Title: Human information behaviour: electronic resources, digital library use and evaluation
1Human information behaviour electronic
resources, digital library use and evaluation
- Jela Steinerová, Jaroslav uol
- Department of Library and Information Science,
Faculty of Arts, Comenius University Bratislava,
Slovakia, - steinerova_at_fphil.uniba.sk,
- susol_at_fphil.uniba.sk
2Agenda
- Research project VEGA interaction of man and
information environment - User surveys in Slovakia
- A model of an average user
- Differences in user groups
- Use of electronic resources
- Conclusions proposals for digital libraries
3Research project VEGA 1/9236/02 Contexts of
research project
- New challenges changes in information provision
in libraries - digital libraries
- integration of sources, user communities
- accessibility of electronic communication
- open information structures in digital environment
4Contexts of research project
- Information behaviour of users in information
seeking conceptual model - Stable preferences (motivation, sources, access)
- Patterns (orientation, cooperation, information
processing) - Evaluation (relevance, strategy, success)
5Several user studies
- 1. academic and research libraries in Slovakia
- (students, educators, research workers)
- 2. electronic resources, internet
- 3. special community (visually impaired users)
- 4. scientific and research workers (Slovak
Academy of Sciences) - 5. elderly users of public libraries
6Assumptions and goals of user studies
- strategic aspects of information seeking
- role of collaboration in information seeking
- expectations (change of knowledge states)
- first access points (catalogue, internet)
- motivation for information seeking
- professional journals
- role of simple and easy access
7Research questions of user studies
- How do users make use of electronic resources?
- Are they willing to publish in the electronic
environment?
- What are the users perceptions of information
seeking process based on constant preferences of
information use? - What are the perceptions of users during the
information seeking process? - What are the perceptions of users after the
completion of information seeking?
8User survey academic and research libraries
- 793 subjects
- 16 selected academic and research libraries
- June - July 2002
- questionnaire, methodological guidelines
- data gathering, coding, analyses
- Final Report (2004)
9A model of an average user
- 57 men, 55 students, 52 age to 25
- Good accessibility, well-arranged form
- Authorities (sources, authors)
- Immediate use (pragmatic aspect stragegic user
group)
10A model of an average user
- Broader categories (access)
- Little planning of information seeking
- Little willingness to invest time, money (free
access) - Often changes of systems, sources, services
(problem re-definition) need for help - Relevance judgements keywords
- Preferences of simple language
11Differences between user groups
- Males
- Preferences of individual work
- Confirmation of prior knowledge
- Preferences of internet
- Optimism, satisfaction
- Females
- More often use of catalogues, bibliographies
- Collaboration, help of librarians
- Relief, careful approach
12Differences between user groups males, females
13Difference between user groups
- Managers (experts)
- Timeliness
- Individual work
- More frequent use of catalogues, reference
- Students (novices)
- First source internet
- Collaboration
- Help of librarians
14Differences between user groups managers,
students
15Differences between user groups technical
sciences, social sciences
- Social sciences
- Individual work
- More help in problem formulation
- Use of less libraries
- First access points easy access
- Technical sciences
- Help of librarians
- Better organization of work
- Timely information
- Better problem formulation
16Differences between user groups by subjects
(technical, social sciences)
17User preferences in electronic resources
- user preferences in electronic communication
- attitude of users towards electronic resources in
saturation of their scientific (academic)
information needs - attitude of authors towards electronic resources
in publishing the results of scientific research. - perception of trustworthiness and reliability of
electronic resources
18User preferences in electronic resources
- user preferences along the axis of reliability/
seriousness of the resource availability/ speed
of access - usage of electronic resources
- types of electronic resources
- characteristics of electronic resources
(comparison with traditional documents) - usage of paid resources - what financial means
- percentage of users who prefer electronic
resources.
19Actual usage of electronic resources
1
6
Graph 1.
