๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Trust in information sources: seeking information from people, documents, and virtual agents

โœ Scribed by Morten Hertzum; Hans H.K Andersen; Verner Andersen; Camilla B Hansen


Book ID
104359299
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
279 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0953-5438

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


The notion of trust has been virtually absent from most work on how people assess and choose their information sources. Based on two empirical cases this study shows that software engineers and users of e-commerce websites devote a lot of attention to considerations about the trustworthiness of their sources, which include people, documents, and virtual agents. In the project-based software engineering environment trust tends to be a collaborative issue and the studied software engineers normally know their sources first-hand or have them recommended by colleagues. Outside this network people are cautious and alert to even feeble cues about source trustworthiness. For example, users of e-commerce websites-generally perceived as single-user environments-react rather strongly to the visual appearance of virtual agents, though this is clearly a surface attribute. Across the two cases people need access to their sources in ways that enable them to assess source trustworthiness, access alone is not enough.


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