti Srikantaiah

The editorial team of Michael E. D. Koenig and T. Kanti Srikantaiah follow up their groundbreaking Knowledge Management for the Information Professional (2000) with this important book.  While the earlier work offered an introduction to KM, providing definitions and promoting a vital interaction between the business and information communities, Knowledge Management Lessons Learned surveys recent applications and innovations.  Through the experiences and analyses of more than 30 experts, the book demonstrates KM in practice, revealing what has been learned, what works, and what doesn't.  Practitioners describe projects undertaken by organizations at the forefront of KM, and the top researchers and analysts discuss KM strategy and implementation, cost analysis, education and training, content management, communities of practice, competitive intelligence, and more.


Looking for InformationLooking for Information: A Survey of Research on Information Seeking , Needs & Behavior - order now
by Donald Owen Case

Looking for Information presents examples of information seeking and reviews studies of the information -seeking behavior of both general and specific social and occupational groups: scientists, engineers, social scientists, humanists, policy experts, the aged, the poor, and "the public" in general. It also discusses general research on information seeking, including basic research on human communication behavior as found in the literature of psychology, anthropology, sociology, and other disciplines.


Information Representation and Retrieval in the Digital Age - order now
by Heting Chu

Here is the first book to offer a clear, comprehensive view of Information Representation and Retrieval (IRR). With an emphasis on principles and fundamentals, author Heting Chu, Ph.D. (College of Information and Computer Science at Long Island University) first reviews key concepts and major development stages of the field, then systematically examines information representation methods, IRR languages, retrieval techniques and models, and internet retrieval systems.

In addition, the author explains the retrieval of multilingual, multimedia, and hyper-structured information; explores the user dimension and evaluation issues; and analyzes the role and potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in IRR. This thoroughly researched, carefully organized monograph is an indispensable guide for the scholar, student, or practitioner who needs broad and current knowledge of the key topic in information science.


Information Architecture for Designers: Structuring Websites for Business Success - order now
by Peter Van Dijck

This must-read text for all web designers delivers vital information on how to employ information architecture to create intelligent sites that produce hard sales. In today's drastically reduced web market, measurable business returns are essential to clients and this book equips the designer with the tools to deliver the goods.

Information Architecture is low on theory, high on practice. It contains practical examples, how-to's, do's and don'ts and ready -to-use templates, illustrating concepts, tools and deliverables that can be used immediately in real life by anyone responsible for designing web sites. Practical explanations and tips are illustrated with case studies from industry leaders like IBM and Microsoft, and clear explanations of the latest cutting-edge research from the academic world.

Readers can also access a web site where all the model templates explained in the book are ready for use, and a free sample chapter and free access to a sample templates are available.


IInformation Architecture, an Emerging 21st Century Professionnformation Architecture, an Emerging 21st Century Profession - order now
by Earl Morrogh

For undergraduate/graduate-level courses in Information Architecture, Information Design, Interaction Design, User Experience Design, Social Informatics, Human-computer Interaction, Knowledge Management, Information Management, Web Design, Communications History, Telecommunications Infrastructure, and for survey courses in Information Science, Telecommunications, Computer Science, and Information and Communication.

 


American Society for Information Science and Technology
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Tel. 301-495-0900, Fax: 301-495-0810 | E-mail:
asis@asis.org

Copyright 2008, American Society for Information Science and Technology