Dictionary Definition
information
Noun
1 a message received and understood [syn:
info]
2 a collection of facts from which conclusions
may be drawn; "statistical data" [syn: data]
3 knowledge acquired through study or experience
or instruction
4 (communication theory) a numerical measure of
the uncertainty of an outcome; "the signal contained thousands of
bits of information" [syn: selective
information, entropy]
5 formal accusation of a crime
User Contributed Dictionary
see Information
English
Noun
(Short form: info)- A collection of related data.
- Knowledge about a topic.
- Data that have been processed into a format that is understandable by its intended audience.
- A service provided by telephone which provides listed telephone numbers of a subscriber: see 411.
- answer to a question, minimal part of information is bit (2), which is answer yes or no.
- A sworn statement by an authorized official filed in court briefly describing the nature of each charge against a suspect, tantamount to an indictment but without the involvement of a grand jury.
Derived terms
Translations
- Arabic: (maʕlumāt) p
- trreq Armenian
- trreq Basque
- Breton: ditour (1), keloù (1, 2)
- Bulgarian: информация
- Catalan: informació
- Chinese: 信息 (xìnxī)
- Czech: informace
- Danish: information, informationer
- Dutch: informatie
- Esperanto: informo
- Estonian: informatsioon, teave
- Finnish: informaatio
- French: renseignement (1), informations f|p (1, 2)
- Georgian: ცნობება (tsnobeba), შეტყობინება (šetq῾obineba)
- German: Information (1, 2, 3), Auskunft (4)
- Greek: πληροφορία , πληροφορίες f|p
- trreq Hebrew
- Hindi: जानकारी (jānkārī) g Hindi
- Hungarian: felvilágosítás, tájékoztatás, információ
- Italian: informazione
- Japanese: (じょうほう, jōhō)
- Korean: 안내 (annae); 정보 (jeongbo)
- Latin: nuntius , scientia , doctrina
- trreq Latvian
- trreq Lithuanian
- Malay: informasi, maklumat
- Malayalam: അറിവ് (aRivu), വിവരം (vivaram)
- Marathi: माहिती (māhitī)
- trreq Mongolian
- Norwegian: informasjon g Norwegian
- trreq Old English
- trreq Persian
- Polish: informacja
- Portuguese: informação
- Romanian: informaţie
- Russian: информация (informácija)
- Serbian: informacija
- Spanish: información
- Swedish: information
- Thai: (kàao), (kôr moon)
- trreq Turkish
- Ukrainian: інформація
- Welsh: gwybodaeth
External links
French
Pronunciation
- /ɛ̃.fɔʁ.ma.sjɔ̃/
- SAMPA: /E~.fOR.ma.sjO~/
Noun
- information
- news, a piece of
information
- Tous les jours, il regarde la télé le midi pour suivre les
informations.
- Cette information nous est parvenue hier soir.
- Tous les jours, il regarde la télé le midi pour suivre les
informations.
Synonyms
- sense information renseignement
- sense a piece of information nouvelle
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Information as a concept
bears a diversity of meanings, from everyday usage to technical
settings. Generally speaking, the concept of information is closely
related to notions of constraint, communication, control,
data, form, instruction, knowledge, meaning,
mental stimulus,
pattern, perception, and representation.
Many people speak about the Information
Age as the advent of the Knowledge Age or knowledge
society, the information
society, the Information
revolution, and information
technologies, and even though informatics, information
science and computer
science are often in the spotlight, the word "information" is
often used without careful consideration of the various meanings it
has acquired.
Etymology
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the earliest historical meaning of the word information in English was the act of informing, or giving form or shape to the mind, as in education, instruction, or training. A quote from 1387: "Five books come down from heaven for information of mankind." It was also used for an item of training, e.g. a particular instruction. "Melibee had heard the great skills and reasons of Dame Prudence, and her wise information and techniques." (1386)The English word was apparently derived by adding
the common "noun of action" ending "-ation" (descended through
French from Latin "-tio") to the earlier verb to inform, in the
sense of to give form to the mind, to discipline, instruct, teach:
"Men so wise should go and inform their kings." (1330) Inform
itself comes (via French) from the Latin verb informare, to give
form to, to form an idea of. Furthermore, Latin itself already even
contained the word informatio meaning concept or idea, but the
extent to which this may have influenced the development of the
word information in English is unclear.
