Bonnie Nardi
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Bonnie Nardi is best known as the lead author of Information Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart, Nardi & O'Day, (MIT Press, 1998). She is widely known among librarians - especially research, reference and digital librarians - for Chapter 7 of Information Ecologies, which focused on librarians as keystone species in information ecologies.
Nardi's book inspired the title of a UK conference Information Ecologies: the impact of new information 'species' [1] (http://www.jisc.ac.uk/index.cfm?name=event_ecologies_1298) hosted, inter alia, by the UK Office of Library Networking, now known by its acronym UKOLN (http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/), and led to a keynote address by Nardi at a 1998 Library of Congress Institute on Reference Service in a Digital Age [2] (http://www.loc.gov/rr/digiref/archive/nardi.html).
Bonnie Nardi is currently a member of the faculty of the School of Information & Computer Science (http://www.ics.uci.edu) at University of California, Irvine. She had written Information Ecologies while a researcher at ATT Labs Research (http://www.research.att.com/).
Nardi's self-described theoretical orientation is "activity theory, a philosophical framework developed by the Russian psychologists Vygotsky, Luria, Leontiev, and their students. My interests are user interface design, collaborative work, computer-mediated communication, and theoretical approaches to technology design and evaluation." She is currently conducting a study of blogging.
See also Bonnie Nardi's home page (http://www.darrouzet-nardi.net/bonnie/), information ecology, information species, digital library, digital librarian.