Reframing Information Architecture

  • 3h 22m
  • Andrea Resmini (ed)
  • Springer
  • 2014

Information architecture has changed dramatically since the mid-1990s and earlier conceptions of the world and the internet being different and separate have given way to a much more complex scenario in the present day. In the post-digital world that we now inhabit the digital and the physical blend easily and our activities and usage of information takes place through multiple contexts and via multiple devices and unstable, emergent choreographies. Information architecture now is steadily growing into a channel- or medium-specific multi-disciplinary framework, with contributions coming from architecture, urban planning, design and systems thinking, cognitive science, new media, anthropology. All these have been heavily reshaping the practice: conversations about labelling, websites, and hierarchies are replaced by conversations about sense-making, place-making, design, architecture, cross media, complexity, embodied cognition and their application to the architecture of information spaces as places we live in in an increasingly large part of our lives.

Via narratives, frameworks, references, approaches and case-studies this book explores these changes and offers a way to reconceptualize the shifting role and nature of information architecture where information permeates digital and physical space, users are producers and products are increasingly becoming complex cross-channel or multi-channel services.

About the Editor

Andrea Resmini is an assistant professor at Jönköping International Business School, in Jönköping, Sweden. Architect, designer, ICT professional since 1989 and information architect since 1999, Andrea holds a MA in Architecture and Industrial Design from the Politecnico di Milano, Italy and a PhD in Legal Informatics from the University of Bologna, Italy.

He is currently the Editor in Chief of the Journal of Information Architecture and a past two-term president of the Information Architecture Institute.

In this Book

  • Information Architecture as a Discipline—A Methodological Approach
  • The Information Architecture of Meaning Making
  • Dynamic Information Architecture—External and Internal Contexts for Reframing
  • The Interplay of the Information Disciplines and Information Architecture
  • A Phenomenological Approach to Understanding Information and its Objects
  • Toward a Culturally Focused Information Architecture
  • Toward a Semiotics of Digital Places
  • What We Make When We Make Information Architecture
  • Dutch Uncles, Ducks and Decorated Sheds—Notes on the Intertwingularity of Meaning and Structure in Information Architecture
  • Representing Information Across Channels
  • Cross-channel Design for Cultural Institutions—The Istituto degli Innocenti in Florence
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