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Information explosion

The information explosion is the rapid increase in the amount of published information or data and the effects of this abundance.[1] As the amount of available data grows, the problem of managing the information becomes more difficult, which can lead to information overload. The Online Oxford English Dictionary indicates use of the phrase in a March 1964 New Statesman article.[2] The New York Times first used the phrase in its editorial content in an article by Walter Sullivan on June 7, 1964, in which he described the phrase as "much discussed". (p11.) [3] The earliest known use of the phrase was in a speech about television by NBC president Pat Weaver at the Institute of Practitioners of Advertising in London on September 27, 1955. The speech was rebroadcast on radio station WSUI in Iowa and excerpted in the Daily Iowan newspaper two months later.[4]

Many sectors are seeing this rapid increase in the amount of information available such as healthcare, supermarkets, and governments.[5] Another sector that is being affected by this phenomenon is journalism. Such a profession, which in the past was responsible for the dissemination of information, may be suppressed by the overabundance of information today.[6]

Techniques to gather knowledge from an overabundance of electronic information (e.g., data fusion may help in data mining) have existed since the 1970s. Another common technique to deal with such amount of information is qualitative research.[7] Such approaches aim to organize the information, synthesizing, categorizing and systematizing in order to be more usable and easier to search.

Growth patterns edit

  • The world's technological capacity to store information grew from, optimally compressed, 2.6 exabytes in 1986 to 15.7 in 1993, over 54.5 in 2000, and to 295 exabytes in 2007. [8]
  • The world's technological capacity to receive information through one-way broadcast networks was 432 exabytes of (optimally compressed) information in 1986, 715 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 1993, 1,200 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2000, and 1,900 in 2007.[8]
  • The world's effective capacity to exchange information through two-way telecommunication networks was 0.281 exabytes of (optimally compressed) information in 1986, 0.471 in 1993, 2.2 in 2000, and 65 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2007.[8]

A new metric that is being used in an attempt to characterize the growth in person-specific information, is the disk storage per person (DSP), which is measured in megabytes/person (where megabytes is 106 bytes and is abbreviated MB). Global DSP (GDSP) is the total rigid disk drive space (in MB) of new units sold in a year divided by the world population in that year. The GDSP metric is a crude measure of how much disk storage could possibly be used to collect person-specific data on the world population.[5] In 1983, one million fixed drives with an estimated total of 90 terabytes were sold worldwide; 30MB drives had the largest market segment.[9] In 1996, 105 million drives, totaling 160,623 terabytes were sold with 1 and 2 gigabyte drives leading the industry.[10] By the year 2000, with 20GB drive leading the industry, rigid drives sold for the year are projected to total 2,829,288 terabytes Rigid disk drive sales to top $34 billion in 1997.

According to Latanya Sweeney, there are three trends in data gathering today:

Type 1. Expansion of the number of fields being collected, known as the “collect more” trend.

Type 2. Replace an existing aggregate data collection with a person-specific one, known as the “collect specifically” trend.

Type 3. Gather information by starting a new person-specific data collection, known as the “collect it if you can” trend.[5]

Related terms edit

Since "information" in electronic media is often used synonymously with "data", the term information explosion is closely related to the concept of data flood (also dubbed data deluge). Sometimes the term information flood is used as well. All of those basically boil down to the ever-increasing amount of electronic data exchanged per time unit. The awareness about non-manageable amounts of data grew along with the advent of ever more powerful data processing since the mid-1960s.[11]

Challenges edit

Even though the abundance of information can be beneficial in several levels, some problems may be of concern such as privacy, legal and ethical guidelines, filtering and data accuracy.[12] Filtering refers to finding useful information in the middle of so much data, which relates to the job of data scientists. A typical example of a necessity of data filtering (data mining) is in healthcare since in the next years is due to have EHRs (Electronic Health Records) of patients available. With so much information available, the doctors will need to be able to identify patterns and select important data for the diagnosis of the patient.[12] On the other hand, according to some experts, having so much public data available makes it difficult to provide data that is actually anonymous.[5] Another point to take into account is the legal and ethical guidelines, which relates to who will be the owner of the data and how frequently he/she is obliged to the release this and for how long.[12] With so many sources of data, another problem will be accuracy of such. An untrusted source may be challenged by others, by ordering a new set of data, causing a repetition in the information.[12] According to Edward Huth, another concern is the accessibility and cost of such information.[13] The accessibility rate could be improved by either reducing the costs or increasing the utility of the information. The reduction of costs according to the author, could be done by associations, which should assess which information was relevant and gather it in a more organized fashion.

