Description
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- 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 Architecture
- Definitions
- 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 Earth
- Recap
- 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 Schemes
- Exact 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 Systems
- Types 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
- Search Algorithms
- Pattern-Matching Algorithms
- Other Approaches
- Query Builders
- Presenting Results
- Which Content Components to Display
- How Many Documents to Display
- Listing Results
- Grouping Results
- Acting on Results
- Designing the Search Interface
- The Box
- Autocomplete and Autosuggest
- Advanced Search
- Supporting Revision
- When Users Get Stuck
- Where to Learn More
- Recap
- Chapter 10. Thesauri, Controlled Vocabularies, and Metadata
- Metadata
- Controlled Vocabularies
- Synonym Rings
- Authority Files
- Classification Schemes
- Thesauri
- Technical Lingo
- A Thesaurus in Action
- Types of Thesauri
- Classic Thesaurus
- Indexing Thesaurus
- Searching Thesaurus
- Thesaurus Standards
- Semantic Relationships
- Equivalence
- Hierarchical
- Associative
- Preferred Terms
- Term Form
- Term Selection
- Term Definition
- Term Specificity
- Polyhierarchy
- Faceted Classification
- Recap
- Part III. Getting Information Architecture Done
- Chapter 11. Research
- A Research Framework
- Context
- Getting Buy-In
- Background Research
- Introductory Presentations
- Research Meetings
- Stakeholder Interviews
- Technology Assessment
- Content
- Heuristic Evaluation
- Content Analysis
- Content Mapping
- Benchmarking
- Users
- Usage Analysis
- Search Log Analysis
- Customer-Support Data
- Participant Definition and Recruiting
- Surveys
- Contextual Inquiry
- Focus Groups
- User Research Sessions
- Interviews
- Card Sorting
- User Testing
- In Defense of Research
- Overcoming Research Resistance
- Recap
- Chapter 12. Strategy
- What Is an Information Architecture Strategy?
- Strategies Under Attack
- From Research to Strategy
- Developing the Strategy
- Think
- Articulate
- Communicate
- Test
- Work Products and Deliverables
- Metaphor Exploration
- Scenarios
- Case Studies and Stories
- Conceptual Diagrams
- Sitemaps and Wireframes
- The Strategy Report
- A Sample Strategy Report
- The Project Plan
- Presentations
- Recap
- Chapter 13. Design and Documentation
- Guidelines for Diagramming an Information Architecture
- Communicating Visually
- Sitemaps
- High-Level Architecture Sitemaps
- Digging Deeper into Sitemaps
- Keeping Sitemaps Simple
- Detailed Sitemaps
- Organizing Your Sitemaps
- Wireframes
- Types of Wireframes
- Wireframe Guidelines
- Content Mapping and Inventory
- Content Models
- Why Do They Matter?
- An Example
- A Valuable Process
- Controlled Vocabularies
- Design Collaboration
- Design Sketches
- Interactive Prototypes
- Point-of-Production Information Architecture
- Putting It All Together: Information Architecture Style Guides
- The “Why” Stuff
- The “How” Stuff
- Recap
- Coda
- Putting the Arc in Information Architecture
- A Recap of What We’ve Learned
- Now It’s Your Turn
- Appendix A. References
- Books
- Professional Organizations
- Index
- About the Authors