As a final note, the ancient Greek word for form
was eidos, and this word
was famously used in a technical philosophical sense by Plato (and later
Aristotle) to denote the ideal identity or essence of something
(see Theory of
forms). "Eidos" can also be associated with thought, proposition or even concept.
Information as a message
Information is the state of a system of interest.
Message is the information materialized.
Information is a quality of a message from a sender to one or more receivers.
Information is always about something (size of a parameter,
occurrence of an event, etc). Viewed in this manner, information
does not have to be accurate. It may be a truth or a lie, or just
the sound of a falling tree. Even a disruptive noise used to
inhibit the flow of communication and create misunderstanding would
in this view be a form of information. However, generally speaking,
if the amount of information in the received message increases, the
message is more accurate.
This model assumes there is a definite sender and at least one receiver.
Many refinements of the model assume the existence of a common
language understood by the sender and at least one of the
receivers. An important variation identifies information as that
which would be communicated by a message if it were sent from a
sender to a receiver capable of understanding the message. However,
in requiring the existence of a definite sender, the "information
as a message" model does not attach any significance to the idea
that information is something that can be extracted from an
environment, e.g., through observation, reading or
measurement.
Information is a term with many meanings
depending on context, but is as a rule closely related to such
concepts as meaning, knowledge, instruction, communication,
representation, and mental stimulus. Simply stated, information is
a message received and understood. In terms of data, it can be
defined as a collection of facts from which conclusions may be
drawn. There are many other aspects of information since it is the
knowledge acquired through study or experience or instruction. But
overall, information is the result of processing, manipulating and
organizing data in a way that adds to the knowledge of the person
receiving it.
Communication
theory provides a numerical measure of the uncertainty of an
outcome. For example, we can say that "the signal contained
thousands of bits of information". Communication theory tends to
use the concept of information
entropy, generally attributed to C.E. Shannon
(see below).
Another form of information is Fisher
information, a concept of R.A. Fisher.
This is used in application of statistics to estimation
theory and to science in general. Fisher information is thought
of as the amount of information that a message carries about an
unobservable parameter. It can be computed from knowledge of the
likelihood
function defining the system. For example, with a normal
likelihood function, the Fisher information is the reciprocal of
the variance of the law. In the absence of knowledge of the
likelihood law, the Fisher information may be computed from
normally distributed score data as the reciprocal of their second
moment.
Even though information and data are often used
interchangeably, they are actually very different. Data is a set of
unrelated information, and as such is of no use until it is
properly evaluated. Upon evaluation, once there is some significant
relation between data, and they show some relevance, then they are
converted into information. Now this same data can be used for
different purposes. Thus, till the data convey some information,
they are not useful.
Measuring information entropy
The view of information as a message came into
prominence with the publication in 1948 of an influential paper by
Claude
Shannon, "A
Mathematical Theory of Communication." This paper provides the
foundations of information
theory and endows the word information not only with a
technical meaning but also a measure. If the sending device is
equally likely to send any one of a set of N messages, then the
preferred measure of "the information produced when one message is
chosen from the set" is the base two logarithm of N (This measure
is called self-information).
In this paper, Shannon continues:
A complementary way of measuring information is
provided by
algorithmic information theory. In brief, this measures the
information content of a list of symbols based on how predictable
they are, or more specifically how easy it is to compute the list
through a program:
the information content of a sequence is the number of bits of the
shortest program that computes it. The sequence below would have a
very low algorithmic information measurement since it is a very
predictable pattern, and as the pattern continues the measurement
would not change. Shannon information would give the same
information measurement for each symbol, since they are statistically
random, and each new symbol would increase the measurement.
- 123456789101112131415161718192021
It is important to recognize the limitations of
traditional information theory and algorithmic information theory
from the perspective of human meaning. For example, when referring
to the meaning content of a message Shannon noted “Frequently the
messages have meaning… these semantic aspects of communication are
irrelevant to the engineering problem. The significant aspect is
that the actual message is one selected from a set of possible
messages” (emphasis in original).
In information theory signals are part of a
process, not a substance; they do something, they do not contain
any specific meaning. Combining algorithmic information theory and
information theory we can conclude that the most random signal
contains the most information as it can be interpreted in any way
and cannot be compressed.
Michael Reddy noted that "'signals' of the
mathematical
theory are 'patterns that can be exchanged'. There is no
message contained in the signal, the signals convey the ability to
select from a set of possible messages." In information theory "the
system must be designed to operate for each possible selection, not
just the one which will actually be chosen since this is unknown at
the time of design".
