Title: Information
1Information Types of Information
A presentation for L SC 311, New Mexico State
University Fall Semester 2004 Created by Kate Ma
nuel (kmanuel_at_lib.nmsu.edu). Modified by Angela
Murrell (amurrell_at_lib.nmsu.edu).
You are welcome to link to this site, or to print
out a copy for personal use. Please do not make
an electronic copy and load it locally with or
without modifications.
2John Perry Barlow on information
- What is information?
- How does information differ from physical goods?
- What gives information value?
- Whats different about digital information?
3What is information?
- Two basic schools of information
- Information-as-process
- Information is something which happens in the
field of interaction between minds or objects or
other pieces of information
4Information-as-Thing
- Focuses on content AND container as a unit
- Tied to the common understandings of information
as physical (having the necessary information)
and quantifiable
- Is the only approach to information with which
current technologies (can) deal
5What is information?
- Information is always
- about something
- produced by someone
- dependent upon its means of communication
- Information is what current computer systems are
designed to handle
- Not knowledge or wisdom
6Container v. Content
- holds information
- Book
- Web page
- Article
- actual information
- GDP of China
- Definition of a word
7Types of Information
- Information is commonly divided into types
- fact v. opinion/analytic
- objective v. subjective
- primary v. secondary
- popular v. scholarly v. trade
8Types of Information
- Content
- Nature of the information itself
- the distinction between fact opinion, objective
subjective, and primary secondary is largely
a matter of informations content
- Audience
- Who the information is produced for
- the distinction between popular, scholarly
trade is one of audience as much as of content
9Types of information
- These types are not exclusive
- Information can be
- primary opinion/analytic
- subjective popular
- secondary scholarly
- etc.
10Fact v. Opinion
- A fact is the statement of a thing done or
existing.
- E.g., Toni Morrisons book Song of Solomon was
published in 1977.
- E.g., The New York Yankees won the 1999 World
Series.
- An opinion/analytic information is a personal
view or judgement based on what seems to be true,
or an interpretation of fact.
- E.g., Song of Solomon is the best book Toni
Morrison has written.
- E.g., The 1999 Yankees were as good as the
Yankees of Babe Ruth or Joe DiMaggio.
11Objective v. Subjective
- Objective information presents all sides of a
topic.
- E.g., AIDS is transmitted in several ways.
Heterosexual intercourse accounts for 70 of HIV
infections worldwide. Homosexual intercourse and
intravenous drug users sharing contaminated
needles also spread the HIV virus. The virus also
can spread from mother to child by transfer
across the placenta or through breast milk. A
number of hemophiliacs were infected from
contaminated blood and blood products before
screening procedures were introduced in the late
1980s.
12Objective v. Subjective
- Subjective information provides
opinions/evaluative information on a topic.
- Subjective information commonly does not provide
all sides of a topic.
- E.g., AIDS is transmitted in several ways,
including via homosexual activity. AIDS can thus
be seen as a punishment from God resulting from
homosexuals ungodly activities.
13Opinion, Or Subjective Information?
- If subjective information sounds like opinion, it
is.
- The basic difference is that
- an opinion is often a brief statement based on
what seems true to a person (e.g., Blue is the
best color for cars), while
- subjective information often involves a lengthier
presentation of information which combines
opinion with an incomplete (not multi-sided)
presentation of a topic.
14Primary v. Secondary
- Primary information
- is information in its original form.
- has not been published elsewhere, put into
context, interpreted, or translated.
- Secondary information
- Is removed in some way from its original form.
- may include restatements, examinations,
interpretations, or translations.
15Primary Information
- What exactly constitutes primary information can
vary by discipline.
- In the sciences, primary information means the
original study and its data.
- E.g., counting the number of Florida panthers and
detailing their age health conditions.
- In the foreign languages, primary information
means information in the language, not translated
into English.
- E.g., Crime Punishment in Russian is a primary
resource.
16Primary Information
- In the social sciences humanities, primary
information can mean information from the time
period/place in question.
- newspaper articles from 1945 are primary sources
for information about WWII.
- Primary information is also information from the
source, or which has not been commented upon.
- a persons diary (unedited) is a primary source.
- The lyrics and notes to a song are primary
information.
17Secondary information
- Is basically primary information that has been
put into context, interpreted, or translated.
- a book which discusses how highways impact
populations of large carnivores and uses the data
from the Florida panther study in justifying its
conclusions, - an English translation of Crime and Punishment,
- a 1995 article which shows what 1945 newspaper
articles can reveal about WWII and quotes from
some of them,
- a web page commenting on a the text of a persons
diary, or
- a DJs comments on air about the meaning and
significance of a particular song.
18Types of Information
- An in-class activity to practice identifying
types of information and their sources.
19Why do this?
- Knowing what type of information you need can
help you find information more effectively
- certain types of information sources are more
likely to contain certain types of information.
20Print v. Electronic
- Format of container
- Is not a type of information
- All types of information might come as print or
electronic
- NOT ALL information is electronic!
21Facts
- Look for factual information in reference sources
(print or electronic) such as
- dictionaries
- atlases
- handbooks
- directories
- Books, articles, and web sites are not efficient
ways to find out, e.g., the number of Vietnamese
speakers in the U.S.
22Opinions, Other Subjective Information
- Books, articles, and Web pages are all likely
sources of opinions subjective information.
- Review articles and op-ed pieces in newspapers
and other publications are especially good
sources.
- There are even special series like Opposing
Viewpoints which bring together various opinions
on controversial topics.
23Objective Information
- Sources for objective information may include
reference sources (print or electronic) such as
encyclopedias or handbooks.
- Can be in books, articles, or web pages - but the
source should be considered carefully.
- Avoid opinion-only sources, like reviews and
op-ed pieces.
24Primary Secondary Information
- Primary information may be found in an article or
report, an un-translated book, and/or any
resource from the time/place studied.
- Secondary sources may include articles, books, or
web pages.