Web servers edit

As of August 2005, there were over 70 million web servers.[14] As of September 2007 there were over 135 million web servers.[15]

Blogs edit

According to Technorati, the number of blogs doubles about every 6 months with a total of 35.3 million blogs as of April 2006.[16] This is an example of the early stages of logistic growth, where growth is approximately exponential, since blogs are a recent innovation. As the number of blogs approaches the number of possible producers (humans), saturation occurs, growth declines, and the number of blogs eventually stabilizes.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hilbert, M. (2015). Global information Explosion:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-AqzPe_gNs&list=PLtjBSCvWCU3rNm46D3R85efM0hrzjuAIg. Digital Technology and Social Change [Open Online Course at the University of California] freely available at: https://canvas.instructure.com/courses/949415
  2. ^ “Information.” http://dictionary.oed.com. accessed January 4, 2008
  3. ^ "U. S. WILL REMOVE REACTOR IN ARCTIC; Compacting Snow Squeezes Device Under Ice Sheet". The New York Times. 7 June 1964.
  4. ^ Weaver, Sylvester (22 Nov 1955). "The Impact of TV in the U.S." Daily Iowan. p. 2. Retrieved 18 Aug 2021. I believe that in the last few years we have set in motion an information explosion. To each man there is flooding more information than he can presently handle, but he is learning how to handle it and, as he learns, it will do him good.
  5. ^ a b c d Sweeney, Latanya. "Information explosion." Confidentiality, disclosure, and data access: Theory and practical applications for statistical agencies (2001): 43-74.
  6. ^ Fuller, Jack. What is happening to news: The information explosion and the crisis in journalism. University of Chicago Press, 2010.
  7. ^ Major, Claire Howell, and Maggi Savin-Baden. An introduction to qualitative research synthesis: Managing the information explosion in social science research. Routledge, 2010.
  8. ^ a b c "The Womartinhilbert.net/WorldInfoCapacity.html "free access to the study" and "video animation".
  9. ^ Disk/Trend report 1983,” Computer Week. Mountain View, CA. (46) 11/11/83.
  10. ^ Rigid disk drive sales to top $34 billion in 1997,” Disk/Trend News. Mountain View, CA: Disk/Trend, Inc., 1997.
  11. ^ Google Books Ngram viewer for the terms mentioned here
  12. ^ a b c d Berner, Eta S., and Jacqueline Moss. "Informatics challenges for the impending patient information explosion." Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 12.6 (2005): 614-617.
  13. ^ Huth, Edward J. "The information explosion." Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 65.6 (1989): 647.
  14. ^ Robert H Zakon (15 December 2010). "Hobbes' Internet Timeline 10.1". zakon.org. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
  15. ^ "August 2011 Web Server Survey". netcraft.com. August 2011. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
  16. ^ . Sifry's Alerts (sifry.com). April 17, 2006. Archived from the original on 9 January 2013. Retrieved 27 August 2011.

