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Information Seeking Processes and Models

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Consult friends, colleagues, classmates. Self-service. Information Seeking Models ... Undergraduate students; validated with high school students. Kuhlthau's ISP Model ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Information Seeking Processes and Models


1
Information Seeking Processes and Models
  • Dr. Dania Bilal
  • IS 530
  • Fall 2007

2
Charting your information seeking
  • Class Activity
  • On a piece of paper, chart your information
    seeking process from the time you have an
    information need to fulfill to the time it is met
    or unmet.

3
Information Seeking
  • Process of finding information to fill a
    knowledge gap
  • Need information to make a decision
  • Need to learn about something
  • Need to answer a question
  • Need to increase own knowledge about a subject of
    interest
  • Need information to fill other needs

4
Information Seeking
  • User interaction with IRs and sources to
    negotiate information need
  • Consult a professional human intermediary
  • User mediation/reference process
  • Consult friends, colleagues, classmates
  • Self-service

5
Information Seeking Models
  • Represent how people search for information in
    specific environments and how they interact with
    IRs and/or traditional sources to satisfy
    information needs
  • Models vary based on what researchers investigate
  • Commonality across user information seeking

6
Information Seeking Models
  • Kuhlthaus Information Search Process Model
  • Ellis Behavioral Model
  • Marchioninis Information Process Model
  • Wilsons Problem-Solving Model
  • Belkins Anomalous State of Knowledge (ASK)
  • Bates Berrypicking model

7
Kuhlthaus ISP Model
  • Information Search Process model (ISP)
  • Based on five studies in naturalistic settings
  • Emphasis on user thoughts, feelings, and actions
    rather than on systems
  • Undergraduate students validated with high
    school students

8
Kuhlthaus ISP Model
  • Information search process from the users
    perspectives Six stages
  • 1. Task initiation
  • 2. Topic selection
  • 3. Prefocus exploration
  • 4. Focus formulation
  • 5. Information collection
  • 6. Search closure
  • See Kuhlthaus 2004 article, pp. 44-50.

9
Ellis Behavioral Model
  • David Ellis describes 8 information seeking
    patterns of social scientists, physical
    scientists, and engineers in using hypertext
    (e.g., the Web).
  • Starting (Surveying)
  • Chaining
  • Monitoring
  • Browsing
  • Differentiating (Distinguishing)
  • Filtering
  • Extracting
  • Verifying
  • Ending

10
Ellis Model
See D. Turnball, 2.1.1.1-2.1.1.2.
11
Marchioninis Model
  • Problem solving approach to understanding
    information seeking process in the electronic
    environment
  • Eight processes that may work in parallel
  • Problem recognition, Problem definition,
    Selection of system/source, Problem articulation
    (query formulation), Search execution,
    Examination of results, Extraction of desired
    information Reflection, Iteration, and Stopping
    of search process

12
Wilsons Problem-Solving Model
  • T.D. Wilsons 1997 model
  • Goal-directed towards problem solving
  • Based on a survey of research in the health field
  • Users move from uncertainty to certainty through
    the problem-resolution process

13
Wilsons Problem-Solving Model
  • Stages
  • Problem identification
  • Problem definition
  • Problem resolution
  • Solution statement
  • Model has affective dimensions
  • Stages are sequential and non-linear

14
Belkins ASK Theory
  • ASK (Anomalous State of Knowledge) The cognitive
    and situational aspects that were the reason for
    seeking information and approaching an IR system
    (Saracevic, 1996).
  • Knowledge gap (anomaly) and the need to solve it

15
ASK Model
  • Definition
  • A recognition by an individual that his/her model
    of some aspect of the external world and of
    her/her position in it with respect to some
    particular situation is insufficient and
    knowledge is needed to reduce uncertainty
  • Contributions of ASK
  • Reinforced the certainty of the users needs

16
ASK Model
  • Recognized the iterative nature of information
    retrieval
  • users return to the IR system repeatedly to
    satisfy their information needs
  • Move towards system design that is user- rather
    than system-centered (people rather than
    documents)

17
Bates Berrypicking Model
  • Marcia Bates examined the search behavior of
    researchers who were experts in a particular
    field (e.g., engineers, chemists, social
    scientists)
  • Researchers do not make a single search across
    collections

18
Bates Berrypicking Model
  • they move across a variety of sources as follows
  • Bit-at-a-time retrieval not a direct route from
    information need to final retrieved set.
  • Searching changes direction, pauses, and meanders
    as the user reads retrieved documents, follows up
    on leads, and responds to shifts in thinking.
  • New information gives users new ideas, new
    directions to pursue, and a new conception of
    their information needs.

19
Bates Berrypicking Model
  • Researchers information needs and the queries
    they use to represent them these needs in systems
    are continually shifting evolving search,
    dynamic, non-linear

20
Bates Berrypicking Model
  • User information needs are not the same and they
    do change during the search process
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