## Abstract This article focuses on the relevance judgments made by health information users who use the Web. Health information users were conceptualized as motivated information users concerned about how an environmental issue affects their health. Users identified their own environmental health
Relevance judgment in epistemic and hedonic information searches
β Scribed by Yunjie Xu
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 272 KB
- Volume
- 58
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1532-2882
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Research in information science now regards users' relevance judgment as subjective perception. However, userβcentered studies in the extant literature mainly focus on relevance judgment in problem solving contexts in which the situational relevance of a document is the main concern for users. This study investigates users' relevance judgment in nonβproblemβsolving contexts, i.e., when users search information for epistemic value or entertainment. It is posited that informative relevance and affective relevance should be the main concerns for users. Based on H. P. Grice's (1975, 1989) communication theory and Y. Xu and Z. Chen's (2006) framework, this study tests the significance of topicality, novelty, reliability, understandability, and scope to informative relevance and affective relevance in nonβproblemβsolving contexts. This empirical study finds novelty, reliability, and topicality to be key aspects of informative relevance.
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