25
yes, frequently
Usage of
seldom
electronic
resources
no, not using
no answer
68
- highest level of usage up to 18 years (91,7),
3140-years old (75,3). - lower level of frequent usage 1825-years, also
highest level of rare usage (27,6). - the lowest rate of frequent usage / highest rate
of rare usage / of non-usage - social sciences
and arts
20Actual usage of electronic resources
13
51
Graph 2.
Usage
of paid
no, only freely available
el. resources
yes, paid by an
institution / library
36
yes, access paid
individually
- individual payment - decreasing with the age of
respondents, from 15,1 (1825-years) to 6,7 (51
and older). - resources paid by a library - increasing rate of
cases with increasing age - Men - more concentrated on free resources more
willing to pay individually? - Women - more aware of institutional/library
arrangements - goal-centred attitude towards
information searching?
21Types of electronic resources used
individual web pages
1
2
electronic journals
4
Graph 3.
web pages of prof.
25
7
organisations
Types of
el. resources
web pages of
used
conferences, congresses
e-mail lists
35
newsgroups
26
other resources on
internet
- Top 3 ranking valid across all age groups
- age groups 4150-old - electronic journals
first position. - user groups - researchers and scientists
22Preferring electronic resources
11
Graph 4.
Preferring
42
el. resources
yes
no
no answer
47
- decreasing tendency with an increasing age
- disciplines - weak rate of usage in social
sciences and arts rate of preferences higher by
approx. 1/2 in sciences and technical disciplines - gender - rate of acceptance is a little lower in
women than in men - user groups - researchers and managers - positive
attitude higher than negative teachers rate of
refusal is 1/3 higher than their acceptance
23Characteristics of el. resources
quick accessibility
1
5
up-to-datedness
2
Graph 5.
no charge
Characteristics
13
31
of el. resources
searching of the text
9
linking to other
resources
ecological aspect
14
multimediality
25
other
- First three characteristics - technological and
socio-economic properties of the electronic
publishing systems - Creation of hypertext links - a property of
electronic sources per se. - Access free of charge ?
24Characteristics of traditional resources
2
27
22
Graph 6.
seriousness
Characteristics
publishers renome
of traditional
reliability
resources
stability
16
simple usage
33
other
- Reliability, seriousness - features of formal
communication channels - users categories - more important for teachers
(63), researchers (65,9) and managers (75),
than for the students (55)
25Conclusions proposals for digital libraries
- Intellectual stage
- support of intellectual information processing,
selection, analysis, interpretation, synthesis - Reorganization, restructuring
- creative use of information in digital
environment - Collaboration in digital environment
- Orientation stage of information seeking
- links of information seeking with problem
solution (education) - changes of problem understanding in the course of
seeking - support initial stages of seeking, organization
of work, understanding concepts, overview of
sources, confirmation of understanding, relevance
judgement
26Conclusions library services, library and
information education
- Digital libraries support of the intellectual
stage of information seeking - Strategic and analytic user groups (relations to
information use) - Combination trustworthy traditions new
electronic communication patterns - Information literacy support
27Conclusion
- Shift of scholarly communication into electronic
environment (users, authors) - Special user groups (visually impaired)- special
needs (technologyhuman facilitation)
- design of digital reference services and systems
- collaborative systems of information use
- new methods of knowledge organization
- sensitivity to contexts of user information
styles - new contexts of knowledge integration
28Conclusions
- Integration of patterns of user behaviour into
systems, services, products - Steps LONG-TERM process
- first level - technological infrastructure,
information sources - second level content services styles values,
practices - third level people training, information
literacy - fourth level management, philosophy
- n-th level integration digital libraries,
media, learning
29Conclusions
- Challenge of information science co-existence
models of complex systems digital libraries
technologyculture
globallocal
theorypractice pastfuture
individualsocial
neutralemotional
30CONCLUSIONS information behaviour-driven
information society
- humans different roles (citizen, learner,
worker, family member, community member) - humans physical, intellectual development
- humans consumption, creativity, production
- information behaviour orientation (space, time),
intellectual activity (knowledge) - cooperation private, public sectors