Information science at the University of California at Berkeley in the 1960s: a memoir of student days.ABSTRACT The author's experiences as a master's and doctoral student at the University of California at Berkeley (body, education) University of California at Berkeley - (UCB) See also Berzerkley, BSD. http://berkeley.edu/. Note to British and Commonwealth readers: that's /berk'lee/, not /bark'lee/ as in British Received Pronunciation. School of Library and Information Studies during a formative period in the history of information science, 1966-71, are described. The relationship between documentation and information science as experienced in that program is discussed, as well as the various influences, both social and intellectual, that shaped the author's understanding of information science at that time. INTRODUCTION I am writing this article not to claim myself as a pioneer of information science but rather to describe what it was like to be a student in the pioneering days of information science. There is much discussion nowadays of the history of information science, and in some instances it is argued that the early twentieth-century documentation theories of Paul Otlet Paul Otlet (b. August 23, 1868, Belgium - December 10, 1944) was the founding father of documentation, the field of study now more commonly referred to as information science. (1990) and Suzanne Briet (n.d./1951) were the intellectual antecedents of information science. I am not a historian of the field, and I make no claim one way or the other about its historical roots. The understanding I developed of information science as a doctoral student in the 1960s at the University of California at Berkeley (U.C. Berkeley), however, had little to do with Otlet, Briet, or documentation in general. We saw information science as something brand new that was drawing on a range of earlier ideas, to be sure, but those sources were from realms very different from documentation. I believe that some of these sources are being lost sight of in the current discussion of the history of information science. In what follows, I present a memoir of my experience as a student at a formative moment in information science and describe the effort, as I saw it, to develop the field as a meaningful, distinctive discipline in one large doctoral program in a major university. BECOMING A MASTER IN LIBRARY SCIENCE STUDENT Sometimes in life we fall into where we were meant to be all along. Upon returning from Peace Corps service in Thailand, where I had taught English as a foreign language in two Thai high schools, I was confronted with the same question I had had as a fresh college graduate before I left: What should I do with the rest of my life? While sorting this out, I went to live with my parents in Lafayette, California Lafayette is a city in Contra Costa County, California, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city's population was 23,908. It is named (in 1857) after the Marquis de Lafayette, a French military hero of the American Revolutionary War. , just over the hills from the University of California at Berkeley. I went down to Berkeley to take aptitude tests The following organizations provide aptitude and proficiency tests in programming and computer topics. Berger Series A set of proficiency and aptitude tests from Psychometrics, Inc., Henderson, NV (www.psy-test.com). and get career counseling Noun 1. career counseling - counseling on career opportunities counseling, counselling, guidance, counsel, direction - something that provides direction or advice as to a decision or course of action . It must be remembered that this was 1965, and women did not routinely get career guidance. Most female life-models for me in those years were homemakers. In fact, despite having attended Pomona College Pomona College: see Claremont Colleges. , one of the top liberal arts colleges It may never be fully completed or, depending on its its nature, it may be that it can never be completed. However, new and revised entries in the list are always welcome. Liberal arts colleges in the country, I did not personally know a female Ph.D. in a tenure-track position until a high school girlfriend got her doctorate and an academic position. The woman counselor was blunt: With my Phi Beta Kappa Phi Beta Kappa: see fraternity. Phi Beta Kappa Leading academic honour society in the U.S., which draws its membership from college and university students. The oldest Greek-letter society in the U.S. key and B.A. from a good college, about all that was available to me was to "type or teach." In those days, that meant working as a secretary or teaching in elementary or high school. In fact, at that time, the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). required its secretaries to have bachelor's degrees. Other, more remunerative jobs for B.A.'s at the university went to men. The counselor said I would have to do graduate work of some kind if I wanted an interesting job of any other type. The high school children I had taught in Thailand had been far better behaved than typical American high American High School may refer to the following:
I sensed that this was the first straight talk I had ever heard about careers and knew that she was right. The trouble was that I did not feel like going back to school. My undergraduate schooling had been very intense, and I wanted to play for awhile. What was worse, in the aptitude tests I scored right down the middle on everything--interested in everything and nothing. What was I to do? I went to the career information center and looked through the brochures for graduate programs. I looked for the program with the shortest time to attain a degree--maybe if the schooling did not last too long, I could stand it. The library program at Berkeley took just one calendar year. I applied. The admissions officer at the library school asked me if I had ever read anything by Theodore Dreiser. I had not, which worried me a bit, but I was admitted anyway. I needed money, however, as the arrangement with my parents had always been that they would support me through college but not beyond. I applied at the newly founded Institute for Library Research (ILR ILR Industrial and Labor Relations (Cornell University school) ILR Institute for Legal Reform ILR Indefinite Leave to Remain (United Kingdom) ILR Institute for Learning in Retirement ), which was associated with the library school, and was hired as a graduate assistant by Ralph Shoffner. In the first semester in the master in library science (M.L.S.) program, I studied book selection, cataloging, reference services, and the history of the book. Leroy Merritt, who later founded the short-lived library program at the University of Oregon The University of Oregon is a public university located in Eugene, Oregon. The university was founded in 1876, graduating its first class two years later. The University of Oregon is one of 60 members of the Association of American Universities. in Eugene, taught book selection with a strong academic library orientation. I became expert at consulting book auction catalogs for out-of-print books. Roger Levinson, a fine printer by trade, conveyed his deep love of books as physical objects as he expounded on them in class in the Rare Book Room of the library. The library school had its quarters on the top floor of the main Doe Library. Desks for students ran in alcoves next to the windows around the outer wall of the floor. The main library was wailed off from the student quarters, and the library for the school was carved out of a portion of the main library stacks. (Later, the school moved into South Hall, the oldest building on campus, which had been renovated for its occupancy.) I was greatly relieved that, as a graduate student, I had direct access to the general stacks of the main library; undergraduates and visitors were not allowed in the stacks and had to handwrite hand·write tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes To write by hand. [Back-formation from handwritten.] Verb 1. request cards for every book they wanted to examine. The atmosphere at the ILR made an interesting contrast with the more humanities-oriented world of the library program. The ILR was housed on the second floor of an old "temporary" building on campus that was supposed to be torn down at the end of World War II End of World War II can refer to:
