Title: Surviving the Information Explosion
1Surviving the Information Explosion
- Christine Alvarado and Jaime Teevan
2Overview
- Motivation
- Background
- Our study
- Preliminary results
- Future work
3Let Us Interview You!
- Whats the last email you read? What did you do
with it? - Have you gone back to an email youve read before?
- Whats the last file you looked at? How did you
get to it? - Have you searched for a file?
- Whats the last Web page you visited? How did you
get there? - Have you searched for anything on the Web?
4The Information Explosion
- You must extract information from
- 1.6 billion web pages Google
- Dozens of incoming emails daily
- Hundreds of files on your personal computer
5Limited Organizational Tools
6Limited Organizational Tools
- Many separate tools
- Limited organizational support
- Organizational burden on user
- Information overwhelms tools
7HaystackPersonal Information Storage
Web pages
Email
Files
Calendar
Contacts
8HaystackPersonal Information Storage
What was that paper I read last week about
Information Retrieval?
Haystack
9HaystackPersonal Information Storage
Ah yes! Thank you.
Haystack
10User Interface
Microsoft Outlook
Pine
11User Study Goals
- Search
- Frequency
- Type
- Organization
- Patterns
- Use
12Pre-Study Summer 2001Setup
- 6 subjects
- Observed/recorded working for 1-2 hours
- Follow-up interview
13Pre-studyAreas to Explore
- Window placement
- Desktop organization
- Context switches
- Navigation
- Searches
14Previous Work
- Paper documents
- Malone, 1983, Whittaker Hirshberg, 2001
- Files
- Barreau Nardi, 1995
- Web (bookmarks)
- Abrams, 1998
- Email/Calendar
- Whittaker Snider, 1996, Bellotti Smith,
2000
15Whittaker and Hirshberg, 2001
- Method
- Web survey, 50 ATT employees
- Follow-up interview, 14 employees
- Goal
- Determine attitudes toward paper information
organization - Results
- Obsolescence
- Uniqueness
- Filers vs. Pilers
16Method
- Subjects
- 15 MIT CS graduate students (5 women, 10 men)
- Setup
- 10 short interviews ( 5 min.)
- 1 long interview ( 45 min.)
- Topics
- Web, Email, Files
17Short Interviews
- 2 question types
- What was the last email/file/web page you looked
at? - Did you search for any email/file/web page?
- Goal Discover patterns in searching and browsing
18Long Interviews
- Guided tour of subjects bookmarks, email, and
file system - Goals
- Discover organizational patterns
- Relate organization to
- search/browse behavior
- Discover problems in
- organizational structure
19Remember Your Answers?
- Results based on 85 short interviews
- Using a bookmark 57 of accesses
- Typing a URL 20 of accesses
- 19 of above followed links from there
- 3 out of 13 Web searches are for information
that the user has seen before
- 64 of searched for email is found in the users
Inbox
20Results
- Quantitative
- Numbers, counts
- Reproducible
- Qualitative
- Anecdotes
- Building hypotheses
- Categorization of behaviors
21Search Preliminary Results
- Different types of searches
- Directory lookup
- Confirming information exists
- Finding a specific piece of information (QA)
- Learning about a topic (Browse)
- Cross type searches
- Interactions with people
- Searching heavily relied on, very successful
22Search Future Work
- Causes of failure
- Previously viewed information
- Additional cues used for retrieval
- Function of browsing during search
23Organization Future Work
- Consistency of organization across types
- Context used in organization
- Organizations effect on search
24Haystack Applying What We Learn
- Verify our conclusions
- Boundaries between information types
- Automation versus support
- Interaction between search and browsing
25Questions?
Contact us with comments - calvarad_at_ai.mit.edu
- teevan_at_ai.mit.edu
To learn more about Haystack http//haystack.lcs.
mit.edu