Toward Hypertextual Glossaries

6. Hypertextual significance of this work

List of Section Contents

  1. Glossaries as Annotation
    1. Types
    2. Shared versus Personal (or Corporate) Glossaries
  2. Implications
    1. Human Factors
    2. Glossaries as Bridges
  1. Glossaries as Annotation

    We consider glossaries to be a special form of annotation. It is our belief that annotation is one way that readers can, in a sense, become the joint author of a new work the meaning of which depends, more than usually, on the reader.

    We use published rather than shared to avoid confusion with the well-established hypertext systems concept [Garg & Scacchi, 1987].

    Although annotations can be shared with others (e.g., Blustein's [1996] lists of annotation for a textbook) and are sometimes printed in special editions (e.g., The Annotated Alice [Carroll, 1999]) they are a different class of writing. We term such annotations to be published in the sense that they have been put into a form that is intended for other readers to understand. On the other hand, we use the adjective personal annotation to describe works which are more like the jottings of a moment and not formally arranged for presentation to other readers.

    1. Types

      We consider two types of personal glossary using examples from traditional media:

      • those that are tied to a single document such as notes on the flyleaves or in the margins of books; and
      • those that are available for use in any document (which we term floating) such as in a commonplace book (Miller as cited by Bernstein [2004] discusses the needs and implications of such devices)

      Tied personal glossaries, like the sort we report on in this article, may be most useful for textbooks and similar works. We can imagine a future where electronic books come equipped with glossaries with many entries drawn from the text, much as some printed books do today. The primary difference between our imagined future and today's books is that in the future all of the glossaries will be user-editable (and we hope compatible with each other so that a student can amass a grand floating glossary and compare different definitions of the same term).

      The floating tools will clearly be more powerful but they may, as a consequence, require users to exercise restraint in their use lest they become unmanageable — think of how few of the infinity of possible hypertextual structures are feasible for discursive websites now that the WWW has settled into genres. The techniques described by Brown & Brown [2004] might be appropriate starting point for the development of a floating glossary tool.

    2. Shared Versus Personal (or Corporate) Glossaries

      It is well-known that readers rarely agree on where links should begin and end within a single document [Furner et al., 1999; Blustein, 2000]. It is likely that this is due to to way people cognitively process documents [McKendree et al., 1995] and for the same reasons we expect personal annotation to vary amongst individuals. Glossaries in particular are, we believe, an artifact of the reader's cognitive state at the time the definition was recorded. We know that processes of reading and searching for information changes users' cognitive state [Tague-Sutcliffe, 1995] and just as we would not expect a student who had not read a textbook to be able to make sense of a random passage in that book out of context we would not necessarily expect anyone to understand someone else's personal (that is to say, informal) glossary entries.

      As people read and make notes they are attempting to make sense of a text and this sense-making process alters their interpretation of the text [Dillon, 1994; McKendree et al., 1995; Tague-Sutcliffe, 1995]. Personal annotations, of which glossary entries are a distinguished type, are the most obvious remnant of the cognitive state that brought them forth. Because it is difficult to reconstruct the meaning of such entries without access to the context in which they were created glossaries that are not carefully and specifically constructed become increasingly difficult for anyone but their compiler to understand as the number of entries grows.

  2. Implications

    If our supposition that personal glossaries can help individuals (and co-operating groups of people) to make sense of texts, but that are unsuited for sharing with others, then there is a great opportunity for such tools in ebooks and web browsers. The results of our experiment indicate that our prototypes are good models for tied versions of such products. There is clearly much need for further research and product development in this area.

    1. Human Factors

      We contend that as with shared annotation, making shared glossaries useful is more a matter of human factors than technological sophistication. This view is supported by previous research about glossaries (see Literature Review section). Furthermore, Blustein [2000] found that user interface factors had a greater impact on users' success with a hypertext linking system than the accuracy of the links.