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University) UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX ), but Ralph Shoffner ran the institute on a day-to-day basis at Berkeley; I reported to him or to others he directed. Shoffner has long since gone on to found his own consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee consulting company business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a in Oregon, but at the time he was not many years from a very intense engineering education with an emphasis on operations research operations research Application of scientific methods to management and administration of military, government, commercial, and industrial systems. It began during World War II in Britain when teams of scientists worked with the Royal Air Force to improve radar detection of at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, (MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology ). He had a driven quality, a fierce grin, and a wry sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor" sense of humour, humor, humour . He lived and breathed systems analysis, and every one of the ILR's projects was approached in a system-analytic way. Systems analysis itself was not so old then; in fact, one of its pioneers, Wes Churchman, taught at U.C. Berkeley. Everything I was learning while a graduate assistant was new to me; I was unsure of myself and asked questions till I must have driven Shoffner crazy. Trained in the discursive language of the humanities, I found this new way of thinking utterly different, absorbing, and interesting. In the course of the first year I worked there, this way of thinking literally transformed how my mind worked. Gradually, I realized that I had an aptitude for this particular type of analytical thought. I worked on a project to speed up interlibrary in·ter·li·brar·y adj. Existing or occurring between or involving two or more libraries: an interlibrary loan; an interlibrary network. loan processes among the University of California campuses by using fax machines to communicate between campuses; I also worked on a project to get the contents of the catalog of the California State Library The California State Library collects, preserves, generates and disseminates a wide array of information. It was founded in 1850 by the California State Legislature. Today, it is the central reference and research library for state government and the Legislature. in Sacramento into machine-readable form. In those days, there was no "online"; the machine-readable records were used to produce printed book catalogs. I soon formed a plan to become a library systems analyst with my master's degree master's degree n. An academic degree conferred by a college or university upon those who complete at least one year of prescribed study beyond the bachelor's degree. Noun 1. . Computers were still a relatively new phenomenon then. Though most librarians favored their use, there were debates in the library literature about whether computers were a good thing for libraries and, if they were used, what they should be used for. I wrote my own FORTRAN programs to do basic statistical analyses on some data for a small research project at the ILR. Such work would be done with standard statistical programs today, of course. At that time, all computer processing was done by feeding punched cards into big mainframe computers. In fact, because sciatica sciatica (sīăt`ĭkə), severe pain in the leg along the sciatic nerve and its branches. It may be caused by injury or pressure to the base of the nerve in the lower back, or by metabolic, toxic, or infectious disease. in my hip made it painful for me to walk during one term, I dropped out of a programming course because I could not walk up the hill over and over again to where the computers were in order to pick up my paper printouts. My triumph as a student assistant in the ILR came one day after I and two others had been sent in a university car to Sacramento to draw a sample from the State Library's card catalog. I soon realized that the sampling method we were using was seriously biasing the results. Upon our return, it took me forty-five minutes to persuade my supervisor, who was just a rung above me in the institute hierarchy, that what we were doing was not right. He was finally convinced, and we retook re·took v. Past tense of retake. retook the sample. GOING FOR THE DOCTORATE One day at the ILR, Shoffner said to me, "So when are you going to apply to the doctoral program?" I had not seriously entertained this thought before but, when asked in this way, it seemed like quite a natural thing to do. At about this time other events took place that also made going on for a doctorate seem like an exciting thing to do. The federal government was dramatically expanding support for doctoral students in library and information science (LIS LIS - Langage Implementation Systeme. A predecessor of Ada developed by Ichbiah in 1973. It was influenced by Pascal's data structures and Sue's control structures. A type declaration can have a low-level implementation specification. ), in the form of what were known as Title II-B grants. At the same time, the Berkeley program launched a new information science emphasis with the hiring of M. E. (Bill) Maron and, a while later, William Cooper There are several people called William Cooper:
Michael Buckland was born and grew up in England. . The new direction was exciting and felt like a natural follow-up to my interest in library systems analysis. I applied for and was admitted to the program and also received a three-year Title II-B fellowship. Fellow students entering the program within a year or two of my entrance included the following (for those who went on to teach, their university affiliations are given in parentheses See parenthesis. parentheses - See left parenthesis, right parenthesis. ): Hilary Burton, Michael Cooper He performed many characters on The Muppet Show, including Sgt. Floyd Pepper of the Electric Mayhem band, Dr. (University of Washington), Barbara Nozick, Ruth Patrick Dr. Ruth Myrtle Patrick (born November 26, 1907, in Topeka, Kansas) is a botanist and limnologist specializing in diatoms and freshwater ecology, who developed ways to measure the health of freshwater ecosystems and established a number of research facilities. , Ralph Shoffner, Keith Stirling (Brigham Young University Brigham Young University, at Provo, Utah; Latter-Day Saints; coeducational; opened as an academy in 1875 and became a university in 1903. It is noted for its law and business schools. ), Irene Travis (University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
In the early 1970s, he founded the Raincoast Chronicles and Harbour Publishing. (Drexel University Drexel University, at Philadelphia, Pa.; coeducational; founded 1891 by Anthony J. Drexel, opened 1892, chartered 1894 as Drexel Institute of Art, Science, and Industry. It was renamed Drexel Institute of Technology in 1936 and gained university status in 1970. ), and Harriet Zais. Within weeks of Maron's arrival, I and nine other doctoral students, had signed up to be his advisees. That was, I believe, a majority of the doctoral students in the early stages of the program, even with the boost of the Title II-B grants, and gives an indication of the enthusiasm and excitement surrounding the new initiative. Maron taught a course entitled Introduction to Information Science, which drew many students and, in effect, defined what information science was for the Berkeley program. I have been unable to find my notes from Maron's class; however, a couple of years later, I was invited to teach the same introductory course as an acting instructor. (1) The introduction in my notes for the class states that I retained the content of Maron's course largely intact. The principal changes were my additions of a section on user studies and some material by Marshall McLuhan Noun 1. Marshall McLuhan - Canadian writer noted for his analyses of the mass media (1911-1980) Herbert Marshall McLuhan, McLuhan . Here is the main sequence of content of the quarter-length course syllabus as I presented it in spring 1970. Each indented line (Fort.) a line with alternate long and short faces, with salient and receding angles, each face giving a flanking fire along the front of the next. See also: Indented represents one class day; the class met three days a week for one hour.
Librarianship 240, Spring 1970
Introduction to the Information Sciences
I. Introductory
The Information Explosion
II. The Organization of Information for Access
What Is "Access"?
Some Indexing Systems-I
Some Indexing Systems-II
The Descriptive Continuum
III. Automatic Procedures
Set Theory
Computers-I
Computers-II
Artificial Intelligence
Automatic Indexing and Abstracting-I
Automatic Indexing and Abstracting-II
Associative Indexing
Search Strategy
Question-Answering Systems
Field Trip
Midterm
IV. Analysis and Evaluation
Systems Analysis (guest speaker)
"The Scientific Method"-I (2)
"The Scientific Method"-II
Statistical Procedures-I
Statistical Procedures-II
The User in the System-I
The User in the System-II
The User in the System-Ill
Evaluating Information Systems-I
Evaluating Information Systems-II
Computers and Privacy
Overflow
For a while, Maron was the only information science faculty member in the program, and the question quickly arose for those of us in the area of what other courses to take to prepare for the field. Maron later developed a follow-up information science course, which I took, and offered a seminar. I took other courses in the library school as well, which I will describe shortly. One person does not a discipline make, however. There was generally a feeling, supported and promoted by Maron, that information science was developing out of a number of disciplines, and a full education in the field required gaining that knowledge from outside the program as well as within. That often meant taking a course only part of which was of interest for my purposes. In the end, with the help of that wonderful fellowship, I took three full years of classes, culminating in qualifying exams in March of 1970. Partly on Maron's advice, and partly based on my own interests, I took or audited the courses listed below, which were offered outside the library school. (I have made up the titles, as the Berkeley transcripts are quite cryptic.) Home departments for the courses are listed in parentheses; these are quarter, rather than semester-long, courses.
