Emily Marsh
Adjunct Faculty/Research Associate
University of Maryland
“SHOW AND
TELL:
RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN IMAGES AND TEXT"
Thursday,
March 18, 2004
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
Room 405, IS Building
Abstract: Documents—electronic
and printed—are complex tools created to communicate
messages to readers. Among the elements used in document
design are prose, images, color, and spatial relationships.
The final message is a synthesis of these components,
and the interplay among all elements is of critical concern
to people who need to convey and retrieve information
effectively. Given the complexity of this issue, there
is advice aplenty on creating effective illustrated messages,
but precious little data to implement recommendations
like the ones above.
This presentation will describe an original taxonomy
of 46 image-text relationships developed to address just
these issues. It is applicable to all subject areas and
document types. The taxonomy identifies image-text relationships
and groups them in three categories according to the
closeness of the conceptual relationship between image
and text.
The taxonomy was developed in a two-stage process: First,
an extensive review of relevant research in children’s
literature, education, library and information design,
journalism, and lexicography identified existing definitions
and classifications of image-text relationships. Next,
the taxonomy arising from the review was applied in a
content analysis of 954 image-text pairs. The pairs came
from 45 Web homepages from three domains: educational
sites for children, online newspapers, and retail business
sites. The results of this analysis will be described,
along with observations on practice and research implications
in information retrieval and document design. |