Information as a pattern
Information is any represented pattern. This view assumes
neither accuracy nor directly communicating parties, but instead
assumes a separation between an object and its representation.
Consider the following example: economic
statistics represent an economy, however
inaccurately. What are commonly referred to as data in computing, statistics, and other fields,
are forms of information in this sense. The electro-magnetic
patterns in a computer
network and connected devices
are related to something other than the pattern itself, such as
text
characters to be displayed and keyboard
input.
Signals, signs,
and symbols are also in
this category. On the other hand, according to semiotics, data is symbols
with certain syntax and information is data with a certain
semantic. Painting and
drawing contain
information to the extent that they represent something such as an
assortment of objects on a table, a profile, or a landscape. In other words,
when a pattern of something is transposed to a pattern of something
else, the latter is information. This would be the case whether or
not there was anyone to perceive it.
But if information can be defined merely as a
pattern, does that mean that neither utility nor meaning are
necessary components of information? Arguably a distinction must be
made between raw unprocessed data and information which possesses
utility, value
or some quantum of meaning. On this view, information may indeed be
characterized as a pattern; but this is a necessary condition, not a
sufficient one.
An individual entry in a telephone book, which
follows a specific pattern formed by name, address and telephone
number, does not become "informative" in some sense unless and
until it possesses some degree of utility, value or meaning. For
example, someone might look up a girlfriend's number, might order a
take away etc. The vast majority of numbers will never be construed
as "information" in any meaningful sense. The gap between data and
information is only closed by a behavioral bridge whereby some
value, utility or meaning is added to transform mere data or
pattern into information.
When one constructs a representation of an
object, one can selectively extract from the object (sampling)
or use a system of signs
to replace (encoding), or
both. The sampling and encoding result in representation. An
example of the former is a "sample" of a product; an example of the
latter is "verbal description" of a product. Both contain
information of the product, however inaccurate. When one interprets
representation, one can predict a broader pattern from a limited
number of observations (inference) or understand the relation
between patterns of two different things (decoding). One example of the
former is to sip a soup to
know if it is spoiled; an example of the latter is examining
footprints to determine the animal and its condition. In both
cases, information sources are not constructed or presented by some
"sender" of information. Regardless, information is dependent upon,
but usually unrelated to and separate from, the medium or media
used to express it. In other words, the position of a theoretical
series of bits, or even the output once interpreted by a computer or similar device, is
unimportant, except when someone or something is present to
interpret the information. Therefore, a quantity of information is
totally distinct from its medium.
Information as sensory input
Often information is viewed as a type of input to an organism or designed device.
Inputs are of two kinds. Some inputs are important to the function
of the organism (for example, food) or device (energy) by themselves. In his
book Sensory Ecology, Dusenbery called these causal inputs. Other
inputs (information) are important only because they are associated
with causal inputs and can be used to predict the occurrence of a
causal input at a later time (and perhaps another place). Some
information is important because of association with other
information but eventually there must be a connection to a causal
input. In practice, information is usually carried by weak stimuli
that must be detected by specialized sensory systems and amplified
by energy inputs before they can be functional to the organism or
device. For example, light is often a causal input to plants but
provides information to animals. The colored light reflected from a
flower is too weak to do much photosynthetic work but the visual
system of the bee detects it and the bee's nervous system uses the
information to guide the bee to the flower, where the bee often
finds nectar or pollen, which are causal inputs, serving a
nutritional function.
Information is any type of sensory input. When an
organism with a nervous
system receives an input, it transforms the input into an
electrical signal. This is regarded information by some. The idea
of representation is still relevant, but in a slightly different
manner. That is, while abstract
painting does not represent anything concretely, when the
viewer sees the painting, it is nevertheless transformed into
electrical signals that create a representation of the painting.
Defined this way, information does not have to be related to truth,
communication, or representation of an object. Entertainment
in general is not intended to be informative. Music, the performing
arts, amusement
parks, works of fiction and so on are thus forms
of information in this sense, but they are not necessarily forms of
information according to some definitions given above. Consider
another example: food supplies both nutrition and taste for those
who eat it. If information is equated to sensory input, then
nutrition is not information but taste is.