Introduction to statistical inference (Statistics)
Probability theory (Statistics)
Cost/benefit analysis (School of Public Health)
Linear algebra (Mathematics)
Reading course in communication research (Psychology)
Psycholinguistics (Psychology; took one quarter, audited second
quarter)
Artificial intelligence seminar on automatic game-playing (3)
(Psychology)
Propositional and first-order logic (Philosophy)
In the end, it was the social science work, rather than the mathematical, that most appealed to me, but the math enabled me to understand reasonably well the formulas and theory behind Gerard Salton's work (1968) and Maron's own work (Maron, 1961; Maron & Kuhns, 1960) on the design of automatic indexing systems. (4) One of my two chosen doctoral exam specialization areas was then known as "intellectual access"; it would be called "information retrieval information retrieval Recovery of information, especially in a database stored in a computer. Two main approaches are matching words in the query against the database index (keyword searching) and traversing the database using hypertext or hypermedia links. " in most schools today. In a seminar with Maron, I wrote a lengthy paper analyzing and comparing eleven efforts that had been made to that time to come up with formulas for effective automatic indexing. The paper covered the work of H. P. Luhn, Don Swanson, Fred Dameran, Harold Borko, and Paul Switzer, among others. It also covered the work of three women: Phyllis Baxendale, Myrna Bernick (Borko's coauthor) and Mary E. Stevens. Stevens wrote a widely cited review of literature on automatic indexing (1965), which I relied on a great deal in my studies. Many of these indexing approaches were re-invented in the 1990s in the early days of Web retrieval. In the 1960s the emphasis was on automatic indexing, rather than automatic retrieval, but the thinking was essentially the same. In another seminar, I wrote about the history and applications of citation indexing. THE SOCIAL CONTEXT OF THE TIMES Before I discuss other intellectual influences, something should be said about the general context of the times and its impact on this particular student. I started the M.L.S. degree in February of 1966, the last semester before Berkeley switched to the quarter system (they switched back to semesters again after I left). I started the Ph.D. program in the spring quarter of 1967 and left to take a teaching position at the University of Maryland in January of 1972, finishing the doctorate in December 1972. Those years that I was at Berkeley, 1966-71, encompassed most of the years of the 1960s revolution, of which it might fairly be said that Berkeley and San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden were the national headquarters. Those years were a time of almost continual ferment--there were movements for black and female equality, for sexual liberalization lib·er·al·ize v. lib·er·al·ized, lib·er·al·iz·ing, lib·er·al·iz·es v.tr. To make liberal or more liberal: "Our standards of private conduct have been greatly liberalized . . . and general relaxing of rigid social constraints, and in opposition to the Vietnam War Opposition to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War began slowly and in small numbers in 1964 on various college campuses in the United States. This happened during a time of unprecedented student activism reinforced in numbers by the demographically significant baby boomers, but . One cannot understand how liberating the 1960s were without understanding how oppressive the 1950s were for anyone raised during that decade. Our parents' generation, which had had a long hard slog through the 1930s Depression and World War II, just wanted peace and quiet, and they enforced that desire with an imposed conformism con·form·ist n. A person who uncritically or habitually conforms to the customs, rules, or styles of a group. adj. Marked by conformity or convention: that was frightening in its intensity. (I am speaking about society in general here; my parents were not particularly strict.) Young people nowadays who wish they could have lived in that time would, in fact, be horrified hor·ri·fy tr.v. hor·ri·fied, hor·ri·fy·ing, hor·ri·fies 1. To cause to feel horror. See Synonyms at dismay. 2. To cause unpleasant surprise to; shock. at the almost Victorian constriction constriction /con·stric·tion/ (kon-strik´shun) 1. a narrowing or compression of a part; a stricture.constric´tive 2. a diminution in range of thinking or feeling, associated with diminished spontaneity. of 1950s life. Not surprisingly, the prospect of equal rights for women in the 1960s had particularly intense meaning for me. I read Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique (1963) early on. When I heard that an organization called the National Organization for Women was being founded, I made the necessary contacts to be involved in the creation of the first West Coast chapter of NOW in San Francisco. (5) It was organized by a middle-aged businesswoman named Inka O'Hanrahan. I was one of the youngest women at the founding meeting, and I am proud that I was the recording secretary for the meeting. For a time I was part of a conscious-raising group (as they were then called) that we billed as a group for women who had already had their consciousnesses raised. Oh, were we naive! I believed that once men realized that they had been discriminating against women, they would be happy to change things to make them more fair. I was baffled when they seemed to be angry that we wanted equal rights. After all, we were the ones who had been discriminated against! It was a long time before I understood that equality for women and for men of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color caused some white men to feel they were losing their former privileges. The pervasive inequality of women in society was certainly reflected in the university as well, including the library school. Despite the fact that about 30 percent of the doctorates in librarianship had gone to women at that time (based on a count I made at the time in Cohen cohen or kohen (Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. , Denison, & Boehlert, 1963), there were no women in tenure-track positions in the school. (The one exception, Anne Markley, had only a master's degree and had been tenured ten·ured adj. Having tenure: tenured civil servants; tenured faculty. Adj. 1. tenured and promoted to associate professor many years earlier, when that was still possible without a doctorate.) There was, in fact, a kind of upstairs/downstairs culture at the school, with the professors having all the privileges of tenure-track faculty and the lecturers and cataloging revisers constituting the downstairs, with much less pay and security. Most of the latter were women. In fact, this culture was so established, accepted, and out of consciousness that it was not until close to the time I graduated that I finally noticed that the work of cataloging instructors, such as Grete Fruge, was also about "intellectual access," and I wondered for the first time why there was not more connection between her work and Maron's. Throughout this time, I participated in many marches against the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. . The movement climaxed in May of 1970, at the time of the U.S. invasion of Cambodia, which seemed a particularly egregious violation of the rights of a country that was not a party to the war, though Vietnamese troops were in Cambodia. The last several weeks of the school term were lost to rallies, marches, and organizational meetings. Students in the school, in line with our training, developed a clearinghouse of information on the war. This activity led to my first publication in the field (Bates Bates , Katherine Lee 1859-1929. American educator and writer best known for her poem "America the Beautiful," written in 1893 and revised in 1904 and 1911. , 1970). Altogether, I taught the Introduction to Information Science course three times at Berkeley, in the spring and fall of 1969 and spring of 1970. Because of riots or other disruptions, I was not able to complete the entire ten weeks of the quarter any one of those three times. I was reluctant to cancel classes for the sake of those students who wanted to continue, but, for a variety of reasons, it was sometimes just not possible to hold a class. In the spring of 1970, the university cancelled the last several weeks of classes for safety reasons. OTHER INFLUENCES Another major influence during my years at Berkeley was William Paisley. He was a professor in the Communication Department at Stanford and was invited to teach a course in information needs and uses at the library school. Paisley's