    2. Glossaries as Bridges

      A glossary maintained by a reader in a traditional (codex) text may be kept on a loose piece of paper that the reader moves from page to page as they read — indeed this is often done with mathematical texts when notation is unfamiliar to the reader. If such a glossary includes notes about the relevance of terms and concepts and not merely definitions then it can act as a type of bridge to connect (in the reader's mind) disparate parts of the text. The bridge concept is more similar to an open-linking service [Carr et al., 1998] than to a user-created hypertext link, because the bridge is not explicitly recorded as being between two parts of the text. Since glossaries can provide a way to help readers to make mental associations between two parts of a text they have the possibility to improve readers understanding of hypertextual documents. The success of such a technique however this may depend on the coherence of the reader's model of the text, and a discussion of the psychological factors that are believed to be involved is beyond the scope of this article.


References

References for works cited in this text chunk appear below. References for all works cited are available in a separate chunk.

[Bernstein, 2004]
Daybook: High Tech and Low Tech. [blog entry for 05 March 2004]
Note: Bernstein quotes Doug Miller.
<URL:http://markBernstein.org/Mar0401/DaybookHighTechandLowTech.html>
[Blustein, 1996]
Annotations on K&R II. [webpage] Created 20 January 1996. Current version 04 November 2001.
<URL:http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~jamie/C/KR/annotations.html>
[Blustein, 2000]
James Blustein. Automatically generated hypertext versions of scholarly articles and their evaluation. In [HT2K], pages 201 – 210, 2000.
<DOI:10.1145/336296.336364>.
[Brown & Brown, 2004]
P. J. Brown and Heather Brown. Integrating Reading and Writing of Documents. Journal of Digital Information, 5(1), Article No. 237, 2004-02-03, 2004.
<URL:http://jodi.ecs.soton.ac.uk/Articles/v05/i01/Brown/>.
[Carr et al., 1998]
L. A. Carr, W. Hall, and S. Hitchcock. Link Services of Link Agents? In [HT98], pages 113 – 122, 1998.
<DOI:10.1145/276627.276640>.
[Carroll, 1999]
Lewis Carrol (author) & Martin Gardner (annotator). The Annotated Alice: The Definitive Edition. W. W. Norton & Co., 1999.
ISBN 0-393-04847-0.
[Dillon, 1994]
Andrew Dillon. Designing Usable Electronic Text: Ergonomic Aspects of Human Information Usage. Taylor & Francis, 1994. ISBN 0-7484-0112-1 (cloth) / 0-7484-0113-X (paper).
[Furner et al., 1999]
Jonathan Furner, David Ellis, and Peter Willett. Inter-linker consistency in the manual construction of hypertext documents. ACM Computing Surveys, 31(4es), December 1999.
<DOI:10.1145/345966.346008> and <URL:http://www.cs.brown.edu/memex/ACM_HypertextTestbed/papers/44.html>.
[Garg & Scacchi, 1987]
Pankaj K. Garg and Walt Scacchi. On designing intelligent hypertext systems for information management in software engineering. In [HT87] pages 409 – 432, 1987.
[McKendree et al., 1995]
Jean McKendree, Will Reader, and Nick Hammon. The “Homeopathic Fallacy” in Learning from Hypertext. interactions, ii(3), July, 1995.
<DOI:10.1145/208666.208687>.
[McKnight et al., 1991]
Cliff McKnight, Andrew Dillon, and John Richardson. Navigation Through Complex Information Spaces. In Cliff McKnight, Andrew Dillon, and John Richardson (editors). Hypertext in Context, (ISBN 0-521-37488-X) Chapter 4. Cambridge University Press, 1991.
<URL:http://telecaster.lboro.ac.uk/HiC/chapter4.html>. [This link is not authoritative.]
[Tague-Sutcliffe, 1995]
Jean Tague-Sutcliffe. Measuring Information: An Information Services Perspective. Academic Press, 1995.
ISBN 0-12682660-9.

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