Human–Information Interaction—A Special Issue of the Journal of Informatics
Journal Title: Informatics - Year 2015, Vol 2, Issue 1
Abstract
Every day, people from different professions and disciplines need to use information to make decisions, plan courses of action, discover patterns in big data, solve problems, analyze situations, make sense of phenomena, learn new concepts, make forecasts about future trends, and so on. People whose professions involve the frequent or continual performance of such activities include scientists, healthcare specialists, medical researchers, librarians, journalists, engineers, stock brokers, archeologists, educators, social scientists, and others—i.e., the so-called knowledge workers. As the amount and complexity of information is on the rise, it is becoming more important to understand how humans use and interact with information to support their everyday tasks and activities. Although some research toward this end has been done in the past, it has often been in the context of specific domains (e.g., human–computer interaction, information visualization, information science, learning science), specific tasks (e.g., memory recall, sorting lists of items), and/or specific groups of people (e.g., students, doctors, analysts). Human–information interaction (HII) is the field of study that is concerned in general with how and why humans use, find, consume, work with, and interact with information in order to solve problems, make decisions, learn, plan, make sense, discover, and carry out numerous other tasks and activities. HII is a broad area of research, and researchers are interested in many different aspects of HII, including those related to information behavior, information search and retrieval, information foraging, sharing, and seeking; information design, architecture, representation, and visualization; personal information management; information spaces; medical, health, and bioinformatics; human–computer interaction; and information systems. Although the focus of HII research varies according to the dominant discipline in which researchers are situated, the common thread underlying all HII research is the investigation of relationships between humans and information, rather than those between humans and technology per se. Technology may be intimately involved in any given activity, but the focus of research is not on the technology itself. HII is inherently interdisciplinary and draws from research in information visualization, human–computer interaction, information science, cognitive and perceptual sciences, health and medical informatics, educational technologies, and information systems.
Authors and Affiliations
Kamran Sedig and Paul Parsons
Molecular Imaging of Bacterial Infections in vivo: The Discrimination between Infection and Inflammation
Molecular imaging by definition is the visualization of molecular and cellular processes within a given system. The modalities and reagents described here represent a diverse array spanning both pre-clinical and clinic...
Scalable Interactive Visualization for Connectomics
Connectomics has recently begun to image brain tissue at nanometer resolution, which produces petabytes of data. This data must be aligned, labeled, proofread, and formed into graphs, and each step of this process requir...
ICNP® R&D Centre Ireland: Defining Requirements for an Intersectoral Digital Landscape
The apparent speed and impact of creating a global digital landscape for health and social care tells us that the health workforce is playing catch-up with eHealth national programmes. Locating how and where the profes...
Large Scale Advanced Data Analytics on Skin Conditions from Genotype to Phenotype
A crucial factor in Big Data is to take advantage of available data and use that for new discovery or hypothesis generation. In this study, we analyzed Large-scale data from the literature to OMICS, such as the genome,...
Disabling and Enabling Technologies for Learning in Higher Education for All: Issues and Challenges for Whom?
Integration, inclusion, and equity constitute fundamental dimensions of democracy in post-World War II societies and their institutions. The study presented here reports upon the ways in which individuals and instituti...