Portal:Digital Information Overload
What is Digital Information Overload?
Information overload refers to the increasingly frequent state of having too much information to make a decision or remain informed about a topic. This problem can lead to low productivity, frustration, stress, and poor decision making.
Information Overload: Past and PresentThe term âInformation Overloadâ was coined by Alvin Toffler in his 1970 book, Future Shock. According to Wikipedia, information overload is âthe state of having too much information to make a decision or remain informed about a topic.â The overabundance of information is a result of both a large quantity of existing information and a high rate of production of new information. (âInformation explosionâ refers to the high rate at which new information is published.) The problem of information overload in todayâs digital world is different from the problem faced by scholars in the 16th century. Computers and the internet have amplified the problem. Besides making it easier to publish new information and store archives of old material, the level of connectedness with which many of us live has made information overload a more active and interruptive problem. Konrad von Gesner, who lamented the amount of books in the mid sixteenth century, may have been overloaded with information while researching, reading, or investigating. When he was not actively working, however, he was likely able to relax and focus on that which he desired. Today, such an act is more difficult. From the businesswoman whose BlackBerry continuously notifies her of new messages which beg for her attention to the student whose essay writing is interrupted with e-mails, instant messages, and text messages, we are deluged with information. ProblemsThe Information Quality Challenge: (from Urs's essay draft) a) information quality = âreference to a set of characteristics aimed at stating whether a âmessageâ meets the functional, cognitive, aesthetic, and ethical requirements of different stakeholders, such as information creators, administrators, users, experts, etc.â b) Current safeguards for information quality mostly apply to traditional (mass-scale, demand-driven) media (dominated by small number of professionals in commercial, hierarchical, centralized media companies):
c) Now, new modes of information production (large number of non-professionals involved; highly decentralized; different set of principles and motivations)
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NarrativesElizabeth stares at her screen. It feels a bit like an extension of herself, if sheâs honest about it. Or like a best friend. Especially during a boring, boring class. Sheâs pretending to pay attention to a truly stultifying lecture on Justice. Itâs part of the core curriculum and something she more or less has to take in her first year of college. The teacher is droning on. IM from Elizabeth to Keisha, a friend from Second Life who is taking the class as a distance student: âu watching this? This guy is just mailing it in, K. What a waste.â Then: âI wonder if he thinks about the fact that we pay for this.â
SolutionsRelevant Research and ArticlesSusan P. Crawford, "Who's in Charge of Who I Am? Identity and Law Online," December 8, 2004 Posting Your Resume on YouTube, The Wall Street Journal, December 6, 2006 Danah Boyd, 'Facebook's "Privacy Trainwreck": Exposure, Invasion, and Drama,' September 8, 2006 Chinese Web Site Rips Off Facebook, Harvard Crimson, February 15, 2007 Google and Your Health Information, eWeek.com, May 29, 2007 Identity and the virtual community (Donath) "Staying Connected via Cellphone (and Cellphone Bill)", 'NY Times', June 27, 2007 |