Communication Design Quarterly
86 articlesMay 2020
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Book review of "Design, ecology, politics: towards the ecocene" by Joanna Boehnert (2018). Bloomsbury Academic. ↗
Abstract
Design, Ecology, Politics: Towards the Ecocene is a must-read for any communication design educator or practitioner concerned with the deleterious effects of the Anthropocene (or its critical counterpart the Capitalocene), which names the current geological era marked by human dominance over environmental processes. In this book, Dr. Joanna Boehnert deftly incorporates ecological thinking into design pedagogy to articulate a path forward for a new era of human-environment relations built on cooperation rather than exploitation. Existential threats abound in a modern era built on endless consumption and production cycles driven by market logic. For too long, designers have tacitly participated in the destructive tendencies of the neoliberal political project by convincing themselves and others that their work is neutral. This book is a wake-up call that highlights the role that design has played in constructing the precarious conditions of the modern world and, more importantly, the role designers could play in charting a way out of the mess humanity has made.
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Book review of "Bodies in flux: scientific methods for negotiating medical uncertainty" by Christa Teston (2017). University of Chicago Press. ↗
Abstract
At the time of this writing, the New York Times reports that more than 10,000 people have died from the coronavirus worldwide. Healthcare systems across the globe are struggling to keep up with the number of cases being confirmed each day. Over 50 studies on the virus were published in January 2020 as scientists worked to better understand it and potentially develop a vaccine (McFall-Johnsen, 2020) but there has not yet been a vaccine developed. While this is not the only global health crisis happening in early 2020, it is likely the one to which many readers have paid closest attention. We cannot know now the impact the spread of the coronavirus will have on the globe and yet individuals and organizations are currently working to transform uncertainty about the virus into evidence that governments and the public can use to make actionable decisions. While the book under review here does not deal with the coronavirus specifically, it does engage with issues of key importance related to the coronavirus: those of medical certainty and those of medical uncertainty.
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On behalf of SIGDOC and CDQ, we wanted to reach out to all of you and thank you for all you do in this difficult time. Our organization's greatest strength is in its members, and we hope you are all staying as safe and sane as possible while COVID-19 changes the way we work and play. SIGDOC has yet to reach an official decision on the viability or nature of our 2020 Conference in Denton, TX, but the Executive Committee along with this year's Conference Committee, lead by Stacey Pigg, are in consistent contact and weighing options. Above all else, our decision will be informed by the values that we have articulated as an organization, which are: valuing human well-being; engaging in financial stewardship; respecting labor; foregrounding accessibility; supporting early-career scholars; establishing continuity; managing community and networkbuilding; supporting innovation; valuing industry practices; and maintaining and facilitating interorganizational and international relationships. The option for SIGDOC 2020 that best addresses these core values will be the option we select. For now, we have confirmation that the proceedings publications will be moving forward and supported by ACM and included in the Digital Library regardless of the decision we make on the conference. This is great news, and fulfills our values in supporting scholarship and valuing the labor done by our authors, reviewers, and our program cochairs, Josephine Walwema and Daniel Hocutt, who have worked diligently in the midst of the pandemic. CDQ will continue to publish as often as we are able. We understand that our workflows have changed, dramatically for some of us. So while it may be that extra time is occasionally needed for a review, we remain committed to providing you as rapid turnaround as we can, and publishing cutting-edge research on communication design through our original articles, experience reports, and book reviews. In this issue, for example, we are pleased to share with you Sonia Stephens and Dan Richards' "Story mapping and sea level rise: Listening to global risks at street level," and Jennifer Roth Miller, Brandy Dieterle, Jennifer deWinter, and Stephanie Vie's "Social media in professional, technical, and scientific communication programs: A heuristic to guide future use." These two excellent articles are accompanied by reviews of Jonanna Boehnert's Design, ecology politics: Towards the ecocene, reviewed by Ryan Cheek, and Christa Teston's Bodies in flux: Scientific methods for negotiating medical uncertainty, reviewed by Ella Browning.
