Review published In: Semiotics: A way of thinking & approaching information design
Edited by Priscila Lena Farias and João Queiroz
[Information Design Journal 23:2] 2017
► pp. 234–237
Book review
Information Design—ID Theories
Reviewed by
Published online: 3 November 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/idj.23.2.11tir
https://doi.org/10.1075/idj.23.2.11tir
References (19)
Amare, N. and Manning, A. (2012). Unified Theory of Information Design: Visuals, Text and Ethics. Baywood’s Technical Communications Series. Baywood Publishing Company.
Dervin, B. Chaos, Order, and Sense-Making: A Proposed Theory for Information Design. In Robert Jacobson (Ed.): Information Design. The MIT Press. 35–57.
Katz, J. (2012). Designing Information: Human Factors and Common Sense in Information Design. John Wiley & Sons.
Meirelles, I. (2013). Design for Information: An Introduction to the Histories, Theories, and Best Practices Behind Effective Information Visualizations. Rockport Publishers.
Pettersson, R. (1993). Visual Information. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Educational Technology Publications.
(1989). Visuals for Information, Research and practice. Englewood Cliffs. NJ: Educational Technology Publications.
(2015a). Information Design 1. Message Design. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
(2015b). Information Design 2. Text Design. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
(2015c). (e-book) Information Design 3. Image Design. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
(2015d). Information Design 4. Graphic Design. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
(2015e). Information Design 5. Cognition. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
(2015f). Information Design 6. Predecessors & Pioneers. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
(2015g). Basic ID Concepts. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
(2015h). It Depends. Tullinge, Sweden: Institute for Infology. Retrieved from [URL]
