Information Overabundance: What We Don’t Know, We Don’t Know

A few months ago, Peter Shepherd, Project Director at Project COUNTER, asked me to contribute an article to Against The Grain (librarians, publishers and vendors) for their Special Issue on Metrics – The Importance of Being Measured.

I wrote about article level metrics at SSRN and how we view the changing world of information overabundance.  Here is the abstract:

Do you read everything in your field today? Do you even know what everything means any more? Readers of scholarly research are faced with an overabundance of information due to interdisciplinary subject areas, access to research at earlier and multiple stages, and simply more research from more scholars. My simple definition of innovation is the ability to create new things by being exposed to a broader and deeper set of existing things, but broader and deeper have their limits. There is no substitute for reading and truly comprehending a specific article, but there aren’t enough hours in the day to read everything. We need better tools to know what research we need to read. We need to know what we don’t know.

The issue has been published and you can download my article here.

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3 Trackbacks

  1. [...] SSRN’s Gregg Gordon explains the importance of knowing what we know we don’t know. [...]

  2. By GhostCheating | The SSRN Blog on November 24, 2010 at 2:11 pm

    [...] will be revisiting this topic over the next few weeks as it potentially relates to the pressures of Information Overabundance. Cheating may very well be correlated to the need to produce. Typically in academia, one is [...]

  3. By GhostCheating – GC.com ALPHA on December 2, 2010 at 7:37 am

    [...] will be revisiting this topic over the next few weeks as it potentially relates to the pressures of Information Overabundance. Cheating may very well be correlated to the need to produce. Typically in academia, one is [...]

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