original background was social psychology, and his move into communication research had enabled him to have a broader understanding of and appreciation for the commonalities among normally distinct academic disciplines. He and Edwin Parker were the faculty members at Stanford who were looking at the information aspects of communication. They represented a small salient away from the conventional orientation of communication research toward the study of mass media. Paisley taught a second course in the user area as well. I have found the two syllabi syl·la·bi n. A plural of syllabus. in my papers. One course was entitled Behavioral Study of Scientific Information Flow, and the other was entitled The Flow of Information to the Public. It is the first of these courses, taught in 1968, that I want to describe in part. The first week introduced "the information systems of science in their historical context." The next four weeks were devoted to "behavioral research methods useful in information studies." Assigned readings for these weeks drew heavily from a classic social sciences methods text, Kerlinger's Foundations of Behavioral Research (1964). Each week Paisley took a different broad class of research methods and illustrated it with relevant studies from information science, communication, and related fields. After an introduction to behavioral research methods in week two, he addressed, in succession during the next three weeks, the following: "the logic of nonexperimental descriptive research Descriptive research, also known as statistical research, describes data and characteristics about the population or phenomenon being studied. Descriptive research answers the questions who, what, where, when and how. ," "the logic of experimental explanatory research," and "the logic of nonexperimental explanatory research." I quote these exactly to demonstrate the language used at the time. In effect, he was supporting the legitimacy of what is now called quantitative and qualitative research Qualitative research Traditional analysis of firm-specific prospects for future earnings. It may be based on data collected by the analysts, there is no formal quantitative framework used to generate projections. . The terms "experimental," "quasi-experimental," and "nonexperimental" were widely used. I do not recall anyone ever calling such research "quantitative" or "qualitative." In the second five weeks of the term, Paisley addressed "the information systems of science in their social context," including the "effects of the cultural and political systems on information flow," followed by the "effects of the professional association," "effects of the 'invisible college,'" "effects of the employing organization and work team," and, finally, "information inputs and cognitive processes Cognitive processes Thought processes (i.e., reasoning, perception, judgment, memory). Mentioned in: Psychosocial Disorders ." The reader may recognize these various contexts from Paisley's 1968 review chapter on information needs and uses in the Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (Paisley, 1968). "Information seeking Information seeking is the process or activity of attempting to obtain information in both human and technological contexts. Information seeking is related to, but yet different from, information retrieval (IR). in context" has become a popular byword by·word also by-word n. 1. a. A proverbial expression; a proverb. b. An often-used word or phrase. 2. in modern LIS research and has even generated a separate conference by that name, which began in the 1990s. But such thinking was already well launched thirty years earlier. It is popular these days to speak of information-seeking behavior research and theory as though it only truly came around to a user-centered orientation in the 1980s. Before then, it is said, user research was system oriented. Paisley used the word "system" repeatedly in his class, as evident from the above, but the scientist is a very real actor in these systems, not a helpless pawn. These are not technological systems but rather human social systems. Throughout his course and the research he drew upon, there was very much a sense of the scientists both creating and being influenced by these several social contexts. Many writers, however, cite Dervin and Nilan's 1986 literature review on information seeking as marking, essentially, the beginning of a modern user-centered orientation to information-seeking research. I have long been puzzled at this apparent blanking out of the rich body of information behavior research by Paisley and many other excellent researchers with social science research training prior to 1986. In reviewing Dervin and Nilan's paper, I note that their remit was to review the literature from 1978 forward, as 1978 was the date of the last preceding review of the topic. The following is the first paragraph of a section entitled "Call for a Paradigm Shift A dramatic change in methodology or practice. It often refers to a major change in thinking and planning, which ultimately changes the way projects are implemented. For example, accessing applications and data from the Web instead of from local servers is a paradigm shift. See paradigm. " (capitalization of author names was the standard format for the Annual Review at the time): Since 1978 some scholars have focused their primary efforts on identifying the underlying premises and assumptions that they see as having guided information needs and uses research. They call for developing an alternative set of premises and assumptions--in essence, for the introduction of an alternative paradigm. Notable among these are: BELKIN (1978), BROOKES, DERVIN (1977; 1983b), HAMMARBERG, JARVELIN & REPO, LEVITAN, MARKEY, MICK ET AL., NEILL, RUDD, AND THOMAS D. WILSON (1981; 1984). (Dervin & Nilan, 1986, p. 12) They then go on to summarize what they consider to be the differences between the user orientation represented by the above authors and a systems orientation. Thus, it would appear that subsequent generations of information behavior researchers have read this section and assumed that modem, user-sensitive research on information users began only about 1978 and that Dervin and Nilan were the first to capture this new move in their article. Yet in 1965, Paisley and Parker wrote an article entitled "Information Retrieval as a Receiver-Controlled Communication System" (Paisley & Parker, 1965). Colin Mick, cited above, was a doctoral student of Paisley's. (6) Further, the extensive research cited by Paisley in another, much longer review (1965) and by Herbert Menzel in a 1960 review is overwhelmingly user-centered; these are not studies of information system performance with standardized relevance assessments or collections of studies on library circulation. I subsequently took User Studies as the second of my two doctoral examination areas for the Ph.D. As the first student to request that area, I typed a giant binder full of notes on all the research of note that I had found to that date and wrote a sixty-page literature review of the essential studies, in effect, to educate the faculty. I subsequently submitted the review to ERIC (1971). I should have developed the work into a book, but I lacked the confidence at the time. I now very much wish I had done so, because it appears that much of our field currently thinks that user-centered research began in 1978! I subsequently founded the first courses in information-seeking behavior at the University of Maryland, the University of Washington, and UCLA, in, respectively, about 1975, 1977, and 1981. I have always tried to teach the full historical arc of information-seeking research rather than only the latest work. In ignoring that earlier literature, we collectively have failed to benefit from a rich body of findings that were often based on top-quality research designs that were supported by abundant funding. The 1960s were a golden era where federal social science research funding Research funding is a term generally covering any funding for scientific research, in the areas of both "hard" science and technology and social science. The term often connotes funding obtained through a competitive process, in which potential research projects are evaluated and was concerned; we have not seen the equal since. These studies were not all soulless soul·less adj. Lacking sensitivity or the capacity for deep feeling. soul less·ly adv. statistical monstrosities, as
so often caricatured in the current world of qualitative research
theory. For example, the thirteen information seeking studies that
appear in the 1959 International Conference on Scientific Information,
which I studied closely as a doctoral student, employ a wide range of
