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JASS 2005 Next-Generation User-Centered Information Management . Information Architecture Tobias Zimmermann (tobias.zimmermann@mytum.de).
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JASS 2005Next-Generation User-Centered Information Management Information Architecture Tobias Zimmermann (tobias.zimmermann@mytum.de) Software Engineering betrieblicher Informationssysteme (sebis)Ernst Denert-StiftungslehrstuhlLehrstuhl für Informatik 19 Institut für InformatikTU München wwwmatthes.in.tum.de JASS 05 Information Architecture
Agenda • The problem: COGNITIVE OVERLOAD • User‘s information seeking behavior • What is information architecture? • Information Architecture ? What for? • Information Architecture and Development of an Information Space • Information architecture components • Discussion & case study JASS 05 Information Architecture
The problem: COGNITIVE OVERLOAD • Cognitive overload results from various reasons: • Information anxieties • Information overload of pushed and pulled information • Lack of adequate information and unclear information needs • Marginal growth of information quality in respect to quantity • Inadequate workplace infrastructure • Need of dealing with multi-tasking and interruption • ... collating information exceeds it’s value to business • Consequences of cognitive overload (study “Dying for information” 1996): • Less job satisfaction and stress, delay of important decisions • Tensions with work colleagues and ill health Source: [Ki00] JASS 05 Information Architecture
exhaustive research exploratory seeking known-item seeking User‘s information seeking behaviors • 3 common types of information seeking: • exhaustive research: everything on a particular topic, multiple research with different search terms (e.g. 21.900.000 hits for “information architecture” at google.com) • exploratory seeking: open-ended, no clear expectation of the right answer, user is not aware how to articulate what he is looking for (e.g. browsing) • known-item seeking: clear awareness of the desired information, user knows how to call it and where to find (e.g. directory lookup for a phone number) Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Information Architecture, some definitions • Common shared definitions: • “The combination of organization, labeling, and navigation systems within an information system” • “The structural design of an information space to facilitate task completion and intuitive access to content” • “An Information architect is an internet librarian” • Information Architecture is not: • graphic design • software development • usability engineering • but there are some important intersections. Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Costs of inadequate information architecture • Costs of … • ... finding information, • ... not finding information, • ... redesign and improvements, • ... maintenance, • ... training, • ... lost customers, • ... lost reputation and brand value • … • A well-defined information architecture tries to address all topics and to reduce these costs. JASS 05 Information Architecture
Business goals, funding, politics, culture, technologies, resources and constraints Context Users Content Document/data types, content Objects, existing structure Audience, tasks, needs, information seeking behavior, experience The three circles of information architecture Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Mental Model Implementation Model IA & Interaction Diagrams and Prototypes Conceptual / Content Model Development process of an information space Source: adopted form [Ad01] and [Ch01] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Information architecture components • organization systems, • structure and categorization of information • labeling systems, • representation of information, giving names • navigation systems, • browsing through information spaces • searching systems, • information retrieval with search engines • controlled vocabulary, thesauri and rule sets • defining synonyms, scopes and instructions for information retrieval Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Organization schemes and structures • The exponential increase of content makes it necessary to organize information to retrieve it adequately. • Organization schemes define shared characteristics of content items • logical grouping information and content, sorting of content, • exact schemes: alphabetical, chronological, geographical • ambiguous schemes: by topic, by task, by audience, by metaphors • Organization structures define the types of relationships between content groups • Top-Down: hierarchical relationships (e.g. main page and subsites, navigation) • hierarchical and polyhierarchical (e.g. taxonomies, improved search functionality) • Bottom-Up approach: relational database model (e.g. product catalogues, CMS) • network of hypertext links Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
structure and schemes at microsoft.com structure (hierarchy) scheme (by audience) JASS 05 Information Architecture
H T1 T2 T3 T4 H T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 IA models and types of structure (I) • all-in-one • very simple model with all content on a single “homepage” • flat / monocline grouping • flat pattern with all sites at the same level, few standard topics (home, products, about us, contact) • Index • flat structure with a central list of content • works well with medium amount of data and a intuitive sorting H Source: [Sc04a] JASS 05 Information Architecture
