Information about Exformation
Exformation is a term meaning explicitly discarded information.
It was coined by Danish physicist Tor Nørretranders in his book The User Illusion published in English 1998. Originally spelt eksformation in Danish, the word first appeared in English in an article Nørretranders wrote in 1992.
Exformation is everything we do not actually say but have in our heads, when or before we say anything at all whereas information is the measurable, demonstrable utterance we actually come out with.
If someone is talking about cows, for example, what is said will be unintelligible unless the person listening has some prior idea what a cow is, what it is good for, and in what context one might encounter one. From the information content of a message alone, there is no way of measuring how much exformation it contains.
In 1862 the author Victor Hugo wrote to his publisher asking how his most recent book, Les Misérables, was getting on. Hugo just wrote “?” in his message, to which his publisher replied “!”, to indicate it was selling well. This exchange of messages would have no meaning to a third party because the shared context is unique to those taking part in it. The amount of information (a single character) was extremely small, and yet because of exformation a meaning is clearly conveyed.
Meaning
Effective communication depends on a shared body of knowledge between the persons communicating. In using words, sounds and gestures the speaker has deliberately thrown away a huge body of information, though it remains implied. This shared context is called exformation.Exformation is everything we do not actually say but have in our heads, when or before we say anything at all whereas information is the measurable, demonstrable utterance we actually come out with.
If someone is talking about cows, for example, what is said will be unintelligible unless the person listening has some prior idea what a cow is, what it is good for, and in what context one might encounter one. From the information content of a message alone, there is no way of measuring how much exformation it contains.
In 1862 the author Victor Hugo wrote to his publisher asking how his most recent book, Les Misérables, was getting on. Hugo just wrote “?” in his message, to which his publisher replied “!”, to indicate it was selling well. This exchange of messages would have no meaning to a third party because the shared context is unique to those taking part in it. The amount of information (a single character) was extremely small, and yet because of exformation a meaning is clearly conveyed.
See also
- Shannon–Hartley theorem
- Code rate
- Redundancy
- Channel capacity
- Systems theory
- Negentropy
- Complex systems
Tor Nørretranders (born June 20, 1955) is a Danish author of popular science. He was born in Copenhagen, Denmark. His books and lectures have primarily been focused on science and its role in society, often with Nørretranders' own advice about how society should integrate new
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The term user illusion originated at Xerox PARC to describe the illusion created for the user by a human-computer interface, for example the visual metaphor of a desktop used in many Graphical user interfaces.
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Communication is a process that allows organisms to exchange information by several methods. Communication requires that all parties understand a common language that is exchanged with each other.
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Knowledge is defined (Oxford English Dictionary) variously as (i) expertise, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education; the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject, (ii) what is known in a particular field or in total; facts and information or
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Information is the result of processing, gathering, manipulating and organizing data in a way that adds to the knowledge of the receiver. In other words, it is the context in which data is taken.
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Victor-Marie Hugo
Born: 26 February 1802
Died: 22 May 1885
Literary movement: Romanticism
Debut works: Nouvelles Odes et Poésies Diverses (New Odes and Various Poems) (1824)
Influences: Walter Scott
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Born: 26 February 1802
Died: 22 May 1885
Literary movement: Romanticism
Debut works: Nouvelles Odes et Poésies Diverses (New Odes and Various Poems) (1824)
Influences: Walter Scott
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Les Misérables
Portrait of "Cosette" by Emile Bayard, from the original edition of Les Misérables (1862)
Author Victor Hugo
Country France
Language French
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher A.
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Portrait of "Cosette" by Emile Bayard, from the original edition of Les Misérables (1862)
Author Victor Hugo
Country France
Language French
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher A.
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The code rate or information rate of a forward error correction (FEC) code, for example a convolutional code, states what portion of the total amount of information that is useful (non redundant). The code rate is typically a fractional number.
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Redundancy in information theory is the number of bits used to transmit a message minus the number of bits of actual information in the message. Informally, it is the amount of wasted "space" used to transmit certain data.
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In electrical engineering and computer science, channel capacity is the tightest upper bound on the amount of information that can be reliably transmitted over a communications channel.
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Systems theory is an interdisciplinary field of science. It studies the nature of complex systems in nature, society, and science. More specificially, it is a framework by which one can analyze and/or describe any group of objects that work in concert to produce some result.
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In 1943 Erwin Schrödinger used the concept of “negative entropy” in his popular-science book What is life?. Later, Léon Brillouin shortened the expression to a single word, negentropy.
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Complex systems is a subfield of a systems science or systemics, which studies the common properties of systems considered complex in the nature, society and science. It is also called complex systems theory, complexity science, study of complex systems
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