methods, most quite sensitive to a user perspective. Indeed,
Menzel's research (1959) in that volume on the ways scientists
serendipitously discovered new information of value to them could be
reported today in a modern journal as a qualitative study, and, except
for changes in the technologies used, the results are still of
value--because people and the social system of science change much more
slowly than does the technology.My 1970 Information Science course (discussed above) lists the "User in the System" as a topic because I was a doctoral student attempting to bring a user orientation to a course that had been entirely devoted to a systems approach. I felt I had to relate this interest of mine to the main content of the course, thus I entitled the section "User in the System." In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , however, I had already taken Paisley's and other courses that drew me to a social science research paradigm and an interest in both information seekers and system design. I was particularly interested in access vocabularies that were oriented to users and designed from their needs. When I took Paisley's course, I was absolutely fascinated. I went to see him in his office one day. We talked for forty-five minutes, and it felt like coming home. There was an intellectual "just-right-ness" about how he thought about things and what his interests were. I had found my preferred intellectual style and content, and, ultimately, my mentor "My Mentor" is the second episode of the American situation comedy Scrubs. It originally aired as Episode 2 of Season 1 on October 4, 2001. Plot Elliot gets on Carla's bad side after telling Dr. Kelso about one of Carla's mistakes. Elliot gets defensive with J.D. . (He could not formally be my advisor because he was at Stanford.) I was to learn that he had tremendous personal and professional integrity as well. He took me absolutely seriously as a researcher in training--something that was not always easy to come by for a young woman in the era of miniskirts. I could not have picked a better person to look to for guidance and as a model. (Paisley's wife, Matilda Butler, might have served as a female model; however, she was beautiful and had her life so well organized that I could not imagine ever being like her.) Not long after that, I left Maron as an advisee ad·vi·see n. One that is advised. Noun 1. advisee - someone who receives advice individual, mortal, person, somebody, someone, soul - a human being; "there was too much for one person to do" . My increasing interest in social science approaches was not a good match with his mathemetico-logical theoretical orientation. Victor Rosenberg, who had joined the Berkeley faculty in the meantime, became my new advisor. Rosenberg had done an early and important study on information seeking for professional needs (Rosenberg, 1967). That study was one of the best-known sources of evidence for the Principle of Least Effort The principle of least effort is a theory of user behavior held among researchers in the field of library and information science. The principle states that an information-seeking client will tend to use the most convenient search method, in the least exacting mode available. in information seeking at that time. While working with Rosenberg, I had the opportunity to attend, as a student "gofer (language) Gofer - A lazy functional language designed by Mark Jones <mpj@cs.nott.ac.uk> at the Programming Research Group, Oxford, UK in 1991. It is very similar to Haskell 1.2. ," an exciting conference in Palo Alto Palo Alto, city, California Palo Alto (păl`ō ăl`tō), city (1990 pop. 55,900), Santa Clara co., W Calif.; inc. 1894. Although primarily residential, Palo Alto has aerospace, electronics, and advanced research industries. on the new technology of online database searching, which was just appearing on the horizon in its most primitive form. I did the bibliography for the book that appeared out of that conference (Walker, 1971) and got to meet a number of leading lights of the field, including Pauline Atherton (now Cochrane), Douglas Engelbart (person) Douglas Engelbart - Douglas C. Engelbart, the inventor of the mouse. On 1968-12-09, Douglas C. Engelbart and the group of 17 researchers working with him in the Augmentation Research Center at Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, California, USA, presented a , Margaret Fisher, Robert Katter, Frederick Kilgour, Robert Landau, Davis McCarn, Edwin Parker, Mary Stevens, and Roger Summit, the founder of the DIALOG search service. Rosenberg and I got along well in the advisor relationship, but he left for the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries. before my work was completed. So I switched, finally, to Ray Swank, the dean of the library school, whose interests were less well linked to mine but were sufficiently close to complete the dissertation. Swank was a thoughtful and supportive advisor. My dissertation was entitled "Factors Affecting Subject Catalog Search Success," a topic that nicely melded my two interests in intellectual access and users (Bates, 1972; published in Bates, 1977a and b). Another influential course was a seminar taught in the library school by James Dolby. Dolby was a professor of mathematics at San Jose San Jose, city, United States San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850. State University and was working at that time with Harold Resnikoff on a grant to study information storage and access, especially in library catalogs (Resnikoff & Dolby, 1972). Dolby's course was immensely important to me in ways I did not fully recognize at the time. The seemingly disparate topics he raised and discussed in the class all had in common a deep understanding on his part of the ways in which we can think about information independently of content and still discover wonderful and valuable things about it. It is popular nowadays to be somewhat dismissive of the fascination with information that characterized the 1950s and 1960s. The work from that time is often viewed as reflecting a naive assumption that information is an objective entity to be transferred from a sender to a recipient and has an identical meaning to both parties in the transaction (Dervin, 1983, Tuominen et al., 2002). I believe that this view misreads how sophisticated at least some of the writers were at that time. But, more importantly, this view also fails to see the positive benefits that arose, and can still arise, from the study of information as an entity distinct from its meaning content. Information can be an indicator of social processes, and it can be considered as a phenomenon of interest in and of itself in a variety of senses. The final influential course to be mentioned was a seminar given by Patrick Wilson. I took it in my first quarter in the doctoral program, in the spring of 1967, when Wilson was in the final throes throe n. 1. A severe pang or spasm of pain, as in childbirth. See Synonyms at pain. 2. throes A condition of agonizing struggle or trouble: a country in the throes of economic collapse. of writing his first book, Two Kinds of Power: An Essay on Bibliographical Control (1968). Wilson was trained as a philosopher, and he brought philosophical rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity. rigor mor´tis the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers. to the discussion in class. We essentially worked through the ideas in his book during the course of the quarter. The class taught me that our discipline can be as intellectually demanding and as exciting as any body of thought. Though I had had a couple of philosophy courses in college, I had not understood the game of philosophy as it is played by its theoreticians. Wilson's course piqued my interest in philosophy in a more sophisticated sense. Some ten years later, while teaching at the University of Washington, I audited a couple of philosophy courses and frequently went to philosophy colloquia col·lo·qui·a n. A plural of colloquium. . This background has enriched my understanding ever since. During this entire time as a student I was also taking reading courses and reading on my own, always with a sense of exploration in a new world and in an effort to pull together a coherent sense for myself of what information science was and where it could go. There had not been many books written within the field yet, but these four formed my understanding of the then existing core: Joseph Becker and Robert Hayes's Information Storage and Retrieval information storage and retrieval, the systematic process of collecting and cataloging data so that they can be located and displayed on request. Computers and data processing techniques have made