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The Laws of the Web : Patterns in the Ecology of Information

Part of the The MIT Press series
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An accessible explanation of the hidden patterns found within the seemingly chaotic World Wide Web. Despite its haphazard growth, the Web hides powerful underlying regularities-from the organization of its links to the patterns found in its use by millions of users.

Many of these regularities have been predicted on the basis of theoretical models based on a field of physics-statistical mechanics-that few would have thought applicable to the social domain. In this book, Bernardo Huberman explains in accessible language the laws of the Web.

One of the foremost researchers in the field, Huberman has established, for example, that the surfing patterns of individuals are describable by a precise law.

Such findings can lead to more efficient Web design and use.

They also shed light on social mechanisms whose significance goes beyond the Web.

In this sense, the Web is a gigantic informational ecosystem that can be used to quantify and test explanations of human behavior and social interaction.

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Product Details
MIT Press
0262083035 / 9780262083034
Hardback
28/09/2001
United States
116 pages, 10 illus.; 10 Illustrations, unspecified
137 x 203 mm, 290 grams
General (US: Trade)/Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More