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Human Information Behavior (HIB)

Human Information Behavior (HIB). What is information behavior? What is “information”?. Human Information Behavior (HIB). “the totality of human behavior in relation to sources and channels of information, including both active and passive information seeking, and information use”

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Human Information Behavior (HIB)

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  1. Human Information Behavior (HIB) • What is information behavior? • What is “information”? INFO 105

  2. Human Information Behavior (HIB) “the totality of human behavior in relation to sources and channels of information, including both active and passive information seeking, and information use” (Wilson, 2000) “how people need, seek, give, and use information in different contexts” (Pettigrew et al, 2001) INFO 105

  3. What is your model of “information retrieval”? INFO 105

  4. The classic information retrieval model Document representation Information Need Document Query Match INFO 105

  5. Information-seeking activity from Hancock-Beaulieu (1989) INFO 105

  6. Paradigm shift in studying information needs & uses • System-oriented • Examines use of information systems and information services; barriers to the use; satisfaction reports. • Tries to explain differences: demographic, sociological, life style, task description, etc • User-centered • “information” as something constructed by people • Understanding information use in particular situations • Asks “how questions” INFO 105

  7. Information needs & uses- two central concepts • Information? • Any message, document or information resource • Any publicly available symbolic material • Any data • Information need: a state of needing “information” • Information as • Capable of transforming image structures • Alters the cognitive structure of a receiver • Information needs as • When a person recognizes something wrong in state of knowledge and wishes to resolve the anomaly (Belkin, 1978) INFO 105

  8. An information behavior model as a way of thinking of the field Context? adopted from Wilson 1999: Models in Information Behaviour Research, Journal of Documentation, 55(3) Choice of channel? INFO 105

  9. Information needs and seeking (adopted from Wilson 1999: Models in Information Behaviour Research, Journal of Documentation, 55(3)) INFO 105

  10. Krikelas’s Information-Seeking Behavior Model Adapted from Krikelas, James (1983) Information seeking behavior: Patterns and concepts. Drexel Library Quarterly, 19, 5-20. INFO 105

  11. Sense-Making theory by Dervin Facing a gappy situation. From “Sense-Making Methodology: Communicating Communicatively With Campaign Audiences” by B. Dervin & M. Frenette, 2003. INFO 105

  12. Bates’ berry-picking model • Real-life queries change and evolve during the course of searching At each stage, with each different conception of the query, the user may identify useful information and references. In other words, the query is satisfied not by a single final retrieved set, but a serious of selections of individual references and bits of information at each stage of the ever-modifying search. (1989, p. 410) INFO 105

  13. Kuhlthau’s Information Search Process • ISP stages: • Initiation • Selection • Exploration • Formulation • Collection • Presentation • Each stage represents the primary task at each point; Thoughts, feelings, and actions commonly experienced were identified in each stage of the process • Uncertainty principle: uncertainty is a cognitive state that commonly causes affective symptoms of anxiety and lack of confidence INFO 105

  14. “Browsing is a collaborative process” • Collaboration is an important aspect of searching online IR systems • Requires explicit computerized support • Collaborative work in digital library • ARIADNE system INFO 105

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