The Proceedings of an international forum held at Cumberland Lodge, Windsor Park, 16-18th July 1999, organised by City University, and sponsored by Aslib, The Association for Information Management, The British Library and News International. The purpose of the conference was to: explore methods for evaluating the Internet's many features and functions; assess the impact of the Internet in strategic areas of human endeavour, so providing us with an understanding of the way that the Internet is fashioning the world we live in; identify the key information and communication principles, ideas and concepts that are emerging as a result of the spread and development of the Internet; and put down an agenda for future Internet research and collaboration. Contents: The challenge: unstable knowledge, unstable times; Three-dimensional impact: a case study of electronic government; Joining up information and learning; Newspapers and the net: peaceful coexistence or fight to the death? The impact of the Internet on the ownership of information; Impact of the Internet: some conceptual and methodological issues; Studying the impacts of the Internet without assuming technological determinism; The relevance of information retrieval research for the evaluation of the WWW; From bibliometrics to cybermetrics; Web metrics: too much data, too little analysis; Surveying the global diffusion of the Internet; Tracking and evaluating the global information consumer; Evaluating the net as a 'local' information resource.
Author(s): David Nicholas, Ian Rowlands
Publisher: Taylor & Francis e-Library
Year: 2000
Language: English
Pages: 179
Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 2
Acknowledgements......Page 3
Copyright......Page 4
Contents......Page 5
Introduction......Page 7
The challenge: unstable knowledge, unstable times......Page 9
Three-dimensional impact: a case study of electronic government......Page 22
Joining up information and learning......Page 28
Newspapers and the Net—peaceful coexistence or fight to the death?......Page 37
Impact of the Internet: some conceptual and methodogical issues......Page 51
The impact of the Internet on the ownership of information......Page 66
Studying the impacts of the Internet without assuming technological determinism......Page 76
The relevance of IR research for the evaluation of the World Wide Web......Page 97
Who can count the dust of Jacob? From bibliometrics to cybermetrics......Page 108
Web metrics: too much data, too little analysis......Page 123
Surveying the global diffusion of the Internet......Page 134
Tracking and evaluating the global information consumer......Page 143
Evaluating the Net as a ‘local’ information resource......Page 153
Conclusions......Page 162
Profiles of forum participants......Page 165
Index......Page 168