From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Information architecture (IA)
is the art of expressing a model or concept of information used in activities that require
explicit details of complex systems. Among these activities are library systems, Content Management Systems, web
development, user interactions,
database development, programming, technical writing, enterprise architecture, and
critical system software design. Information
architecture has somewhat different meanings in these different
branches of IS or IT architecture. Most definitions have common
qualities: a structural design of shared environments, methods of
organizing and labeling websites, intranets, and online
communities, and ways of bringing the principles of design and
architecture to the digital landscape.
Historically the term "information architect" is attributed to
Richard
Saul Wurman. Wurman sees architecture as "used in the words
architect of foreign policy. I mean architect as in the creating of
systemic, structural, and orderly principles to make something
work--the thoughtful making of either artifact, or idea, or policy
that informs because it is clear."[1]
Definitions
The term information architecture describes a
specialized skill set which relates to the interpretation of
information and expression of distinctions between signs and
systems of signs. It has some degree of origin in the library
sciences. Many schools with library and information science
departments teach information architecture. [2]
In the context of information systems design information
architecture refers to the analysis and design of the data stored
by information systems, concentrating on entities, their
attributes, and their interrelationships. It refers to the modeling
of data for an individual database and to the corporate data models
an enterprise uses to coordinate the definition of data in several
(perhaps scores or hundreds) of distinct databases. The "canonical
data model" is applied to integration technologies as a definition
for specific data passed between the systems of an enterprise. At a
higher level of abstraction it may also refer to the definition of
data stores.
R.I.P.O.S.E. definition
Information architecture is defined by the R.I.P.O.S.E.[3]
technique, developed in 1989[4]
as:
- The conceptual structure and logical organization of the
intelligence of a person or group of people (organizations).
Note: In this case the term
intelligence is used to the effect of "knowledge used to
inform".
Information architecture is defined by the Information Architecture
Institute as:
- The structural design of shared information environments.
- The art and science of organizing and labeling web sites,
intranets, online communities, and software to support findability and usability.[5][6]
- An emerging community of practice focused on
bringing principles of design and architecture to the digital
landscape.
History
Information Architecture was originally a term
with a meaning more akin to what is called today Information Design."
Critiques
- The term Information Architecture has been criticized, as the
term "architecture" is
primarily used for habitable physical structures and imply that
information systems are static like habitable physical structures
or buildings. Information systems are "living systems", which
frequently get updated, altered, and morphed, both by author and
users. In some cases, information systems dynamically adapt to
specific actions and context of users. Since the discipline of
architecture ("habitable physical structures") increasingly uses
materials and solutions that are less static, this criticism may be
unjustified.
- User-Centered Information Designers analyze cognitive,
behavioral, and emotional processes of users and define
User-Centered Information Systems and taxonomies. Furthermore, some
activities involved in the creation of information systems can be
similar to activities involved in the creation of taxonomies. Some have suggested that the
term information architecture is analogous with taxonomy. Others
contend that the activities involved in the creation of a taxonomy
are a subset of the activities involved in developing an
information architecture, since this typically also involves
articulating the objectives of the information, and understanding
the intended audience.[7] Some
practicing information architects specialize in developing
taxonomies, as part of their IA "toolkit," along with deliverables
like site maps, flow diagrams, and screen-level design prototypes
to represent the structure of a Web site or interactive
application.
- With the ever increasing integration of applications within the
enterprise, neither websites nor corporate data models and master
data systems can any longer be considered in isolation. Information
Architecture will be challenged to evolve to include the entire
spectrum of both structured and unstructured data, ranging from
transactional systems to ad hoc usage.
See also
References
- ^
R.S. Wurman: "Information Architects"
- ^
IAinstitute.org, Schools
Teaching IA
- ^
Ripose.com - see map
- ^
Ripose.com - see
precise
- ^
‘What is IA?’ Information Architecture Institute. IAinstitute.org
- ^
"Information architecture for the World Wide Web" by Peter Morville
& Louis Rosenfeld. O’Reilly, 2006.
- ^
“Understanding information taxonomy helps build better apps” Techrepublic.com
External
links