External links edit

  • Conceptualizing Information Systems and Cognitive Sustainability in 21st Century 'Attention' Economies (Includes Syllabus)
  • How Much Information? 2003
  • Surviving the Information Explosion: How People Find Their Electronic Information [1]
  • Why the Information Explosion Can Be Bad for Data Mining, and How Data Fusion Provides a Way Out
  • Information Explosion, Largest databases

information, explosion, been, suggested, that, this, article, merged, into, information, overload, discuss, proposed, since, march, 2024, information, explosion, rapid, increase, amount, published, information, data, effects, this, abundance, amount, available. It has been suggested that this article be merged into Information overload Discuss Proposed since March 2024 The information explosion is the rapid increase in the amount of published information or data and the effects of this abundance 1 As the amount of available data grows the problem of managing the information becomes more difficult which can lead to information overload The Online Oxford English Dictionary indicates use of the phrase in a March 1964 New Statesman article 2 The New York Times first used the phrase in its editorial content in an article by Walter Sullivan on June 7 1964 in which he described the phrase as much discussed p11 3 The earliest known use of the phrase was in a speech about television by NBC president Pat Weaver at the Institute of Practitioners of Advertising in London on September 27 1955 The speech was rebroadcast on radio station WSUI in Iowa and excerpted in the Daily Iowan newspaper two months later 4 Many sectors are seeing this rapid increase in the amount of information available such as healthcare supermarkets and governments 5 Another sector that is being affected by this phenomenon is journalism Such a profession which in the past was responsible for the dissemination of information may be suppressed by the overabundance of information today 6 Techniques to gather knowledge from an overabundance of electronic information e g data fusion may help in data mining have existed since the 1970s Another common technique to deal with such amount of information is qualitative research 7 Such approaches aim to organize the information synthesizing categorizing and systematizing in order to be more usable and easier to search Contents 1 Growth patterns 2 Related terms 3 Challenges 4 Web servers 5 Blogs 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksGrowth patterns editThe world s technological capacity to store information grew from optimally compressed 2 6 exabytes in 1986 to 15 7 in 1993 over 54 5 in 2000 and to 295 exabytes in 2007 8 The world s technological capacity to receive information through one way broadcast networks was 432 exabytes of optimally compressed information in 1986 715 optimally compressed exabytes in 1993 1 200 optimally compressed exabytes in 2000 and 1 900 in 2007 8 The world s effective capacity to exchange information through two way telecommunication networks was 0 281 exabytes of optimally compressed information in 1986 0 471 in 1993 2 2 in 2000 and 65 optimally compressed exabytes in 2007 8 A new metric that is being used in an attempt to characterize the growth in person specific information is the disk storage per person DSP which is measured in megabytes person where megabytes is 106 bytes and is abbreviated MB Global DSP GDSP is the total rigid disk drive space in MB of new units sold in a year divided by the world population in that year The GDSP metric is a crude measure of how much disk storage could possibly be used to collect person specific data on the world population 5 In 1983 one million fixed drives with an estimated total of 90 terabytes were sold worldwide 30MB drives had the largest market segment 9 In 1996 105 million drives totaling 160 623 terabytes were sold with 1 and 2 gigabyte drives leading the industry 10 By the year 2000 with 20GB drive leading the industry rigid drives sold for the year are projected to total 2 829 288 terabytes Rigid disk drive sales to top 34 billion in 1997 According to Latanya Sweeney there are three trends in data gathering today Type 1 Expansion of the number of fields being collected known as the collect more trend Type 2 Replace an existing aggregate data collection with a person specific one known as the collect specifically trend Type 3 Gather information by starting a new person specific data collection known as the collect it if you can trend 5 Related terms editSince information in electronic media is often used synonymously with data the term information explosion is closely related to the concept of data flood also dubbed data deluge Sometimes the term information flood is used as well All of those basically boil down to the ever increasing amount of electronic data exchanged per time unit The awareness about non manageable amounts of data grew along with the advent of ever more powerful data processing since the mid 1960s 11 Challenges editEven though the abundance of information can be beneficial in several levels some problems may be of concern such as privacy legal and ethical guidelines filtering and data accuracy 12 Filtering refers to finding useful information in the middle of so much data which relates to the job of data scientists A typical example of a necessity of data filtering data mining is in healthcare since in the next