November 2019
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Review of "Algorithms of oppression: how search engines reinforce racism," by Noble, S. U. (2018). New York, New York: NYU Press. ↗
Abstract
Read and considered thoughtfully, Safiya Umoja Noble'sAlgorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racismis devastating. It reduces to rubble the notion that technology is neutral and ideology-free. Noble's crushing the neutrality myth does several things. First, this act lays foundations for her argument: only if you recognize and understand that technology is built with, and integrates, bias, can you then be open to her primary thesis: search engines advance discriminatory and often racist content. Second, it banishes a convenient response for many self-identified meritocratic Silicon Valley "winners" and their supporters. Post-reading, some individuals may retain their beliefs in a neutral and ideology-free technology in spite of the overwhelming evidence and citations Noble brings to bear. Effective countering of Noble's claims is unlikely to occur. For professionals working in technology, information, argumentation, and/or rhetorical studies,Algorithms of Oppressionis refreshing. Agonistic towards structural racism and its defenses, single-minded in its evidentiary presentation, collaborative in its acknowledgement of others' scholarship and research, Noble models many academic, critical, and social moves. Technology scholars and writers will find inAlgorithms of Oppressiona masterful mentor text on how to be an activist researcher scholar. Noble also makes this enjoyable reading. It is uncommon to find academic books that can simultaneously be read, used, and applied by academics and non-academics alike.
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Review of "Network sense: methods for visualizing a discipline," by Mueller, D. N. (2017). Fort Collins, Colorado: WAC Clearinghouse. ↗
Abstract
Derek N. Mueller's Network Sense: Methods for Visualizing a Discipline (2017) presents a compelling argument for adding distant reading and thin description to the Rhetoric, Composition, and Writing Studies (RCWS) research methods portfolio. Not only can these methods help professionals address information overload, but the methods also support disciplinary wayfinding and network awareness for veteran and initiate practitioners and scholars alike. Network Sense 's explicit goal is to help current and new members in RCWS avoid information overload and better understand their discipline and where it is going. Mueller's presentation and evidence builds upon lived academic experience of ever-expanding growth in research, conferences, publications, and professional activities in RCWS. Similarly, his detailing the dearth of non-local, reliable, and consistently gathered data articulates the experience and lived frustration of many scholars. Finally, his presentation and analysis regarding the increasing number of scholars cited at the end of the long tail as opposed to having more repeatedly cited authors explains the felt experience of sharing or disciplinary niching or potential diffusion. Winning the 2018 Computers and Composition Distinguished Book Award, as well as the 2019 Research Impact Award by the Conference on College Composition and Communication, underscores this book's value to its fields.
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Abstract
The role of a book review is to serve the authors by bringing visibility to (and increasing the impact of) their work. For readers, it offers a snapshot so they can decide whether or not to invest in the book. For Communication Design Quarterly (CDQ) , book reviews should aim for an audience made of practitioners, teachers, and researchers. So, to resist the bifurcation between academic scholarship and practitioners, we recognize that many of our readers' concerns are shared. Books that are selected for review should be useful for scholars and practitioners alike. Similarly, reviews should aim to address shared concerns.
August 2019
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Abstract
From the perspective of an instructor who teaches "Productivity and Tools" in a Technical Communication program, many concepts from the essays in Rhetoric and Experience Architecture ring true, such as when the writers say we need to focus on human experiences that are augmented by technology. Students enter my classes, and often the technologies they seek to use are their masters. My wish is that they learn to make those technologies serve them as they go forward to design human interactions with complex systems, and that they become sensitive to multi-faceted scenes of rhetorical relations in user experience (UX). In Rhetoric and Experience Architecture , Potts and Salvo successfully foreground the rhetorical dimensions of user experience.
January 2019
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Bridgeford, T., & St.Amant, K. (Eds.), (2015). Academy-industry Relationships and Partnerships: Perspectives for Technical Communicators. Amityville, NY: Baywood Publishing Company.
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Willerton, R. (2015). Plain Language and Ethical Action: A Dialogic Approach to Technical Communication in the Twenty-First Century. New York: Routledge.
