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Twenty-five years of end-user searching, Part 1: Research findings

✍ Scribed by Karen Markey


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
248 KB
Volume
58
Category
Article
ISSN
1532-2882

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

This is the first part of a two‐part article that reviews 25 years of published research findings on end‐user searching in online information retrieval (IR) systems. In Part 1 (Markey, 2007), the author seeks to answer the following questions: What characterizes the queries that end users submit to online IR systems? What search features do people use? What features would enable them to improve on the retrievals they have in hand? What features are hardly ever used? What do end users do in response to the system's retrievals? Are end users satisfied with their online searches? Summarizing searches of online IR systems by the search features people use everyday makes information retrieval appear to be a very simplistic one‐stop event. In Part 2, the author examines current models of the information retrieval process, demonstrating that information retrieval is much more complex and involves changes in cognition, feelings, and/or events during the information seeking process. She poses a host of new research questions that will further our understanding about end‐user searching of online IR systems.


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Twenty-five years of end-user searching,
✍ Karen Markey 📂 Article 📅 2007 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 231 KB 👁 1 views

## Abstract This is the second part of a two‐part article that examines 25 years of published research findings on end‐user searching of online information retrieval (IR) systems. In Part 1 (Markey, 2007), it was learned that people enter a few short search statements into online IR systems. Their