Information as an influence which leads to a transformation
Information is any type of pattern that
influences the formation or transformation of other patterns. In
this sense, there is no need for a conscious mind to perceive, much
less appreciate, the pattern. Consider, for example, DNA. The sequence of
nucleotides is a
pattern that influences the formation and development of an
organism without any need for a conscious mind. Systems
theory at times seems to refer to information in this sense,
assuming information does not necessarily involve any conscious
mind, and patterns circulating (due to feedback) in the system can be
called information. In other words, it can be said that information
in this sense is something potentially perceived as representation,
though not created or presented for that purpose.
When Marshall
McLuhan speaks of media
and their effects on human cultures, he refers to the structure of
artifacts
that in turn shape our behaviors and mindsets. Also, pheromones are often said to
be "information" in this sense.
(See also Gregory
Bateson.)
Information as a property in physics
In 2003, J. D. Bekenstein claimed there is a
growing trend in physics
to define the physical world as being made of information itself
(and thus information is defined in this way). Information has a
well defined meaning in physics. Examples of this include the
phenomenon of quantum
entanglement where particles can interact without reference to
their separation or the speed of light. Information itself cannot
travel faster than light even if the information is transmitted
indirectly. This could lead to the fact that all attempts at
physically observing a particle with an "entangled" relationship to
another are slowed down, even though the particles are not
connected in any other way other than by the information they
carry.
Another link is demonstrated by the Maxwell's
demon thought experiment. In this experiment, a direct
relationship between information and another physical property,
entropy, is
demonstrated. A consequence is that it is impossible to destroy
information without increasing the entropy of a system; in
practical terms this often means generating heat. Another, more
philosophical, outcome is that information could be thought of as
interchangeable with
energy. Thus, in the study of logic gates,
the theoretical lower bound of thermal energy released by an AND
gate is higher than for the NOT gate (because information is
destroyed in an AND gate and simply converted in a NOT gate).
Physical information is of particular importance in the theory of
quantum
computers.
Information as records
Records are a specialized form of information.
Essentially, records are information produced consciously or as
by-products of business activities or transactions and retained
because of their value. Primarily their value is as evidence of the
activities of the organization but they may also be retained for
their informational value. Sound records
management ensures that the integrity of records is preserved
for as long as they are required.
The international standard on records management,
ISO 15489, defines records as "information created, received, and
maintained as evidence and information by an organization or
person, in pursuance of legal obligations or in the transaction of
business". The International Committee on Archives (ICA) Committee
on electronic records defined a record as, "a specific piece of
recorded information generated, collected or received in the
initiation, conduct or completion of an activity and that comprises
sufficient content, context and structure to provide proof or
evidence of that activity".
Records may be retained because of their business
value, as part of the corporate
memory of the organization or to meet legal, fiscal or
accountability requirements imposed on the organization. Willis
(2005) expressed the view that sound management of business records
and information delivered "…six key requirements for good corporate
governance…transparency; accountability; due process;
compliance; meeting statutory and common law requirements; and
security of personal and corporate information."
References
Further reading
- Bekenstein, Jacob D. (2003, August). Information in the holographic universe. Scientific American.
- Luciano Floridi, (2005). 'Is Information Meaningful Data?', Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 70 (2), pp. 351 - 370. Available online at Oxford University
- Luciano Floridi, (2005). 'Semantic Conceptions of Information', The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2005 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.). Available online at Stanford University
See also
- Informatics
- Information architecture
- Information broker
- Information communication technology
- Information entropy
- Information geometry
- Information highway
- Information ladder
- Information mapping
- Information overload
- Information processing
- Information processor
- Information revolution
- Information sensitivity
- Information science
- Information system
- Information technology
- Information theory
- Infosphere
- Accuracy
- Abstraction
- Algorithmic information theory
- Classified information
- Complexity
- Cybernetics
- Exformation
- Fisher information
- Free Information Infrastructure
- Freedom of information
- Infornography
- Library and Information Science
- Medium
- Metadata
- Observation
- Philosophy of information
- Physical information
- Prediction
- Propaganda model
- Relevance
- Receiver operating characteristic
- Satisficing
- Shannon–Hartley theorem
- Systems theory
External links
- Semantic Conceptions of Information Review by Luciano Floridi for the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Principia Cybernetica entry on negentropy
- Fisher Information, a New Paradigm for Science: Introduction, Uncertainty principles, Wave equations, Ideas of Escher, Kant, Plato and Wheeler. This essay is continually revised in the light of ongoing research.
