User population and user contributions to virtual publics: a systems model
GROUP '99 Proceedings of the international ACM SIGGROUP conference on Supporting group work
Business information visualization
Communications of the AIS
Towards an optimal resolution to information overload: an infomediary approach
GROUP '01 Proceedings of the 2001 International ACM SIGGROUP Conference on Supporting Group Work
Information literacy: innuendo or insight?
Education and Information Technologies
Sustaining distance training
Technology in the language arts classroom
Challenges of teaching with technology across the curriculum
The Interaction between Primary Teachers' Perceptions of ICT and Their Pedagogy
Education and Information Technologies
Digital government and citizen participation in international context
Digital government
Preface to Special Issue on User Modeling for Web Information Retrieval
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
Rethinking information handling: designing for information offload
Proceedings of the 4th decennial conference on Critical computing: between sense and sensibility
ECSCW'03 Proceedings of the eighth conference on European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
The dark side of information: overload, anxiety and other paradoxes and pathologies
Journal of Information Science
Developing the Information and Knowledge Agenda in Information Systems: Insights From Philosophy
The Information Society - The Philosophy of Information, its Nature, and Future Developments
Adaptive Reward Mechanism for Sustainable Online Learning Community
Proceedings of the 2005 conference on Artificial Intelligence in Education: Supporting Learning through Intelligent and Socially Informed Technology
User- and community-adaptive rewards mechanism for sustainable online community
UM'05 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on User Modeling
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From the Publisher:We are awash in information: faxes, e-mail, news, infotainment, and advertising overwhelm us even as CEOs and politicians herald the dawn of a glorious and profitable Information Age. Media scholar and cyber-pundit David Shank deftly dismantles all the hype and exposes the unsettling impact of information overload, or data smog, on our individual well-being (emotional and physical) and on our society at large. This myth-shattering manifesto also outlines a welter of practical strategies for minimizing data smog's polluting effects - from curtailing junkmail and telephone sales pitches to instituting all-out "data fasts."