October 2018
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Tettegah, S. Y., & Garcia, Y. E. (Eds.). (2016). Emotions, Technology, and Health. London: Elsevier. Sharon Y. Tettegah and Yolanda Evie Garcia's collection Emotions, Technology, and Health surveys how technologies "old" (e.g., photographs, the telephone) and "new" (e.g., mobile apps, robots, sensors) "mediate" patients' emotions within the context of processes, individuals, and spaces part of, adjacent to, or outside of the clinical healthcare setting (p. xvii). The collection also explores technology's mediation of practitioner and caregiver emotions. Overall, Tettegah and Garcia hope to expand the notion of "telehealth" beyond the remote or virtual delivery of health services to something that also encompasses "technology-based interventions in hospitals and other treatment settings that do not include distance as a necessary component" (p. xv).
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Abstract
Skinner, K., & Merholz, P. (2016). Org Design for Design Orgs: Building and Managing In-House Design Teams. O'Reilly Media. In Org Design for Design Orgs: Building and Managing In-House Design Teams , Kristin Skinner and Peter Merholz lay out a practical guide for "creating and leading design teams" within the context of design as "part of strategic planning" (Appendix B). A practical guide, the book is divided into ten chapters, each dealing with a component of working with design teams. The book aims to bridge the gap left out by texts that focus on methods, tools, and outcomes, but leave out the practical elements of setting up design teams. It shows how design teams can operate with a design culture that successfully interacts with other departments within an organization in the digital and connected age.
February 2018
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Review of " Fundamentals of User-Centered Design: A Practical Approach ," by Still, B., & Crane, K. (2017). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ↗
Abstract
Over the past 100 years, user-centered design (UCD) has evolved from an idea to a developed area of research in design communication for academics and practitioners. Since UCD was coined by Donald Norman in 1986, it has slowly become a guiding theory behind many design practices, pushing user needs over technological desires. In Fundamentals of User-Centered Design: A Practical Approach , Brian Still and Kate Crane illustrate the history, implementation, and best and worst practices in UCD. This book pulls from expertise in both academia and industry to create a handbook on UCD in both a print and eBook edition. Using their combined experiences, Still and Crane provide thoughtful commentary on the current state of UCD by establishing theory and applying it to their own work and the work of others within the field of design.
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Review of " Exploratory Programming for the Arts and Humanities ," by Montfort, N. (2016). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ↗
Abstract
Coding, like other forms of written communication, is both science and art. This is not a new or revolutionary idea. In 1974, Donald Knuth published "Computer Programming as an Art" and declared that "[a] programmer who subconsciously views himself as an artist will enjoy what he does and will do it better" (p. 673). In 1984, Steven Levy's Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution introduced us to the Hacker Ethic, one tenet of which is that we can create art and beauty on the computer (p. 31). Many other authors and coders have argued similar cases about the socially situated nature of programming since.
March 2017
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Review of "Communicating Mobility and Technology: A Material Rhetoric for Persuasive Transportation," by Pflugfelder, E. H. (2017). New York: Routledge, 2017 ↗
Abstract
Humans are so enmeshed in mobility systems that they identify with themselves through those systems. InCommunicating Mobility and Technology: A Material Rhetoric for Persuasive Transportation,Ehren Pflugfelder (2017) uses the term "automobility" to describe both "the specific kinds of mobility afforded by independent, automobile-related movement technologies" and "the complex cultural, bodily, technological, and ecological ramifications of our dependence on separate mobility technologies" (p. 4). Given identities enmeshed in ecologies of systems involving human and nonhuman actors through which transportation emerges, automobility is described as a "wicked problem" to be solved, in part, by technical communicators and communication designers naming and revealing the persuasive power of transportation systems. Understanding this persuasive power benefits practitioners by revealing the shared agency of automobility among the car-driver assemblage, and academics, by offering a framework for recognizing transportation as persuasive and therefore rhetorical.
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Designing online resources for safety net healthcare providers: users' needs and the evidence-based medicine paradigm ↗
Abstract
As the healthcare system in the United States becomes more complex, so does the information needed for administrators and clinicians to keep apprised of new regulatory and systemic changes. In this article, I use a review and analysis of an online resource project to identify effective practices to educate and support healthcare safety net organizations, or those clinics that serve low-income populations. The project team consisted primarily of healthcare researchers who used a systematic review of the scholarly literature to develop online systems for transmitting information about healthcare payment and service delivery reform to those serving low income populations. As the technical communicator working on this project, the author advocated incorporating concepts of user research and user-centered design to the project team. This research included a survey of provider-users. The analysis of this project revealed that, in the health and medical community, evidence-based medicine and the genre of systematic literature review may be privileged such that provider-user needs for information seeking are not taken into account when designing online communication based on these reviews. Communication designers may need to work with and adapt the work of translation science and knowledge-to-action to develop more user-centered online content for provider education.
