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The Architecture of Understanding Peter Morville, Text Analytics World 2015
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Page 1: The Architecture of Understanding

The Architecture of Understanding

Peter Morville, Text Analytics World 2015

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The Library of Congress “To further the progress of knowledge and creativity.”

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Fragmentation Fragmentation into multiple sites, domains, and identities is a major problem. Users don’t know which site to visit for which purpose.

Findability Users can’t find what they need from the home page, but most users don’t come through the front door. They enter via a web search or a deep link, and are confused by what they find. Even worse, most never use the Library, because its resources aren’t easily findable.

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Web Governance Board

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Goodness

Complex

ity

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Simple

Complex

Simple

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Nature

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Isle Royale National Park

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Planning

Inspiration

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Planning

Playing Practicing

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“With respect to learning by failure, it’s all fun and games until someone gets a larval cyst in the brain.”

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“There is a problem in discussing systems only with words. Words and sentences must, by necessity, come only one at a time in linear, logical order. Systems happen all at once. They are connected not just in one direction, but in many directions simultaneously.”

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Food Scarcity(overpopluation)

T T

Inflow(birth rate)

Outflow(death rate)

Stock(population)

T T

Disease(canine parvovirus)

Immigration(via ice bridge)

Parasites(moose tick)

Weather(mild winter)

Inflow(birth rate)

Outflow(death rate)

Stock(population)

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“It is the responsibility of the architect to know and concentrate on the critical few details and interfaces that really matter.”

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The design and management of information systems.

Understanding the nature of information in systems.

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Categories

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Categories are the cornerstones of cognition and culture.

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We use radio buttons when checkboxes or sliders would reveal the truth.

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Connections

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Hyperlinks Pages

Web

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Paths Places

Space

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Connections Categories

Mind

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Consequences Actions

Time

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“The system always kicks back.”

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If you think information architecture hasn’t changed since the polar bear, you’re simply not paying attention.

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C o n t e x t

Users Creators

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“Tell me about a day in your life.”

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“How can I know what I think until I see what I say?”

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Culture

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Underlying Assumptions

Espoused Values

ArtifactsVisible organizational structures and processes (hard to decipher)

Strategies, goals, philosophies, justifications

Unconscious, taken for granted beliefs, perceptions, thoughts, feelings (source of values, action)

Three Levels of Culture

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Double-loop learning in organizations (and individuals) is rare.

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The relationship between information and culture.

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“There’s a secret about MRIs and back pain: the most common problems physicians see on MRI and attribute to back pain – herniated, ruptured, and bulging discs – are seen almost as commonly on MRIs of healthy people without back pain.”

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“If you want to accelerate someone’s death, give him a personal doctor. I don’t mean provide him with a bad doctor. Just pay for him to choose his own. Any doctor will do.”

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Limits

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“It is now my suggestion that many people may not want information, and that they will avoid using a system precisely because it gives them information…If you have information, you must first read it. You must then try to understand it. Understanding the information may show that your work was wrong, or may show that your work was needless. Thus not having and not using information can lead to less trouble and pain than having and using it.”

Calvin Mooers (1959)

The limits of information

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“We shape our buildings. Thereafter, they shape us.” – Winston Churchill

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“Willpower is the single most

important keystone habit for

individual success.”

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“A culture of generosity.” Josie Parker, Ann Arbor District Library

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“Where architects use forms and spaces to design

environments for inhabitation, information architects use

nodes and links to create environments for understanding.”

Jorge Arango, Architectures (2011)

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Daylighting

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Daylighting

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Map the System

Map the Context Share the Map

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Firmitas, Utilitas, Venustas Vitruvius, De Architectura (15 BC)

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No house should ever be on a hill or on anything. It should be of the hill. Belonging to it.

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“Any wild flower is truly simple but double the same wild flower by cultivation and it ceases to be so. The scheme of the original is no longer clear.”

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“Each step is a potential place: place to

worship, place to wash, place to sell, place

to sleep, place to die and be burned.”

Donlyn Lyndon (1962)

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67  The l ibrary is an act of inspirat ion archi tecture and a keystone of cul ture .

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Thank You! IA Therefore I Am