Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) is one of the most important and indispensable annuals for the information science and technology professional. Since
1966, ARIST has been continuously at the cutting edge in contributing a useful and comprehensive view of information science and technology. ARIST reviews numerous topics within the field and ultimately provides an
annual source of ideas, trends, and references to the literature.
This edition of ARIST covers eight topics as follows:
I. Planning Information Systems and Services Policy for the Net and the Internet By Sandra Braman
User-Centered Perspective of Information Retrieval Research and Analysis Methods
By William Sugar II. Basic Techniques and Technologies Groupware
By Elizabeth Davenport and Geoffrey McKim Visualization
By James G. Williams, Kenneth M. Sochats, and Emile Morse III Applications
Refereeing of Scholarly Works for Primary Publishing By Margaret Stieg Dalton
Small Business and Information Technology By Karen Glynn and Michael E. D. Koenig
History, Archives, and Information Science By Lawrence J. McCrank IV The Profession
History of Information Science By Michael Buckland and Ziming Liu
ARIST is scholarly, thorough within the scope defined by the chapter author, up-to-date, well written, and readable by an audience that goes beyond the author's immediate peer group to researchers and practitioners
in information science and technology in general and ASIS in particular. ARIST Volume 30: Annual Review of Information Science and Technology © 1995, Association for Information Science
525 Pages, hardbound ISBN: 1-57387-019-6 |