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Review of "The Mobile Story: Narrative Practices with Locative Technologies," by Farman, J. (Ed.). (2014). New York, NY: Routledge ↗
Abstract
The Mobile Story: Narrative Practices with Locative Technologiesedited by Jason Farman brings together communication designers and theorists to offer numerous approaches for creating digital stories in an age of mobile, locative media. Contrasting the popular conception that mobile devices are a distraction, Farman argues the growing ubiquity of mobiles has led to their interface disappearing through daily use (p. 5). Users no longer need to consciously focus their attention on their devices and can instead seamlessly use such devices for everyday tasks. Due to this growing familiarity, the projects in the book "seek to "defamiliarize" people with their places and the technologies that mediate those places" (p. 5) in order to push interface to the forefront of users' attentions and see how mobiles provide a unique lens through which they interact with the world around them.
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This article examines information source selection behavior among maintenance technicians and how this behavior might influence the design of technical information. For this entry, "maintenance technicians" are individuals who maintain machine equipment (e.g., generators or bearings) in industrial enterprises, and this process includes the troubleshooting of problems and the repairing of machine equipment. In this entry, the authors use a review of the literature on information source selection behavior to discuss core concepts within the field of source selection behavior. Three of the main concepts examined are "information," "information source," and "source preference criteria." These core concepts function as a frame of reference for discussing how maintenance technicians might select information sources to perform maintenance activities. The authors also use these concepts to review why certain sources are selected for use over others. The results tentatively suggest maintenance technicians prefer information sources that can be adapted to specific workplace contexts.
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Review of "Risk Communication and Miscommunication: Case Studies in Science, Technology, Engineering, Government, and Community Organizations," by Boiarsky, C. (2016). Boulder, CO: University of Colorado Press ↗
Abstract
What if something as seemingly routine as an email or an interoffice memorandum could make the difference between preventing a crisis or allowing a dangerous situation to deteriorate? This is the question Carolyn Boiarsky asks her readers to grapple with in Risk Communication and Miscommunication: Case Studies in Science, Technology, Engineering, Government, and Community Organizations, as she presents analyses of communication artifacts in case studies from the last few decades of US history. In a year that brought catastrophic flooding in Louisiana and national controversy over a proposed oil pipeline's threats to drinking water and sacred sites on Native American land, Boiarsky's case studies---which include the 2010 BP/ Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion, the 2011 opening of the Mississippi Spillway during river flooding, and the 2014 expansion of the Enbridge Pipeline after a leak in Michigan four years prior---are a timely addition to the literature on risk communication. Communication designers will find this book particularly useful because of its concrete, actionable strategies for practitioners and chapter summaries that lend themselves to quick access for future reference.
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Review of "The Language of Technical Communication," by Gallon, R. (2016). Laguna Hills, CA: XML Press ↗
Abstract
Ray Gallon's collection The Language of Technical Communication attempts to standardize the terminology used in the field by offering concise definitions for 52 key terms, each authored by a contributor with relevant expertise. As a reference work, this book resists summarization. In this review, I will instead assess the text according to criteria appropriate for a reference: ease of use, selection of included terms, and quality of the definitions provided. Although Gallon forwards no explicit thesis, by prioritizing information related to content management, the book does make a claim about the future of communication design. Individuals who are new to the field or whose responsibilities are expanding into content management will find The Language of Technical Communication valuable, while scholars and experienced communication designers will appreciate the contributors' consistent emphasis on the future of the discipline.