- How Much Information? 2003 an attempt to estimate how much new information is created each year (study was produced by faculty and students at the School of Information Management and Systems at the University of California at Berkeley.)
information in Afrikaans: Inligting
information in Arabic: معلومة
information in Bengali: তথ্য
information in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Інфармацыя
information in Bulgarian: Информация
information in Catalan: Informació
information in Cebuano: Impormasyon
information in Czech: Informace
information in Welsh: Gwybodaeth
information in Danish: Information
information in German: Information
information in Estonian: Informatsioon
information in Modern Greek (1453-):
Πληροφορία
information in Spanish: Información
information in Esperanto: Informo
information in Basque: Informazio
information in Persian: اطلاعات
information in French: Information
information in Galician: Información
information in Korean: 정보
information in Croatian: Informacija
information in Ido: Informo
information in Indonesian: Informasi
information in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Information
information in Icelandic: Upplýsingar
information in Italian: Informazione
information in Hebrew: מידע
information in Kazakh: Ақпарат
information in Latvian: Informācija
information in Luxembourgish: Informatioun
information in Lithuanian: Informacija
information in Hungarian: Információ
information in Macedonian: Информација
information in Malayalam: ഇന്ഫര്മേഷന്
information in Malay (macrolanguage):
Maklumat
information in Mongolian: Мэдээлэл
information in Dutch: Informatie
information in Japanese: 情報
information in Norwegian: Informasjon
information in Polish: Informacja
information in Portuguese: Informação
information in Romanian: Informaţie
information in Quechua: Willa
information in Russian: Информация
information in Albanian: Informacioni
information in Sicilian: Nfurmazzioni
information in Simple English: Information
information in Slovak: Informácia
information in Slovenian: Informacija
information in Serbian: Информација
information in Finnish: Informaatio
information in Swedish: Information
information in Thai: สารสนเทศ
information in Vietnamese: Thông tin
information in Tajik: Иттиолот
information in Turkish: Bilgi
information in Ukrainian: Інформація
information in Yiddish: אינפארמאציע
information in Chinese: 信息
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ALGOL,
COBOL, ESP, FORTRAN, accusal, accusation, accusing, acquaintance, advice, allegation, allegement, alphabetic data,
alphanumeric code, angular data, answer, arraignment, assembler, bail, bill of particulars, binary
digit, binary scale, binary system, bit, blame, brass tacks, bringing of
charges, bringing to book, broadcast journalism, bug, byte, catechization, charge, coaching, command pulses,
commands, commerce, communication, communion, compiler, complaint, computer code,
computer language, computer program, congress, connection, contact, control signals,
controlled quantity, conversation, converse, corpus, correcting signals,
correspondence,
count, data, datum, dealing, dealings, delation, denouncement, denunciation, didactics, direction, dirt, dope, edification, education, enlightenment, error, error signals, essential
facts, essentials,
exchange, experience, expertise, facts, factual base, familiarity, feedback
pulses, feedback signals, film data, gen, guidance, hexadecimal system,
illumination,
impeachment,
implication,
imputation, indictment, info, innuendo, input data, input
quantity, insinuation, instruction, instructions, intelligence, interaction, interchange, intercommunication,
intercommunion,
intercourse,
interplay, intimacy, journalism, ken, know-how, knowing, knowledge, lawsuit, laying of charges,
linguistic intercourse, lore, low-down, machine language,
message, multiple
messages, news, news
agency, news medium, news service, newsiness, newsletter, newsmagazine, newspaper, newsworthiness, noise, numeric data, octal system,
oscillograph data, output data, output quantity, pedagogics, pedagogy, plaint, play, polar data, poop, practical knowledge, presentment, press
association, private knowledge, private teaching, privity, programmed instruction,
prosecution,
punch-card data, radio,
random data, ratio cognoscendi, rectangular data, reeducation, reference
quantity, reply, report, reportage, reproach, response, ruly English,
schooling, science, self-instruction,
self-knowledge, self-teaching, signals, single messages, social
intercourse, speaking,
speech, speech circuit,
speech situation, spoon-feeding, suit, talking, taxing, teaching, technic, technics, technique, telegraph agency,
telepathy, television, the data, the
details, the dope, the facts, the fourth estate, the information,
the particulars, the picture, the press, the scoop, the score, the
specifics, the whole story, tidings, touch, traffic, truck, true bill, tuition, tutelage, tutorage, tutoring, tutorship, two-way
communication, unorganized data, unspoken accusation, veiled
accusation, visible-speech data, wire service, wisdom, word