Index

Tim Gorichanaz (College of Computing and Informatics, Drexel University, USA)

Information Experience in Theory and Design

ISBN: 978-1-83909-369-2, eISBN: 978-1-83909-368-5

ISSN: 2055-5377

Publication date: 1 October 2020

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

Gorichanaz, T. (2020), "Index", Information Experience in Theory and Design (Studies in Information, Vol. 14), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 189-193. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2055-537720200000014019

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Abstraction
, 78–79

identity as
, 83–84

Abtrinsic information
, 50

Accomplishment
, 150, 152

Adtrinsic information
, 50

Affective components
, 150

Affective information
, 51

Ambiguity
, 1–2, 108–109

American Library Association (ALA)
, 128

Antecedents of personal meaning
, 148–151

“Anti-plastic straw” movement
, 46

Anxiety
, 46–47, 62, 126

Art
, 25–26, 140

Art therapy
, 105

Art-making process, understanding and
, 25–26

Artists
, 24–26, 36

Athletes
, 24–26

Attributes
, 119–120

Autobiographical self
, 69

Autonomous information
, 51

Being informed
, 90–92, 97–98

Beliefs
, 42

#BlackLivesMatter
, 78

Capitalism
, 100

Care

and ontic bonds
, 94–95

for thyself
, 96

Centripetal force
, 150

Circle of moral concern
, 125

Climate change
, 44–48

Codes of ethics
, 156

Cognitive biases
, 42–43

Cognitive information
, 51

Cognitive science
, 42–43

Communication
, 43

Computable subjectivity
, 70

Conceptual knowledge
, 31–32

Conceptualization
, 78

Conglomerations of information
, 32

Consciousness
, 71

Contemporary notions of relevance
, 118

Continuity-making
, 77–78

Core self
, 69

Craeft
, 137–138

Craft

and information
, 141–144

and meaning
, 136–138

and poiesis
, 138–140

Craft
, 140

Crisis of meaning
, 59, 95, 97, 114–116

Cura personalis
, 128

Depression
, 117, 126

Design strategies for understanding
, 56–63

information experience design
, 58

intentional struggle
, 61–63

multiple perspectives
, 56–59

Designing for meaning

mood for designing for personal meaning
, 154–156

personal meaning and antecedents
, 148–151

slow technology and turn to meaning in HCI
, 146–148

techniques for cultivating personal meaning
, 151–154

Designing for self

self-care and technologies
, 100–103

from self-portraiture to selfies
, 103–105

strategies for
, 105–109

Dignity
, 124

Document
, 49

as answers
, 32–33

document experience, character of
, 49–50

society
, 103–104

work as questioning
, 33–36

Donne, John
, 92–93

Dormant document
, 49–50

Emotional experience
, 8

Equality
, 124

Esthetic experience
, 8

Ethics
, 12

Ethics of being informed
, 90–92

Eudaimonia
, 129

Everyday life
, 10, 72

Exentropy
, 130

Existentialism
, 103

Experience

economy
, 5–6

of information literacy
, 6

of meaning
, 8

Experiencing cognitive–affective information
, 9–10

Experiencing sensory information
, 9–10

Extrinsic information
, 50, 51

Fiction
, 19, 22, 126–127

File-self
, 73

Flourishing

with information
, 129–131

informational
, 131–134

Flow of existence
, 1, 7–8, 77–78

Formative reading
, 44–45

Functional information
, 51

Gauguin, Paul
, 34–39

Gibson’s theory of affordances
, 116

GIFT app
, 154

Good life
, 124, 128–129

crisis of meaning
, 126–128

flourishing with information
, 129–131

informational flourishing in ultrarunning
, 131–134

Good Place, The
, 44

GoSlow app
, 147–148

Gratitude
, 156

Group identity
, 81–82, 85–87

Heidegger, Martin
, 3–4, 23, 32, 37, 39, 59

Hermeneutic phenomenology
, 3–4

Human flourishing relies
, 130

Human-centered paradigm
, 5

Human–computer interaction (HCI)
, 3, 146

slow technology and turn to meaning in
, 146–148

Hypomnemata
, 101

Identity
, 78, 89

as abstraction
, 83–84

abstraction and levels of abstraction
, 78–79

defining
, 79–82

information and
, 84–87

work
, 84

Information
, 18, 29–30, 42, 91, 113

artifacts
, 141

athletes and artists
, 24–26

craft and
, 141–144

epistemic aims for
, 19–23

and epistemology
, 19

field
, 160

further research with understanding
, 26–27

and identity
, 84–87

knowledge
, 20

learning
, 20–21

making meaning from
, 116–118

need
, 31

object
, 49–50

organizations
, 30

professional
, 160

provision
, 128

in religious conversions
, 44–46

Schools
, 159–160

as self-construction
, 74–75

signals
, 100

for social change
, 46–48

society
, 123

studies
, 1–2

technologies
, 72

theory entropy
, 91

understanding
, 21–24

wisdom
, 22–23

Information behavior (IB)
, 2, 3, 26–27

research
, 136

Information experience
, 3, 5–7, 17, 19–20, 70, 125, 159

conceptualizing
, 7–11

design
, 58

disciplinary setting
, 2–3

experience
, 7–8

maxims of
, 10–11

as phenomenon
, 9–10