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Review of "All edge: Inside the new workplace networks. by Spinuzzi, C.," University of Chicago Press: Chicago (2015) ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "All edge: Inside the new workplace networks. by Spinuzzi, C.," University of Chicago Press: Chicago (2015) Author: Sarah K. Gunning Towson University Towson UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 4Issue 2March 2016 pp 64–68https://doi.org/10.1145/3068698.3068705Published:22 March 2017Publication History 0citation19DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads19Last 12 Months2Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of "Intertwingled: Information changes everything. by Morville, P.," Semantic Studios, Ann Arbor, MI (2014) ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Intertwingled: Information changes everything. by Morville, P.," Semantic Studios, Ann Arbor, MI (2014) Author: Stacey L. Pigg North Carolina State University North Carolina State UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 4Issue 2March 2016 pp 69–72https://doi.org/10.1145/3068698.3068706Published:22 March 2017Publication History 0citation28DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads28Last 12 Months1Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of "Managing Chaos: Digital Governance by Design by Welchman, L.," New York: Rosenfeld Media (2015) ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Managing Chaos: Digital Governance by Design by Welchman, L.," New York: Rosenfeld Media (2015) Author: Christopher Andrews Texas A&M University Texas A&M UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 4Issue 2bJune 2016 pp 49–53https://doi.org/10.1145/3068755.3068762Published:22 March 2017Publication History 0citation110DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads110Last 12 Months5Last 6 weeks0 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of "Mapping Experiences: A Guide to Creating Value through Journeys, Blueprints, and Diagrams by Kalbach, J.," Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly Media (2016) ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Mapping Experiences: A Guide to Creating Value through Journeys, Blueprints, and Diagrams by Kalbach, J.," Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly Media (2016) Author: Dave Jones Sundog SundogView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 4Issue 2bJune 2016 pp 44–48https://doi.org/10.1145/3068755.3068761Published:22 March 2017Publication History 0citation308DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads308Last 12 Months41Last 6 weeks3 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
January 2016
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Review of "World 3.0: Global prosperity and how to achieve it by P. Ghemawat", Harvard Business Review Press 2011 ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "World 3.0: Global prosperity and how to achieve it by P. Ghemawat", Harvard Business Review Press 2011 Author: Guiseppe Getto East Carolina University East Carolina UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 4Issue 1November 2015 pp 73–76https://doi.org/10.1145/2875501.2875508Published:08 January 2016Publication History 0citation66DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads66Last 12 Months10Last 6 weeks0 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of "Rhetorical memory: A study of technical communication and information management by S. Whittemore", University of Chicago Press 2015 ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Rhetorical memory: A study of technical communication and information management by S. Whittemore", University of Chicago Press 2015 Author: Benjamin Lauren Michigan State University Michigan State UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 4Issue 1November 2015 pp 77–80https://doi.org/10.1145/2875501.2875509Published:08 January 2016Publication History 0citation11DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads11Last 12 Months2Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
September 2015
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Abstract
A primary information source for many patients and caregivers is an organization's website. This study analyzes 17 of the top hospitals in the U.S. to determine how they are communicating about the role of the hospitalist in the care of patients. Beginning with a review of the evolution and implantation of the hospitalist in the hospital setting, this paper then goes on to outline the information gathered and analyzed from the websites used in this study. The findings indicate that hospital systems need to improve the types and kinds of communication that it posts on their websites to assist patients with their information needs.
