INLS 500, Human Information Interactions, Spring 2015

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Weekly Schedule/Readings


 

Due Date Summary

Date Due
1/15 Sign up for Evidence Summary Topic
1/15 Database/Searching lab
1/20 Evidence Summary: Article Title Due
2/3 Diary and Analysis of an Information Seeking Event: brief description due
2/10 System/Service Proposal: Audience and Setting description due
2/17 System/Service Proposal: Preliminary plan for literature searching due
3/5 Diary and Analysis of an Information Seeking Event: Final Deliverables due
3/19 System/Service Proposal: Preliminary population data due
3/26 System/Service Proposal: Brief description of proposal due
4/2 Form teams for Scholarly Communications Assignment (In-Class)
4/7 System/Service Proposal Final: Deliverablesdue
4/9 Scholarly Communication: List of selected articles due
4/28 Scholarly Communication: Final Deliverables Due

 

Other class pages:

Syllabus / Additional Readings / Assignments / Sakai site


Please note: The annotations provided below many of these articles are a combination of insights from Barbara Wildemuth, other SILS faculty, and me. Please be sure to read through them carefully, as they often contain additional instructions related to the reading.

INTRODUCTION / BASIC CONCEPTS

1, Thursday, January 8: Trends in human information interaction research

These two brief articles were written as part of the 10th anniversary celebration (in 2009) of the Special Interest Group on Information Needs, Seeking, and Use of the American Society for Information Science & Technology. Together, they provide a brief historical overview of the general directions taken in information behavior research.

2, Tuesday, January 13: Theoretical perspectives and basic concepts

Each of these two readings takes a slightly different view of our field and, in particular, the portion of our field surveyed in this course.

3, Thursday, January 15: Databases/Search lab (some practice in expressing your own information needs)

Evidence Summary: Date/Topic Selection Due

 

4,Tuesday, January 20: Cognitive approaches to information behaviors

Evidence Summary: Article Title Due

 

5, Thursday, January 22: Alternatives: Affective approaches

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INFORMATION NEEDS

6, Tuesday, January 27: Experiencing an information need

7, Thursday, January 29: Expressing information needs

8, Tuesday, February 3: Studying/analyzing information needs

Diary and Analysis of an Information Seeking Event: Brief description due

To ensure that you're on the right track with this assignment, you should turn in a one paragraph description of the event you expect to observe. For more guidance, see "Choosing an Event" on the Assignment page.

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INFORMATION SEEKING

9, Thursday, February 5: Selection of information sources

System/Service Proposal : Setting and Target Audience Description is due

 

10, Tuesday, February 10: Interactive information retrieval as part of the information seeking process

You will submit three paragraphs:

  1. One paragraph describing the setting you've selected, including the name (real or fictional) of the organization to which you will be proposing your sytem/service.
  2. One paragraph defining/describing the client group (based on your current knowledge).
  3. One paragraph about why you selected this setting and client group.

 

11, Thursday, February 12: Assessment of information quality/value

These two studies are examining very similar behaviors, so we'll focus our attention on the differences between them. Pay attention to the research questions asked, who is included in the study sample, what data were collected, and what conclusions were drawn.

12, Tuesday, February 17: Relevance judgments

System/Service Proposal: Preliminary plan for literature searching due

 

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INFORMATION USE AND ACCESS

13, Thursday, February 19: Ways of using information/Re-Using and Re-finding information

Each of the studies below examined or proposed a different type/aspect of information use. I've tried to briefly state the type of information use with each citation. To support our class discussion today, select TWO of these articles and read them before coming to class. If the study examined additional information behaviors (e.g., information seeking), skim those sections; focus on the sections discussing USE of the information.

14, Tuesday, February 24: Information poverty and information overload

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RELATIONSHIPS AMONG INFORMATION SEEKING, USE, AND CONTEXT

15, Thursday, February 26: Domain, disciplinary, and organizational context (Academic Domains)

16, Tuesday, March 3: Domain, disciplinary, and organizational context (Community, Organizational, and Government)

17, Thursday, March 5: Everyday life information seeking

Diary and Analysis of an Information Seeking Event: Final Deliverables due

 

---- Spring Break (no class) ----

18, Tuesday, March 17: Incidental information acquisition: Browsing and serendipity

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INTERMEDIATION AND DIS-INTERMEDIATION IN INFORMATION SEEKING

19, Thursday, March 19: Human intermediaries: Reference and help desk services/Imposed Queries

 

System/Service Proposal: Preliminary Population Data due

 

20, Tuesday, March 24: Information retrieval systems as intermediaries (iConference)

 

21, Thursday, March 26: Social systems and Media (Collaborative Search/Social intermediation, Recommender systems, Social Q&A, etc. )(iConference)

System/Service Proposal: Brief description of proposed system/service is due

 

22, Tuesday, March 31: Social Systems and Media (pt. 2) - Guest Lecture

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SCHOLARLY COMMUNICATION

23, Thursday, April 2: Scholarly work and the role of scholarly communication

In Class Assignment: Form teams for In-Depth Analysis of an Example of Scholarly Communication

 

24, Tuesday, April 7: Metrics of scholarly productivity

System/Service Proposal: Final Deliverables are due

 

25, Thursday, April 9: The future of scholarly communication

In-Depth Analysis of an Example of Scholarly Communication : List of selected articles due

 

26, Tuesday, April 14: The invisible college: discovery and representation; Diffusion theory and how it applies to the diffusion of information and information technologies

27, Thursday, April 16: Scholarly publishing as an industry: Traditional and open access models; Intellectual property issues

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THE FUTURE OF INFORMATION

28, Tuesday, April 21: A new era of information?

29, Tuesday, April 23: Course wrap-up and summary

FINAL CLASS MEETING

 

April 28 (8 am): Scholarly Communications Assignment Due

 

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Creative Commons LicenseThis INLS 500 website, UNC-CH, 2014, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License, and benefitted from input received from Barbara Wildemuth, Deborah Barreau, Laura Sheble, Earl Bailey, Ruth Palmquist, and Kaitlin Costello. Address all comments and questions to Kathy Brennan at angibson@email.unc.edu. This page was last modified on January 9, 2015, by Amelia N. Gibson.