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LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15
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Page 1: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

LIS900C lecture 3:Information Architecture

2002-05-15

Page 2: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Reading

• ``Information Architecture'' by Louis Rosenfeld and Peter Morville, O'Reilly 1998

• There is now a second edition, hopefully it is better

• Contents is very thin, I summarize the whole book here.

Page 3: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Sensitivity exercise

• What do you hate about a web site?

• What do you like about a web site?

• All issues to do with that fall into three categories– Technical– Look and Feel– Architecture

Page 4: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Reasons to hate a web site

• Can't find it.

• Page crowded

• Loud colours

• Gratuitous use of technology

• Inappropriate tone

• Designer centered

• Lack of attention to detail

Page 5: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Reasons to like a web site

• useful

• attractive to look at

• thought provoking

• findabilty

• personalisation

Page 6: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Why is it so difficult

• technical expertise

• graphical design expertise

• overall structure

Page 7: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

IA determines

• organization

• content

• functionality– navigation– labeling– searching

Page 8: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Good IA is important for the producer

• web site an important point of first contact

• needs to determine overall design before the site is built

• reorganizing a site is – costly– difficult

Page 9: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Topics covered

• Classification

• navigation

• labelling

• making a site searchable

Page 10: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

The challenge of classification• ambiguity:

``a tomato is a red or yellowish fruit with a juicy pulp, used as a vegetable, botanically it is a berry.''

• heterogeneity– in a library– on a web site

• granularity• format

• difference in perspective• internal politics

Page 11: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Organizational schemes• Exact schemes

– alphabetical– chronological– geographical

• ambiguous schemes– topical: should be there, but not the only scheme– task-oriented– audience-specific: open or closed

• metaphor-driven: not as overall organization• Hybrid schemes are not good

Page 12: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

The mixed-up library• adult

• arts and humanities

• community center

• get a library card

• learn about our library

• science

• teen

• youth

Page 13: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Organizational form: hierarchies

• keep balance between breadth and depth

• obey 7 +-2 rule horizontally,

• no more than 5 levels vertically

• cross-link ambiguous items if really necessary

• keep new sites shallow

Page 14: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

organizational forms: hypertext

• great flexibility

• great potential for confusion

• not good as a prime organizational structure

Page 15: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

organizational forms: database

• powerful for searching

• useful if there is controlled vocabulary

• easy reorganization

• on the fly or static generation of pages– but ensure robot indexing

• not good for heterogenous data

Page 16: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Navigation aids

• provide context

• allow for flexibility of movement

• support associative learning

• danger of overwhelming the user

Page 17: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

browser navigation aids

• They include – open– back– forward– history– bookmarks– prospective view– visited url color

• sites should not corrupt the browser.

Page 18: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

navigation

• the ``you are here'' mark– pages should indicate site name– navigation should be consistent– navigation not to refer to current pages– highlight current page in a different way

• allow for lateral navigation

Page 19: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Types of navigational systems

• global hierarchical navigation systems– text– icon

• local navigation systems: integration with global system can be challenging

• ad hoc navigation: clear label are required

Page 20: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Frames are problematic

• potential waste of pages real estate

• speed of display

• disrupt the page model

• complex design

Page 21: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

remote navigation system I

• table of contents– good in a hierarchical web site

– reinforce the hierarchy

– facilitate known-item access

– resist temptation to overwhelm user

• indexes– presents key term without hierarchy

– key terms found from search behavior

– links terms to final destination pages

– use term rotation

Page 22: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

remote navigation systems II

• site maps– is a graphical representationof the site's contents– new because no equivalent in print– there are automated tools to generate site maps– seldomly well-done– to be kept simple

• guided tours– important for sites with restricted access– should feature linear navigation

Page 23: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

labelling

• a label is short expression that represents a larger set of information.

• example: ``contact us''• labelling is an outgrowth of site

organization, that we have discussed previously.