possible the high-speed, selective retrieval of large amounts of (1963), F. W. Lancaster's Information Retrieval Systems (1968), Charles Meadow's The Analysis of Information Systems (1967), and Manfred Kochen's collection, The Growth of Knowledge (1967). For me, Becker and Hayes's work was the canonical description of information science as it began in the 1960s. The book was a rare mixture of the key elements of a science named for information: it covered the management, both physical and intellectual, of information, the structure of retrieval systems, and the theoretical background. Lancaster's book provided a very insightful conceptualization con·cep·tu·al·ize v. con·cep·tu·al·ized, con·cep·tu·al·iz·ing, con·cep·tu·al·iz·es v.tr. To form a concept or concepts of, and especially to interpret in a conceptual way: of indexing theory. Meadow's book, though subtitled "A Programmer's Introduction to Information Retrieval," was useful to me because it presented a database management perspective. On the contents page of Kochen's book, there are checkmarks indicating that I had read over half the articles in it, but the article that influenced me the most by far was Derek de Solla Price's "Networks of Scientific Papers" (1967). Along with Price's two short books on the bibliometrics Bibliometrics is a set of methods used to study or measure texts and information. Citation analysis and content analysis are commonly used bibliometric methods. While bibliometric methods are most often used in the field of library and information science, bibliometrics have wide of scientific communication (1961, 1963), this work demonstrated how powerfully the seemingly trivial barebones statistics of information could tell stories of great interest from a sociological and historical perspective. I also read Thomas Kuhn's (1964) and James Watson's (1968) books, both of which, in different ways, shattered some standard assumptions about the way science works, and, implicitly, how science information flows. Because of the newness of the subdiscipline sub·dis·ci·pline n. A field of specialized study within a broader discipline; a subfield. of information-seeking behavior, there were few books on it, hence my extensive use, as noted above, of my own and others' literature reviews to identify a wide range of partially or wholly relevant resources. As for sources outside of information science, I read Shannon and Weaver's popularization pop·u·lar·ize tr.v. pop·u·lar·ized, pop·u·lar·iz·ing, pop·u·lar·iz·es 1. To make popular: A famous dancer popularized the new hairstyle. 2. of Shannon's information theory (1963), which was an important part of Maron's courses. In addition, as the theory drew on mathematics, engineering, and physics, which I found difficult, I also gave close attention to expositions on information and communication theory by Colin Cherry Colin Cherry (1914 – 1979) was a British cognitive scientist whose main contributions were in focused auditory attention, specifically regarding the cocktail party problem. (1966), J. R. Pierce (1961), and Jagjit Singh Jagjit Singh can refer to:
Wiener and his book on cybernetics cybernetics [Gr.,=steersman], term coined by American mathematician Norbert Wiener to refer to the general analysis of control systems and communication systems in living organisms and machines. (1961). I also read his autobiography, I Am a Mathematician (1956), which was rooted in a classic child-prodigy tale. Though cybernetic cy·ber·net·ics n. (used with a sing. verb) The theoretical study of communication and control processes in biological, mechanical, and electronic systems, especially the comparison of these processes in biological and artificial systems. theory itself has been marginalized subsequently, the core idea that some systems are governed by information fed back from the environment was a breakthrough of enormous significance at the time. We use terms like "feedback" so casually today that we do not realize how fundamentally such ideas shook up science and human understanding generally in the 1940s and 1950s. Wiener's work reinforced for me the idea that there is great power in understanding the role of information at a systems level. After I had held Wiener as a hero for many years, I worked briefly on a consulting job with Joseph Becker (co-author of the above-mentioned book by Becker & Hayes) in 1989. He told me that he had met Wiener and that Wiener had dismissed our field as "sorting things into jam pots." So much for hero worship hero worship n. Intense or excessive admiration for a hero or a person regarded as a hero. hero worship Noun admiration for heroes or idealized people Noun 1. . More harmonious with my native abilities and cognitive style Cognitive style is a term used in cognitive psychology to describe the way individuals think, perceive and remember information, or their preferred approach to using such information to solve problems. were materials I read in psychology and linguistics. The psycholinguistics psycholinguistics, the study of psychological states and mental activity associated with the use of language. An important focus of psycholinguistics is the largely unconscious application of grammatical rules that enable people to produce and comprehend intelligible course I took was taught by Dan Slobin Dan Isaac Slobin is an American psychologist working at the University of California, Berkeley, who has made major contributions to the study of children's language acquisition. , and it represented the cutting edge work of the day. We read Noam Chomsky's brilliant dissection (1959) of B. F. Skinner's book, Verbal Behavior (1957). Chomsky's review was one of several forces propelling a movement to restore the validity of studying the mind to the discipline of psychology, in contrast to the mandate to study only observable behavior, which had been the position of the behaviorist Behaviorist 1. One who accepts or assumes the theory of behaviorism (behavioral finance in investing.) 2. A psychologist who subscribes to behaviorism. Notes: When it comes to investing, people may not be as rational as they think. paradigm of Skinner and others. In a bibliometric study I did in 1980 of our field, covering somewhat earlier literature, I found that Chomsky was the most-cited person in our field at the time (Bates, 1980). Books such as George Miller's Language and Communication (1951), which analyzed language from the standpoint of Shannon's information theory, and Miller, Galanter, and Pribram's Plans and the Structure of Behavior (1960), informed my thinking and reinforced the value of understanding life from its pattern and structure, from its information, in addition to its meaning. Final of influences were the guest speakers in classes or in the regular colloquia that were held in the school or in other departments. I kept notes on these talks. Apart from faculty in the school, such as William Cooper and J. Periam Danton, the speakers whose talks I attended included (in no particular order): Robert Hayes, Paul Wasserman, Lotfi Zadeh, John Bennett
John Bennett may refer to:
It may refer to:
information processing Acquisition, recording, organization, retrieval, display, and dissemination of information. Today the term usually refers to computer-based operations. ." It was a novel sensation to hear a speaker with whom I could identify more directly than I was accustomed to with the male speakers. Through all these various influences, I developed a sense of information science as being, actually, about information. For a long time, I took my own understanding for granted, as representing a general way of thinking about the subject in the field. Finally, however, as more and more new influences entered the field, many of them powerful and interesting as well, it seemed more and more important to try to articulate just how our discipline can carve out its own particular territory among the many disciplines competing for some of the same intellectual turf. In a 1987 conference paper, entitled "Information: The Last Variable," I argued for more attention to the discovery of the variables that are unique to the study of information. In 1999, in "The Invisible Substrate of Information Science," I presented much more extensively my view of what uniquely distinguishes information science from other disciplines. See, especially, the section titled "Information Science Theory" in that article. These ideas, developed over thirty years in the field, had their roots in my experiences at U.C. Berkeley in the 1960s. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS This article began with a question regarding the role of the history of documentation in the development of information science at the University of California at Berkeley. I have reviewed a wide range of influences that chiefly formed my thinking as a doctoral student in the school at the time. These influences are all about scientific, engineering, logical, social, and psychological thinking that formed early thinking in information science as we experienced it at U.C. Berkeley rather than about documentation. It is fitting at this point, however, to refer to the tiny role that documentation did play in my studies there. When I arrived at the library school, there was still a course on the books titled Documentation, and my recollection is that it was Dean Swank whom I asked about it. He said that it had not been given in several years, and the subject had been a precursor to information science. As far as I am aware, the course was not given again. In reviewing the notes from my schooling, however, I found a lecture on documentation. In a course numbered Librarianship 212A--unfortunately with no tide, but I recall it as a course in advanced reference sources--taught by Ray Held in the winter quarter of 1967, the first lecture of the course was on documentation. Perhaps Held had taught it previously? In the notes I took on that lecture, I wrote that documentation largely overlaps librarianship but has slightly different concerns. Documentalists were said to be more interested than librarians were in dissemination; were more likely to focus on new systems, theories, and technologies; and worked most often in science and technology disciplines. This description sounds a lot like the work of special librarians. In that lecture, I got no sense, or at least retained no sense, of the long history behind the idea of documentation. For me, at Berkeley, information science was something new under the sun, drawing on theory and research from a number of fields, none of them being documentation. It is no doubt information science's loss that we did not develop a better linkage with the larger theoretical history of our field while students at Berkeley. At the same time, a wide range of deeply developed thinking in the social and engineering sciences did enormously enrich our understanding. In the recent enthusiasm for reconnecting with the earlier history of our field, it seems to me that the middle-term history, that of the 1950s and 1960s that I have described herein, is being rather ignored, and the full richness of understanding that is available to our field thus is not integrated. Of the nine of us who went into academia from the Berkeley doctoral group listed earlier, all but two have taught mainly in the West. Thus the vision of information science developed at Berkeley may not have penetrated much beyond the Rocky Mountains Rocky Mountains, major mountain system of W North America and easternmost belt of the North American cordillera, extending more than 3,000 mi (4,800 km) from central N.Mex. to NW Alaska; Mt. Elbert (14,431 ft/4,399 m) in Colorado is the highest peak. . Considering the standing today of the subject matter that we covered, the subfield sub·field n. 1. A subdivision of a field of study; a subdiscipline. 2. Mathematics A field that is a subset of another field. of information retrieval has certainly thrived subsequently. Gerard Salton's work at Cornell University in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , however, surely had a great deal to do with the subsequent success of that subfield as well. Patrick Wilson's sophisticated philosophical analyses of access and information seeking in his three books (1968, 1977, 1983), as well as in the book written by Howard White, Wilson, and myself in 1992, and Paisley's legacy in information seeking (see also Paisley, 1980; Paisley & Parker, 1965, 1968; Parker & Paisley, 1966; Rees & Paisley, 1968, among others), (7) seem to have been much less recognized subsequently--much to the loss of the field, I believe. Whatever the reasons, perhaps now with publications such as this issue of Library Trends we are at last developing a sufficient sense of ourselves as a discipline to bring together all of the rich sources from which we draw and to create an intellectual edifice worthy of the exciting questions we study. NOTES (1.) Currently enrolled doctoral students are not now permitted to teach graduate courses as sole instructor in their own department in the University of California; presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. , the rules were different then. (2.) "The Scientific Method" was put into quotation marks because there are many such methods. The purpose of this section was to provide a simplified, general conception of how scientific research is conducted. (3.) These were not what are currently known as computer games; rather, we addressed established nonautomated games with known rules for play. As computer processing power was limited, software had to be based on strategic heuristics rather than on brute force computation of all options, and there was much interest at the time in such heuristics. (4.) Wherever possible in this article, the cited book editions are the ones that I would have seen at the time rather than the latest edition available now. (5.) I heard later that there is some dispute between the Los Angeles and San Francisco chapters regarding which chapter was actually founded first. (6.) Three other advisees of Paisley's in the Communication Department at Stanford have been influential in information studies: Christine L. Borgman Christine L. Borgman (b. 1951) is Professor and University of California Presidential Chair in Information Studies at the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles. , Donald O. Case, and Ronald E. Rice. Case has recently published a comprehensive book on information seeking behavior (Case, 2002). (7.) Both Paisley and Parker subsequently left Stanford to establish their own information and communication industry businesses. REFERENCES Bates, M. J. (1970). A campus information clearinghouse. California Librarian, 31, 171-172. Bates, M. J. (1971). User studies: A review for librarians and information scientists. ERIC ED 047 738. Bates, M. J. (1972). Factors affecting subject catalog search success. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal . Bates, M. J. (1977a). Factors affecting subject catalog search success. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 28(3), 161-169. Bates, M. J. (1977b). System meets user: Problems in matching subject search terms. Information Processing &Management, 13(6), 367-375. Bates, M. J. (1980). A criterion citation rate for information scientists. Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science Annual Meeting, 17, 276-278. Bates, M. J. (1987). Information: The last variable. Proceedings of the 50th ASIS 1. ASIS - Application Software Installation Server. 2. (language) ASIS - Ada Semantic Interface Specification. Annual Meeting, 24, 6-10. Bates, M. J. (1999). The invisible substrate of information science. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 50(12), 1043-1050. Becker, J., & Hayes, R. M. (1963). Information storage and retrieval: Tools, elements, theories. New York: Wiley. Briet, S. (n.d.). What is documentation? (R. E. Day & L. Martinet mar·ti·net n. 1. A rigid military disciplinarian. 2. One who demands absolute adherence to forms and rules. [After Jean Martinet (died 1672), French army officer. , Trans.). (Original published as Qu'est-ce que la documentation? Paris: Editions documentaires, industrielles et techniques, 1951). Retrieved April 18, 2004, from http://www.lisp LISP: see programming language. LISP Powerful computer programming language designed for manipulating lists of data or symbols rather than processing numerical data, used extensively in artificial-intelligence applications. .wayne.edu/~ai2398/briet.htm. Case, D. O. (2002) Looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. information: A survey of research on information seeking, needs, and behavior. New York: Academic Press. Cherry, C. (1966). On human communication: A review, a survey, and a criticism (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Chomsky, N. (1959). A review of B. F. Skinner's, Verbal behavior. Language, 35(1), 26-58. Cohen, N. M., Denison, B., & Boehlert, J. C. (1963). Library science dissertations: 1925-1960: An annotated bibliography of doctoral studies. Washington, DC: United States G.P.O. Dervin, B. (1983). Information as a user construct: The relevance of perceived information needs to synthesis and interpretation. In S. A. Ward & L. J. Reed (Eds.), Knowledge structures and use: Implications for synthesis and interpretation (pp. 153-184). Philadelphia: Temple University Press. Dervin, B., & Nilan, M. (1986). Information needs and uses. Annual Review of Information Science and Technology, 21, 3-33. Friedan, B. (1963). The feminine mystique. New York: Norton. International Conference on Scientific Information. (1959). Proceedings. 