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Review of "Rhetoric in the Flesh: Trained Vision, Technical Expertise, and the Gross Anatomy Lab. by T. Kenny Fountain" New York, NY: Routledge, 2014. ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Rhetoric in the Flesh: Trained Vision, Technical Expertise, and the Gross Anatomy Lab. by T. Kenny Fountain" New York, NY: Routledge, 2014. Author: Molly Kessler University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 3Issue 4August 2015 pp 91–96https://doi.org/10.1145/2826972.2826982Published:17 September 2015Publication History 0citation20DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads20Last 12 Months4Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my Alerts New Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
March 2015
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Review of " Implementing Responsive Design: Building Sites for an Anywhere, Everywhere Web by Tim Kadlec", New Riders, 2013. ISBN#: 978-0-321-82168-3 ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Implementing Responsive Design: Building Sites for an Anywhere, Everywhere Web by Tim Kadlec", New Riders, 2013. ISBN#: 978-0-321-82168-3 Author: Daniel L. Hocutt University of Richmond University of RichmondView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 3Issue 2February 2015pp 93–96https://doi.org/10.1145/2752853.2752862Published:27 March 2015Publication History 0citation28DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads28Last 12 Months2Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of " Mining the Social Web by Matthew A. Russell", Second edition. O'Reilly, 2013. ISBN: 978-1-4493-6761-9 ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Mining the Social Web by Matthew A. Russell", Second edition. O'Reilly, 2013. ISBN: 978-1-4493-6761-9 Author: Donovan Warren Old Dominion University Old Dominion UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 3Issue 2February 2015 pp 97–99https://doi.org/10.1145/2752853.2752863Published:27 March 2015Publication History 0citation14DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads14Last 12 Months1Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of " Playful Design: Creating Game Experiences in Everyday Interfaces. John Ferrara", Brooklyn, NY: Rosenfeld Media. 2012. ISBN: 978-1933820149 ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Playful Design: Creating Game Experiences in Everyday Interfaces. John Ferrara", Brooklyn, NY: Rosenfeld Media. 2012. ISBN: 978-1933820149 Author: Matthew Beale Old Dominion University Old Dominion UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 3Issue 2February 2015 pp 100–103https://doi.org/10.1145/2752853.2752864Published:27 March 2015Publication History 0citation41DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads41Last 12 Months15Last 6 weeks4 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
January 2015
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Book review: "Responding to Technology --- Resistance through Technology" (12-13), and "User Agency and Technology" (13-14). ↗
Abstract
No abstract available.
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Review of "Topsight: A guide to studying, diagnosing, and fixing information flow in organizations by Clay Spinuzzi" Amazon CreateSpace 2013 978-1481960069. ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "Topsight: A guide to studying, diagnosing, and fixing information flow in organizations by Clay Spinuzzi" Amazon CreateSpace 2013 978-1481960069. Author: Chris Bethel East Carolina University East Carolina UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 2Issue 4August 2014 pp 81–83https://doi.org/10.1145/2721874.2721879Published:13 January 2015Publication History 0citation19DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads19Last 12 Months5Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my Alerts New Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Book review: "The Digital Rights Movement: The Role of Technology in Subverting Digital Copyright by Hector Postigo". The MIT Press, 2012. ISBN#: 978-0-262-01795-4 ↗
Abstract
No abstract available.
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Book review: "Morse, T.A. (2014). Signs and wonders: Religious rhetoric and the preservation of sign language". Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press. ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Book review: "Morse, T.A. (2014). Signs and wonders: Religious rhetoric and the preservation of sign language". Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press. Author: Janine M. Butler East Carolina University East Carolina UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 3Issue 1November 2014 pp 50–53https://doi.org/10.1145/2721882.2721889Published:13 January 2015Publication History 0citation9DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads9Last 12 Months1Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my Alerts New Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of "PowerPoint, Communication, and the Knowledge Society by Hubert Knoblauch" Cambridge University Press 2013. ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "PowerPoint, Communication, and the Knowledge Society by Hubert Knoblauch" Cambridge University Press 2013. Author: Beth Keller Michigan State University Michigan State UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 2Issue 4August 2014 pp 84–86https://doi.org/10.1145/2721874.2721880Published:13 January 2015Publication History 0citation23DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads23Last 12 Months5Last 6 weeks2 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my AlertsNew Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access
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Review of "The user experience team of one: A research and design survival guide by L. Buley" Rosenfeld Media 2013 978-1-933820-18-7. ↗
Abstract
research-article Share on Review of "The user experience team of one: A research and design survival guide by L. Buley" Rosenfeld Media 2013 978-1-933820-18-7. Author: Kristi Wiley East Carolina University East Carolina UniversityView Profile Authors Info & Claims Communication Design QuarterlyVolume 2Issue 4August 2014 pp 87–89https://doi.org/10.1145/2721874.2721881Published:13 January 2015Publication History 0citation96DownloadsMetricsTotal Citations0Total Downloads96Last 12 Months13Last 6 weeks1 Get Citation AlertsNew Citation Alert added!This alert has been successfully added and will be sent to:You will be notified whenever a record that you have chosen has been cited.To manage your alert preferences, click on the button below.Manage my Alerts New Citation Alert!Please log in to your account Save to BinderSave to BinderCreate a New BinderNameCancelCreateExport CitationPublisher SiteGet Access