Empirical Studies of Collaborative Information Seeking: A Review of Methodological Issues
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- CollInfoSeek_MethodReview_JDOC2019_AuthorVersion
Accepted author manuscript, 1.08 MB, PDF document
Purpose – Information seeking is often performed in collaborative contexts. The research into such collaborative information seeking (CIS) has been proceeding since the 1990s but lacks methodological discussions. This paper analyzes and discusses methodological issues in existing CIS studies.
Design/methodology/approach – We systematically review 69 empirical CIS studies.
Findings – The review shows that the most common methods of data collection are lab experiments (43%), observation (19%), and surveys (16%), that the most common methods of data analysis are description (33%), statistical testing (29%), and content analysis (19%), and that CIS studies involve a fairly even mix of novice, intermediate, and specialist participants. However, we also find that CIS research is dominated by exploratory studies, leaves it largely unexplored in what ways the findings of a study may be specific to the particular study setting, appears to assign primacy to precision at the expense of generalizability, struggles with investigating how CIS activities extend over time, and provides data about behavior to a larger extent than about reasons, experiences, and especially outcomes.
Research limitations/implications – The major implication of this review is its identification of the need for a shared model to which individual CIS studies can contribute in a cumulative manner. To support the development of such a model we discuss a model of the core CIS process and a model of the factors that trigger CIS.
Originality/value – This study assesses the current state of CIS research, provides guidance for future CIS studies, and aims to inspire further methodological discussion.
Design/methodology/approach – We systematically review 69 empirical CIS studies.
Findings – The review shows that the most common methods of data collection are lab experiments (43%), observation (19%), and surveys (16%), that the most common methods of data analysis are description (33%), statistical testing (29%), and content analysis (19%), and that CIS studies involve a fairly even mix of novice, intermediate, and specialist participants. However, we also find that CIS research is dominated by exploratory studies, leaves it largely unexplored in what ways the findings of a study may be specific to the particular study setting, appears to assign primacy to precision at the expense of generalizability, struggles with investigating how CIS activities extend over time, and provides data about behavior to a larger extent than about reasons, experiences, and especially outcomes.
Research limitations/implications – The major implication of this review is its identification of the need for a shared model to which individual CIS studies can contribute in a cumulative manner. To support the development of such a model we discuss a model of the core CIS process and a model of the factors that trigger CIS.
Originality/value – This study assesses the current state of CIS research, provides guidance for future CIS studies, and aims to inspire further methodological discussion.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Documentation |
Volume | 75 |
Issue number | 1 |
Pages (from-to) | 140-163 |
ISSN | 0022-0418 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2019 |
- Faculty of Humanities - collaborative information seeking, collaborative search, Information behavior, Research methods
Research areas
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