2 vols. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council. Kerlinger, F. N. (1964). Foundations of behavioral research: Educational and psychological inquiry. New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston. Kochen, M. (Ed.). (1967). The growth of knowledge: Readings on organization and retrieval of information. New York: Wiley. Kuhn, T. S. (1964). The structure of scientific revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press The University of Chicago Press is the largest university press in the United States. It is operated by the University of Chicago and publishes a wide variety of academic titles, including The Chicago Manual of Style, dozens of academic journals, including . Lancaster, F. W. (1968). Information retrieval systems: Characteristics, testing, and evaluation. New York: Wiley. Maron, M. E. (1961). Automatic indexing: An experimental inquiry. Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery See ACM. Association for Computing Machinery - Association for Computing , 8, 404-417. Maron, M. E., & Kuhns, J. L. (1960). On relevance, probabilistic (probability) probabilistic - Relating to, or governed by, probability. The behaviour of a probabilistic system cannot be predicted exactly but the probability of certain behaviours is known. Such systems may be simulated using pseudorandom numbers. indexing, and information retrieval. Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery, 7, 216-244. Meadow, C. T. (1967). The analysis of information systems: A programmer's introduction to information retrieval New York: Wiley. Menzel, H. (1959). Planned and unplanned scientific communication. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Scientific Information, Vol. 1 (pp. 199-243). Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council. Menzel, H. (1960). Review of studies in the flow of information among scientists. 2 vols. New York: Columbia University, Bureau of Applied Social Research. Miller, G. A. (1951). Language and communication. New York: McGraw-Hill. Miller, G. A., Galanter, E., & Pribram, K. H. (1960). Plans and the structure of behaviour. New York: Holt. Otlet, P. (1990). International organisation and dissemination of knowledge: Selected essays of Paul Otlet (W. Boyd Rayward, Ed. & Trans.). New York: Elsevier. Paisley, W. J. (1965). The flow of (behavioral) science information: A review of the research literature. Stanford, CA: Stanford University, Institute for Communication Research. Paisley, W. J. (1968). Information needs and uses. Annual Review of Information Science and Technology, 3, 1-30. Paisley, W. J. (1980). Information and work. Progress in Communication Sciences, 2, 113-165. Paisley, W. J., & Parker, E. B. (1965). Information retrieval as a receiver-controlled communication system. In L. B. Heilprin, B. E. Markuson, & F. L. Goodman (Eds.), Symposium on education for information science, proceedings (pp. 23-31). Washington, DC: Spartan Books. Paisley, W. J., & Parker, E. B. (1968). The AAPOR AAPOR American Association for Public Opinion Research conference as a communication medium. Public Opinion Quarterly, 32(1), 65-73. Parker, E. B., & Paisley, W. J. (1968). Research for psychologists at the interface of the scientist and his information system. American Psychologist, 21, 1061-1071. Pierce, J. R. (1961). Symbols, signals, and noise: The nature and process of communication. New York: Harper. Price, D. J. deS. (1961). Science since Babylon. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Price, D. J. deS. (1963). Little science, big science. New York: Columbia University Press Columbia University Press is an academic press based in New York City and affiliated with Columbia University. It is currently directed by James D. Jordan (2004-present) and publishes titles in the humanities and sciences, including the fields of literary and cultural studies, . Price, D. J. deS. (1967). Networks of scientific papers. In M. Kochen (Ed.), The growth of knowledge: Readings on organization and retrieval of information (pp. 145-155). New York: Wiley. Rees, M. B., & Paisley, W. J. (1968). Social and psychological predictors of adult information seeking and media use. Adult Education Journal, 19, 11-29. Resnikoff, H. L., & Dolby, J. L. (1972). Access: A study of information storage and retrieval with emphasis on library information systems. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education. ERIC ED 060 921. Rosenberg, V. (1967). Factors affecting the preferences of industrial personnel for information gathering methods. Information Storage and Retrieval, 3, 119-127. Salton, G. (1968). Automatic information organization and retrieval. New York: McGraw-Hill. Shannon, C. E., & Weaver, W. (1963). The mathematical theory of communication. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press The University of Illinois Press (UIP), is a major American university press and part of the University of Illinois. Overview According to the UIP's website: . Singh, J. (1966). Great ideas in information theory, language, and cybernetics. New York: Dover. Skinner, B. F. (1957). Verbal behaviour. London: Methuen. Stevens, M. E. (1965). Automatic indexing: A state-of-the-art report. NBS (National Bureau of Standards) See NIST. NBS - National Bureau of Standards: part of the US Department of Commerce, now NIST. monograph no. 91. Washington, DC: United States G.P.O. Tuominen, K., Talja, S, & Savolainen, R. (2002). Discourse, cognition, and reality: Toward a social constructionist con·struc·tion·ist n. A person who construes a legal text or document in a specified way: a strict constructionist. metatheory met·a·the·o·ry n. A theory devised to analyze theoretical systems. for library and information science. In H. Bruce, R. Fidel, P. Ingwersen, & P. Vakkari (Eds.), Emerging frameworks and methods: Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Conceptions of Library and Information Science (CoLIS4) (pp. 271-283). Greenwood Village, CO: Libraries Unlimited. Walker, D. E. (Ed.). (1971). Interactive bibliographic search: The user-computer interface. Montvale, NJ: AFIPS (American Federation of Information Processing Societies Inc.) An organization founded in 1961 dedicated to advancing information processing in the U.S. It was the U.S. representative of IFIP and umbrella for 11 membership societies. Press. Watson, J. D. (1968). The double helix double helix n. The coiled structure of a double-stranded DNA molecule in which strands linked by hydrogen bonds form a spiral configuration. Also called DNA helix, Watson-Crick helix. : A personal account of the discovery of the structure of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. . New York: Atheneum ath·e·nae·um also ath·e·ne·um n. 1. An institution, such as a literary club or scientific academy, for the promotion of learning. 2. A place, such as a library, where printed materials are available for reading. . White, H. D., Bates, M. J., & Wilson, P. (1992). For information specialists: Interpretations of reference and bibliographic work. Norwood, NJ: Ablex. Wiener, N. (1956). I am a mathematician. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. Wiener, N. (1961). Cybernetics: Or, control and communication in the animal and the machine (2nd ed.). New York: MIT Press. Wilson, P. (1968). Two kinds of power: An essay on bibliographical control. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press "UC Press" redirects here, but this is also an abbreviation for University of Chicago Press University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing. . Wilson, P. (1977). Public knowledge, private ignorance: Toward a library and information policy. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. Wilson, P. (1983). Second-hand knowledge: An inquiry into cognitive authority. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. Marcia J. Bates Marcia J. Bates is Professor VI Emerita of Information Studies in the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles. She has previously taught at the University of Maryland, College Park and was tenured at the University of Washington , Dept. of Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles UCLA comprises the College of Letters and Science (the primary undergraduate college), seven professional schools, and five professional Health Science schools. Since 2001, UCLA has enrolled over 33,000 total students, and that number is steadily rising. (UCLA), Los Angeles, CA 90095-1520 |
|
||||||||||||||||||

less·ly adv.
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion