Information Architecture Robert Munro 2005. Information Architecture Information architecture is...

16
Information Architecture Robert Munro 2005

Transcript of Information Architecture Robert Munro 2005. Information Architecture Information architecture is...

Information Architecture

Robert Munro2005

Information Architecture

Information architecture is how your content is structured within the product:your arrangement of assets across different parts of

the production, and the relationships between them

Information Architecture

The most common architecture of websites and many multimedia productions is a hierarchy:homepage (A)sub-pages of Asub-pages of B

Information Architecture

What did the previous diagram tell us about the relative themes/content of the pages?These two diagrams are identical in terms of the links

between pages, but we would expect the relative content to be different:

Information Architecture

If your production is driven by the data you already have, what is the appropriate architecture?

The ‘boxes’ can represent a page, or something more abstract: play a sound,initiate a dialogueany event (not always mutually exclusive)

Data Management

The data management used in planning, capturing and storing the data will determine its structure

For a multimedia production, the relationships between assets can also be ‘content’

Structured data

What are the relationships between the types of information?which of these are machine-readable

Most multimedia productions will have a large degree of structural repetition:an online dictionary with a page for every word

(or a single panel/frame within a page)the ability to play many different sound recordings

Structured data

Productions can take advantage of all the machine readable relationships in your datamachine readable relationships allow scalability

For a online dictionary, you could:create a single template for a page for a wordpopulate the entire dictionary in an instant

Example: Hearing Voices

Contentsrecording (audio)photorecording namelanguage nametranscriptionspeaker name

Example: Hearing Voices

Where the data came fromrecording (audio)photorecording namelanguage nametranscriptionspeaker name

Example: Hearing Voices

This allowed a single script to import about 50 recordings / transcriptions etc, for 8 different speakers:

Example: Hearing Voices

…but it could have imported 50,000 recordings with no extra effort:

Example: Hearing Voices

Example 2: interview timings:

Example: Hearing Voices

Example 2: interview timings:

Designing your production

Your production might be data driven, but your design should be driven by user needs

Storyboarding is a good technique for negotiating the structure of your production (see tomorrow’s lecture on navigation design)

References

Garrett, J. J. 2002. A visual vocabulary for describing information architecture and interaction design. http://www.jjg.net/ia/visvocab/