INLS 180 Reading List

Fall 2002

 

 

Ackerman, M. & Malone. T. Answer Garden: A tool for growing organizational memory.  Proceedings of ACM COIS (Cambridge, MA April, 1990).  P 31-39.   http://www.ics.uci.edu/~ackerman/pub/90b03/cois90.final.pdf

 

Amento, B., Terveen, L., & Hill, W. (2000). Does ‘authority’ mean quality? Predicting expert quality ratings of web documents.  Proceedings of ACM SIGIR (Athens, July 24-28).  296-303. Also available in the ACM Digital Library through the UNC Library web page.

 

Anderson, R., Bikson, T., Law, S., & Mitchell, B. (1995). Universal access to e-mail: Feasibility and societal implications.  Santa Monica, CA: RAND  [Read: Summary xiii-xxiii AND Chapter One: Introduction p. 1-12.]

 

Arkin, E. 91999). Cancer risk communication—What we know.  Journal of the National Cancer Institute Monographs No. 25, 1999.  182-185.  (available from UNC Library ejournals, be sure to choose monographs within JNCIM).

 

Belkin, N. J. (1980). Anomalous states of knowledge as a basis for information retrieval.

 

Chatman, Elfreda. (1996). The impoverished life-world of outsiders.

 

Denn, S. & Maglaughlin, K. (2000). World’s fastest modeling job, or information architecture: What is it? The multidisciplinary adventures of two PhD students.  Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science.  26(5), June/July, 2000.  13-15.  available at www.asis.org

 

Dervin, B., & Nilan, M. (1986). Information needs and uses.

 

Dewdney, P. & Sheldrick Ross, C. (1994). Flying a light aircraft: Reference service evaluation from a user’s viewpoint.  RQ, 34(2). Winter 1994.  217-230.

 

Dibbell, J. (1996). A rape in cyberspace: How an evil clown, a Haitian trikster spirit, two wizards, and a cast of dozens turned a database into a society.  In Mark Stefik (Ed.) Internet dreams: Archetypes, myths, and metaphors.  Cambridge, MIT Press.

 

Gasaway, L. (1998). Copyright, the Internet, and other legal issues.  Journal of the American Society for Information Science.

 

Harnad, S. (1990). Scholarly skywriting and the prepublication continuum of scientific inquiry. Psychological Science, 1(6), 242-244.

 

Harter, S. P. (1992). Psychological relevance and information science.

 

Maibach, E. (1999). Cancer risk communication—What we need to learn.  Journal of the National Cancer Institute Monographs No. 25, 1999.  179-181.  (available from UNC Library ejournals, be sure to choose monographs within JNCIM).

 

Marchionini, G. (1995). Information Seeking in Electronic Environments. pp 27-60. (Note: this item is not in the reading packet, and may instead be found on reserve in the SILS library. The book is located behind the reference desk.)

 

Moorhead, G., Ference, R., & Neck, C. P. (1991). Group decision fiascoes continue: Space Shuttle Challenger and a groupthink framework.

 

Pierce, J. (1972) Communication.  Scientific American, 227(3), 31-41

 

Pool, I. De Sola. (1973). Communication systems.  In Ithiel Pool, Wilbur Schramm, Nathan Maccoby & Edwin Parker, (Eds.), Handbook of communication.  Chicago: Rand McNally.   3-36.

 

Reeves, B. & Nass, C. (1996). The media equation: How people treat computers, television, and the new media like real people and places.  NY: Cambridge University Press. (Preface ix-xiii, Chapter 1 p 3-15, and Chapter 23 p251-256.)

 

Rogers, E. M. (1995). Diffusion of Innovations. pp 1-37. (Note: this item is on reserve in the SILS library.)

 

Roloff, M. E. (1981). Interpersonal Communication: The Social Exchange Approach. Chapter 1, Social Exchange: Key Concepts, p13-31.

 

Samuelson,  P. (2001). Toward a new politics of intellectual property. Communications of the ACM,  44(3), 98-99. available online at ACM Digital library (via UNC Library)

 

Schamber, L., Eisenberg, M. B., & Nilan, M. S. (1990). A re-examination of relevance: Toward a dynamic, situational definition.

 

Schramm, W. (1973). Channels and audiences.  In Ithiel Pool, Wilbur Schramm, Nathan Maccoby & Edwin Parker, (Eds.), Handbook of communication.  Chicago: Rand McNally.  116-140.

 

Shaw, Debora (2001). Playing the links: Interactivity and stickiness in .Com and “not.ccom” web sites.  First Monday, 6(3), March 2001.  http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue6_3/shaw/index.html

 

Smith, Linda (1981). Citation analysis.   Library Trends, Summer 1981, 30(1), 83-106.

 

Tannen, D. (1995). The power of talk:  Who gets heard and why.  Harvard Business Review, Sept/Oct, 138-148.

 

Taylor, R. S. (1968). Question-negotiation and information seeking in libraries.

 

Tibbo, H. (1995). Interviewing techniques for remote reference: Electronic versus traditional environments.  American Archivist, 58, 294-310.

 

Travis, I. (2000). Information architecture practice: An introduction.  .  Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science.  26(6), Aug/Sept, 2000.  6-21.  available at www.asis.org

 

 

Optional Readings

[Optional] Barreua, D. (2001). Making do: Adapting transaction systems to organizational needs.  Library and Information Science Research, 23(1), 27-43.

 

[Optional] Chatman, E. A. (1992). The Information World of Retired Women. Chapter 3, Social Network Theory, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p 33-41.

 

 

[Optional] Constant, D., Kiesler, S., & Sproull, L. (1994). What's mine is ours, or is it? A study of attitudes about information sharing.

 

 

(Optional) Garvey, W. D. (1979). The role of scientific communication in the conduct of research and the creation of scientific knowledge.

 

[Optional] Morris, R. C. T. (1994). Toward a user-centered information service

 

[Optional] Solomon, P. (1997). Conversation in information-seeking contexts: A test of an analytical framework.  Library and Information Science Research, 19(3), 217-248.

 

[Optional]  Weaver, W. (1949). Recent contributions to the mathematical theory of communication.  In, The mathematical theory of communication.  Urbana, IL: U. of Illinois Press. [Read Chapter 1]