[Air-l] Web and thought
Irene Berkowitz
irene.berkowitz at temple.edu
Wed Mar 10 06:43:09 PST 2004
You might try in the cogitive psychology area or in the range
of media ecology studies.
---- Original message ----
>Date: Tue, 9 Mar 2004 19:29:03 -0600
>From: Nancy Baym <nbaym at ku.edu>
>Subject: [Air-l] Web and thought
>To: air-l at aoir.org
>
>A colleague of mine sends the following query. If anyone has
good
>tips please pass them on to him, Thank you. Nancy
>
>
>>From: "Allan Hanson" <hanson at ku.edu>
>>To: "Nancy Baym" <nbaym at ku.edu>
>>Subject: Bibliographic request
>
>...
>
>> One of my arguments is that keyword searching tends to
give a
>>number of results that are fairly high in information (in the
>>technical sense of information theory...unpredictability),
and that
>>can be conducive to new insights and creative thinking as
the user
>>tries to figure out why certain results were returned. It
seems to
>>me that this is somewhat similar to surfing the web, where
people
>>may be stimulated to think about things in new ways as they
go from
>>site to site and, in the process, encounter ways of approaching
>>things that had not occurred to them before. I haven't been
able to
>>find anything about how web surfing affects the way people
think
>>about things. Do you know of anything that has been done along
>>those lines?
>>
>>Many thanks,
>>
>>Allan
>>
>>Allan Hanson
>>Professor of Anthropology
>
>
>--
>Nancy Baym http://www.ku.edu/home/nbaym
>Communication Studies, University of Kansas
>Bailey Hall, 1440 Jayhawk Blvd., Room 102, Lawrence, KS
66045-7574, USA
>Association of Internet Researchers: http://aoir.org
>
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Irene Berkowitz
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Temple University
Office of the Vice Provost
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