years is due to have EHRs Electronic Health Records of patients available With so much information available the doctors will need to be able to identify patterns and select important data for the diagnosis of the patient 12 On the other hand according to some experts having so much public data available makes it difficult to provide data that is actually anonymous 5 Another point to take into account is the legal and ethical guidelines which relates to who will be the owner of the data and how frequently he she is obliged to the release this and for how long 12 With so many sources of data another problem will be accuracy of such An untrusted source may be challenged by others by ordering a new set of data causing a repetition in the information 12 According to Edward Huth another concern is the accessibility and cost of such information 13 The accessibility rate could be improved by either reducing the costs or increasing the utility of the information The reduction of costs according to the author could be done by associations which should assess which information was relevant and gather it in a more organized fashion Web servers editAs of August 2005 there were over 70 million web servers 14 As of September 2007 update there were over 135 million web servers 15 Blogs editAccording to Technorati the number of blogs doubles about every 6 months with a total of 35 3 million blogs as of April 2006 ref 16 This is an example of the early stages of logistic growth where growth is approximately exponential since blogs are a recent innovation As the number of blogs approaches the number of possible producers humans saturation occurs growth declines and the number of blogs eventually stabilizes See also editBig data Extremely large or complex datasets Curse of dimensionality Difficulties arising when analyzing data with many aspects dimensions Combinatorial explosion Rapid growth of the complexity of a problem due to its combinatorial properties Data mining Process of extracting and discovering patterns in large data sets Information society Form of society Information Age Industrial shift to information technology Information filtering system which removes redundant or unwanted information at a semantic levelPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Metcalfe s law Value of a communication network is proportional the square of the number of pairwise connections Neuroenhancement Extension of cognition in the healthy Second half of the chessboard Mathematical problemPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targetsReferences edit Hilbert M 2015 Global information Explosion https www youtube com watch v 8 AqzPe gNs amp list PLtjBSCvWCU3rNm46D3R85efM0hrzjuAIg Digital Technology and Social Change Open Online Course at the University of California freely available at https canvas instructure com courses 949415 Information http dictionary oed com accessed January 4 2008 U S WILL REMOVE REACTOR IN ARCTIC Compacting Snow Squeezes Device Under Ice Sheet The New York Times 7 June 1964 Weaver Sylvester 22 Nov 1955 The Impact of TV in the U S Daily Iowan p 2 Retrieved 18 Aug 2021 I believe that in the last few years we have set in motion an information explosion To each man there is flooding more information than he can presently handle but he is learning how to handle it and as he learns it will do him good a b c d Sweeney Latanya Information explosion Confidentiality disclosure and data access Theory and practical applications for statistical agencies 2001 43 74 Fuller Jack What is happening to news The information explosion and the crisis in journalism University of Chicago Press 2010 Major Claire Howell and Maggi Savin Baden An introduction to qualitative research synthesis Managing the information explosion in social science research Routledge 2010 a b c The Womartinhilbert net WorldInfoCapacity html free access to the study and video animation Disk Trend report 1983 Computer Week Mountain View CA 46 11 11 83 Rigid disk drive sales to top 34 billion in 1997 Disk Trend News Mountain View CA Disk Trend Inc 1997 Google Books Ngram viewer for the terms mentioned here a b c d Berner Eta S and Jacqueline Moss Informatics challenges for the impending patient information explosion Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 12 6 2005 614 617 Huth Edward J The information explosion Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 65 6 1989 647 Robert H Zakon 15 December 2010 Hobbes Internet Timeline 10 1 zakon org Retrieved 27 August 2011 August 2011 Web Server Survey netcraft com August 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2011 State of the Blogosphere April 2006 Part 1 On Blogosphere Growth Sifry s Alerts sifry com April 17 2006 Archived from the original on 9 January 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2011 External links editConceptualizing Information Systems and Cognitive Sustainability in 21st Century Attention Economies Includes Syllabus How Much Information 2003 Surviving the Information Explosion How People Find Their Electronic Information 1 Why the Information Explosion Can Be Bad for Data Mining and How Data Fusion Provides a Way Out 2 Information Explosion Largest databases Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Information explosion amp oldid 1215623583, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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