H H H IA models and types of structure (II) • Hub-and-spoke / daisy model • useful for distinct linear workflows starting at a common point (e.g. email service/application) • Hierarchies • given parent-child relationship (1:n or n:m) • useful for high-amount of information with a consistent organization scheme polyhierarchy (n:m) strict hierarchy (1:n) Source: adopted form [Sc04a] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Labeling Systems • Labels are given names or icons, representing larger chunks of information. • textual labels • hyperlinks • headings • navigation options • index terms • iconographic labels • may represent complex functions shorter than text, but more limited vocabulary • optical recognition for the user • design and layout elements Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Designing labeling systems • develop consistent labeling system, not just labels • narrow scope whenever possible • be aware of different “languages”/perceptions • avoid noticeable gaps in the labeling system • tools and guidelines for development: • consistency check with navigation tables • have a look for competitors’ labeling systems, “Is there a quasi standard?” • refer to existing controlled vocabularies and thesauri • methods for new systems: content analysis, content authors and card sort Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Navigation Systems • Navigation systems are crucial, a death and live issue, for web sites and complex applications. They provide doors, pathways and windows… • A user who gets lost on the information space will… • …simply clicks away, if there are alternatives, • …gets highly frustrated if he has to use the information space, • …maybe never come back! • Principles for good navigation design • Let me know where I am all the time! • Clearly differentiate hyperlinks from content! • Let me know clearly where I can go from here! • Let me see where I’ve already been! • Make it obvious what to do to get somewhere! • Indicate what clicking a link will do! Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
global navigation local navigation contextual navigation <<content>> contextual navigation Types of navigation systems • embedded navigation systems • global navigation, local navigation and contextual navigation • supplemental navigation systems • sitemaps, indexes and guides • advanced navigation approaches • personalization and customization most popular layout scheme, is it the best? Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Navigation Systems at walmart.com browser navigation supplemental navigation global navigation breadcrumb trail/navigation contextual navigation local navigation JASS 05 Information Architecture
Search systems • A search functionality is an addition to the navigation system to support users in their information needs. • some preconditions: • enough content • sufficient resources to optimize the search system • the search system will not balance a lack in the navigation system • no better alternatives (site indexes) • the search system will pay off • at huge amounts of information • at fragmented sites • with highly dynamic content • when users expect it at your site Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Further possibilities of a search system Improved information retrieval through: • rankings in search results may be sorted by relevance, time, alphabet, pay-for-placement, user’s/expert rating, popularity • synonyms may be presented with controlled vocabularies. • interactive agents with natural language parsing and human-created knowledge-bases. • collaborative filtering by tracking user behavior and profiles. • by leveraging category structures, we can provide results in context. Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
Vocabularies synonym rings authority files classification schemes thesauri complex simple equivalence hierarchical associative Relationships Metadata, Controlled Vocabularies • Metadata are invisible keywords describing the content. They are analyzed by search engines to optimize search results. Usually the are manually entered.<meta name=“keywords” content=“strawberry recipes, cocktail, frozen daiquiri” /> • „controlled vocabularies“ are (manually) cared rule sets and lists of equivalent or associated terms. • synonym rings • authority files • classification schemes • thesauri Source: [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
broader term hierarchical relationship preferred term equivalence relationship variant term associative relationship hierarchical relationship related term narrower term Thesauri and semantic search Source: adopted from [RM02] JASS 05 Information Architecture
References • [Ad01] Adaptive Path : Designing the Complete User Experience, url: http://www.adaptivepath.com/presentations/complete, accessed: 21.03.05. • [Ch01] Chak, A. : Effective Info Architecture. url: http://www.webtechniques.com/archives/2001/10/chak, accessed: 26.03.05. • [Gr04] Greenfield, A. : All watched over by machines of loving grace: Some ethical guidelines for user experience in ubiquitous-computing settings, accessed: 28.03.05. • [Ki00] Kirsh, D. : A Few Thoughts on Cognitive Overload. Intellectica, 2000/1, 30, pp. 19-51, url: http://interruptions.net/literature/Kirsh-Intellectica00-30.pdf, accessed: 28.03.05. • [RM02] Rosenfield, L. ; Morville, P : Information Architecture for the World Wide Web. O‘Reilly, 2002. • [Sc04a] Scratch Media: Navigation, 2004, url: http://www.webdesignfromscratch.com/navigation.cfm, accessed: 28.03.05. • [Sc04b] Scratch Media: IA models, 2004, url: http://www.webdesignfromscratch.com/ia_models.cfm, accessed: 28.03.05. • [Wo01] Wodke, C. : Boxes and Arrows: Defining Information Architecture Deliverables, url: http://www.sitepoint.com/print/architecture-deliverables, accessed: 28.03.05. JASS 05 Information Architecture
Thank you for your attention! Any questions, comments, critics, discussion? JASS 05 Information Architecture
Outlook & discussion topics (I) • Mobile devices, location based services and ubiquitous computing are emerging technologies. • What are the implications for information architecture and it’s components? • How can existing information spaces be modified in their information architecture to deal with • limited screens displays • limited space for information and navigation systems • limited bandwidth • How may change the user’s information seeking behavior? • Expected outcome:Impressions form your brainstorming and basis for discussion with the other group(s). JASS 05 Information Architecture
Outlook & discussion topics (II) • Have a look at one or two corporate websites. Investigate from a user-centered view: • What is the audience for this website? • Which organizational system is used? • What about the navigation system? Does it fulfill the requirements? • Overall impression. Recommendations for improvements? • In case of missing information make reasonable assumptions! • Expected outcome:Short analysis of websites information architectures. Which components have you identified? Screenshots… • Does it have a adequate information architecture? Why? Why not? Improvements? • Recommendations: www.microsoft.com / www.siemens.com / information space of your choice. JASS 05 Information Architecture