• labelling communicates the organization of the site

Page 24: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Why bother

• we need to guess at how users respond to a label

• users will not spend much time interpreting the label

• appropriate tone, no ``hot'', cool'', `stuff''• should reflect thinking of the user, not of

the owner• it is easy to have unplanned labelling

Page 25: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Good labelling

• Sticking with the familiar– main, main page, home, home page– search, find– browse– contact, contact us, feedback– Help, FAQ, Frequently Asked Questions– About, About Us

• Labels may be augmented with scope notes

Page 26: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Grammatical consistency

• contact us, search our site, browse our content

• contact, search, browse

• contact information, search page, table of contents

• (also good in student essays)

Page 27: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Labels as indexing terms

• use in <meta>tags, or in <title> tag

• use as controlled vocabulary in the database

• but some search, in fact almost all, engines do not use metadata

Page 28: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Textual labels

born in Vöklingen, (Saarland) in 1965, I studied Economics and Social Sciences at the universities of Toulouse, Paris, Exeter and Leicester. Between Febrary 1993 and April 2001 I lectured in the Department of Economics at the University of Surrey. In 1993 I founded NetEc, a consortium of Internet projects for academic economists. In 1997, I founded the RePEc dataset to document Economics. Between October and December 2000, I held a visiting professorship at Hitotsubashi University.

Page 29: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

labels as headings

• good practice:– consistency in terminology: wording on

labels is uniform and cohesive– consistency in granularity

• chunks covered by labels at the same level is roughly equal

• chunks covered do not vary by their depth

Page 30: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Iconic labels

• There is only a limited ``vocabulary'' of commonly understood labels

• it is fine for some key concepts

• labels need to be very consistently placed

• they can communicate a graphic identity for the page

• they are easy to find on a page, provided that page is not long

Page 31: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Designing labelling systems I

• start from existing one– put in table or tree (on paper)– make small changes towards consistency

• ``benevolent plagiarism'' from competitors and academic sites

• use controlled vocabularies, example yellow pages

Page 32: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Designing labeling systems II• use a thesaurus, example legislative indexing

vocabulary– ``see'' link– ``see also'' links– broader terms– narrower terms

• labels from contents: best judged by an outsider

• labels from query logs• labels from user interviews• labels from modeling user needs

Page 33: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

fine tuning a labelling system

• remove duplicates• sort alphabetically• homogenize case and punctuation and grammar• remove synonyms according to audience• make labels as different from one another as

possible• search for gaps• look into the future• keep scope focussed• consider granularity

Page 34: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

why not make a site searchable

• not a tool to satisfy all user's needs

• not good on poor contents

• not a cure for bad browsing!

• needs good planning

Page 35: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

why make a site searchable

• cope with bad organization (Foyle's)

• dynamic contents

• large contents

Page 36: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

user needs

• some want overview, others want detail

• some need accuracy, others don‘t care much

• some can wait, others need it now

• some need some info, others need a comprehensive answer

Page 37: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

user's searching expectation

• known-item searching

• existence searching

• exploratory searching

• comprehensive searching

Page 38: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

integrated searching and browsing

• literature deals with separate browsing and searching systems

• browsing and searching in a single system

• with multiple iteration

• and associative learning takes place

Page 39: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

designing search interfaces I

• level of expertise– boolean?– concept search?

• amount returned– comprehensive?– verbose?

• how much to make searchable

Page 40: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

designing search interfaces II

• search target– navigation pages?– HTML only?

• are there specific types of data that users will want multi-lingual?

• audience difference

Page 41: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

features of sophisticatedsearch engines

• fielded searches

• sophisticated query languages

• reusable results set

• customizable relevance

Page 42: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Deal with problems

• getting too much: suggest boolean AND

• getting nothing: suggest boolean OR or truncation

• bad answers: suggest to contact an expert, may be not...

Page 43: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Engines that are available

• swish-e

• swish++

• ht/dig

• roads

• custmized engine with mySQL and PHP, the so-called AMP web site

Page 44: LIS900C lecture 3: Information Architecture 2002-05-15.

Thank you for your attention

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