philosophical foundations
, 3–5

as research approach
, 10

two senses of information experience
, 8–10

Information literacy (IL)
, 2, 3, 57, 75

movement
, 20–21

Information seeking
, 113–114

experiences
, 10

Information-as-knowledge
, 74

Information-as-process
, 74, 142–143

Information-as-thing
, 74

Informational ontology
, 73–74, 91, 119–120

Informational self
, 70–74

Information–ethical frameworks
, 91

Informative reading
, 44–45

Informed learning design
, 57–58

Informed systems
, 58–59

Informing Practice
, 3

Intentional struggle
, 61–63

Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA)
, 24

Intrinsic information
, 50, 51

Irony
, 109, 151, 153, 155–156

iSchool Movement
, 3, 159–160

Jardin secret
, 106–108

Justice
, 124

Know thyself
, 96

Kundera, Milan
, 134

Latham’s conceptual model
, 50

Learning
, 20–21

Level of abstraction (LoA)
, 78–79

LGBTQ+
, 86

Liberty
, 124

Life Review intervention
, 146, 152

Life-relevant learning
, 147–148

Live Review in psychology
, 152–153

Love
, 151

Mahabharata
, 124

Makerspaces
, 135–136, 143

Making Art
, 25–26

Mars Climate Orbiter disaster
, 79

Mass communication media
, 46

Mattering
, 115–116

Meaning
, 114–116

craft and
, 136–138

crisis of
, 126–128

information and personal meaning
, 118–121

making meaning from information
, 116–118

Metaphysical entropy
, 91, 129

Metaphysical negentropy
, 97

Modeling information and moral knowledge
, 48–53

change resulting from experience
, 51

character of document experience
, 49–50

from individual to social change
, 51–53

Montaigne, Michel de
, 109

Mood for designing for personal meaning
, 154–156

Moral change

information for social change
, 46–48

information in religious conversions
, 44–46

modeling information and moral knowledge
, 48–53

moral knowledge
, 43–44

Moral knowledge
, 42–44

modeling information and
, 48–53

Museum
, 143–144, 144

Negentropy
, 130

Occupational therapy
, 137–138

Ontic ethics
, 91

Ontic trust
, 92–94

care and ontic bonds
, 94–95

ethics of being informed
, 90–92

self and
, 96–98

Ontic understandings
, 23

Onto-ethico-epistemology
, 12

Ontological understanding
, 23

Ontology
, 12

Opioid crisis
, 126

Orality
, 100–101

Outcomes of information
, 2, 9, 43, 51

Perfectionism
, 97, 127

Personal identity
, 84–85

Personal meaning
, 127, 146

and antecedents
, 148–151

information and
, 118–121

mood for designing for
, 154–156

techniques for cultivating
, 151–154

Phenomenography
, 3

Phenomenology
, 3–4

Philosophy
, 12–13

of information
, 114, 78

Plato
, 53, 61, 70–71

Poiesis, craft and
, 138–140

Poietic judgment in philosophy
, 153–154

Political polarization
, 59

Polysemy
, 1–2

Poor Richard's Almanac
, 129

Practical knowledge
, 42

Pragmatism
, 115–116

Purpose
, 80, 149

Questioning
, 29–30, 32

danger of answering
, 37–39

document work as
, 33–36

documents as answers
, 32–33

understanding and
, 36–37

Religious conversion
, 46

Republic (Plato)
, 53, 61

Responsive courage
, 151

Reverse Alarm Clock
, 153

Romeo and Juliet
, 98

Rube-Goldbergian mechanism
, 19

Sanctuary
, 107

Sea turtles
, 46–47

Self
, 83, 89

information as self-construction
, 74–75

informational self
, 70–74

and ontic trust
, 96–98

theories of
, 68–70

theorizing self
, 68–70

Self-care
, 96

and technologies
, 100–103

Self-documentation
, 75, 104

Self-efficacy
, 150, 152

Self-portraiture to selfies
, 103–105

Self-questioning
, 106, 108

Self-worth
, 150, 152

Selfies, self-portraiture to
, 103–105

Sense-making
, 73–74, 116

Sensory information
, 9–10

Serious leisure
, 125, 136

Shared information experiences
, 26–27

Slow movements
, 60

Slow technology
, 59–60, 146–148

“Slow Thought: A Manifesto”
, 60

Slowness
, 58–59

Social change, information for
, 46–48

Social epistemology
, 19, 21

Social identity
, 81

Social media
, 127

Societal beliefs
, 46

Socratic principle of self-care
, 101

Structuring information
, 30

Sustainability
, 120–121

Systems thinking
, 58–59

Tech firms
, 100

Technologies of the self
, 101–102

Technology
, 127

digital
, 123

modern
, 37

self-care and
, 100–103

slow
, 146–148

Temporality
, 53

Thermodynamics
, 91

“Theseus’ ship”
, 68

Time
, 77–78

Transformative reading
, 44–45

TuneTracker
, 108

Twitter
, 46

U.S. Declaration of Independence
, 43–44, 129

Ultrarunning
, 131–134

Unamuno, Miguel de
, 138–139

Understanding
, 18, 21–24, 57, 59

design strategies for
, 56–63

further research with
, 26–27

and questioning
, 36–37

Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
, 124

User experience (UX)
, 5–6

Userism
, 4–5

Waggle tool
, 63

Westboro Baptist Church
, 45

Wisdom
, 22–23

Woolf, Virginia
, 92

“Worker’s enquiry”
, 33

Yellowstone National Park
, 47–48