Information architecture for the web and beyond
Information architecture (IA) is far more challenging—and necessary—than ever. With the glut of information available today, anything your organization wants to share should be easy to find, navigate, and understand. But the experience you provide has to be familiar and coherent across multiple inte...
Autor Corporativo: | |
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Otros Autores: | , , |
Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Sebastopol, CA :
O'Reilly
2015.
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Edición: | 4th ed |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009629687706719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Copyright; Table of Contents; Preface; What's New in the Fourth Edition; Organization of This Book; Audience for This Book; Conventions Used in This Book; Contacting the Authors; Safari® Books Online; How to Contact Us; Acknowledgments; Part I. Introducing Information Architecture; Chapter 1. The Problems That Information Architecture Addresses; Hello, iTunes; The Problems Information Architecture Addresses; Information Overload; More Ways to Access Information; Enter Information Architecture; Places Made of Information; Coherence Across Channels; Systems Thinking; Recap
- Chapter 2. Defining Information ArchitectureDefinitions; Just Because You Can't See It, Doesn't Mean It Isn't There; Toward a Damned Good Information Architecture; Context; Content; Users; Recap; Chapter 3. Design for Finding; The "Too-Simple" Information Model; Information Needs; Information-Seeking Behaviors; Learning About Information Needs and Information-Seeking Behaviors; Recap; Chapter 4. Design for Understanding; A Sense of Place; The Architecture of (Real-World) Places; Places Made of Information; Organizing Principles; Structure and Order; Typologies; Modularity and Extensibility
- The Happiest Place(s) on EarthRecap; Part II. Basic Principles of Information Architecture; Chapter 5. The Anatomy of an Information Architecture; Visualizing Information Architecture; Top-Down Information Architecture; Bottom-Up Information Architecture; Invisible Information Architecture; Information Architecture Components; Browsing Aids; Search Aids; Content and Tasks; "Invisible" Components; Recap; Chapter 6. Organization Systems; Challenges of Organizing Information; Ambiguity; Heterogeneity; Differences in Perspectives; Internal Politics; Organizing Information Environments
- Organization SchemesExact Organization Schemes; Ambiguous Organization Schemes; Organization Structures; The Hierarchy: A Top-Down Approach; The Database Model: A Bottom-Up Approach; Hypertext; Social Classification; Creating Cohesive Organization Systems; Recap; Chapter 7. Labeling Systems; Why You Should Care About Labeling; Varieties of Labels; Labels as Contextual Links; Labels as Headings; Labels Within Navigation Systems; Labels as Index Terms; Iconic Labels; Designing Labels; General Guidelines; Sources of Labeling Systems; Creating New Labeling Systems; Tuning and Tweaking; Recap
- Chapter 8. Navigation SystemsTypes of Navigation Systems; Gray Matters; Browser Navigation Features; Placemaking; Improving Flexibility; Embedded Navigation Systems; Global Navigation Systems; Local Navigation Systems; Contextual Navigation; Implementing Embedded Navigation; Supplemental Navigation Systems; Sitemaps; Indexes; Guides; Configurators; Search; Advanced Navigation Approaches; Personalization and Customization; Visualization; Social Navigation; Recap; Chapter 9. Search Systems; Does Your Product Need Search?; Search System Anatomy; Choosing What to Index; Determining Search Zones
- Selecting Content Components to Index