Interactive Information Retrieval: An Introduction

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Interactive Information Retrieval : An Introduction. / Borlund, Pia.

In: Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice, Vol. 1, No. 3, 09.2013, p. 12-32.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Borlund, P 2013, 'Interactive Information Retrieval: An Introduction', Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 12-32. <http://www.koreascience.or.kr/search/articlepdf_ocean.jsp?url=http://ocean.kisti.re.kr/downfile/volume/kisti/E1JSCH/2013/v1n3/E1JSCH_2013_v1n3_12.pdf>

APA

Borlund, P. (2013). Interactive Information Retrieval: An Introduction. Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice, 1(3), 12-32. http://www.koreascience.or.kr/search/articlepdf_ocean.jsp?url=http://ocean.kisti.re.kr/downfile/volume/kisti/E1JSCH/2013/v1n3/E1JSCH_2013_v1n3_12.pdf

Vancouver

Borlund P. Interactive Information Retrieval: An Introduction. Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice. 2013 Sep;1(3):12-32.

Author

Borlund, Pia. / Interactive Information Retrieval : An Introduction. In: Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice. 2013 ; Vol. 1, No. 3. pp. 12-32.

Bibtex

@article{c312fd11132a4e3a9d2f260451c037f4,
title = "Interactive Information Retrieval: An Introduction",
abstract = "The paper introduces the research area of interactive information retrieval (IIR) from a historical point of view. Further, the focus here is on evaluation, because much research in IR deals with IR evaluation methodology due to the core research interest in IR performance, system interaction and satisfaction with retrieved information. In order to position IIR evaluation, the Cranfield model and the series of tests that led to the Cranfield model are outlined. Three iconic user-oriented studies and projects that all have contributed to how IIR is perceived and understood today are presented: The MEDLARS test, the Book House fiction retrieval system, and the OKAPI project. On this basis the call for alternative IIR evaluation approaches motivated by the three revolutions (the cognitive, the relevance, and the interactive revolutions) put forward by Robertson & Hancock-Beaulieu (1992) is presented. As a response to this call the {\textquoteleft}IIR evaluation model{\textquoteright} by Borlund (e.g., 2003a) is introduced. The objective of the IIR evaluation model is to facilitate IIR evaluation as close as possible to actual information searching and IR processes, though still in a relatively controlled evaluation environment, in which the test instrument of a simulated work task situation plays a central part.",
author = "Pia Borlund",
year = "2013",
month = sep,
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "12--32",
journal = "Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice",
issn = "2287-9099",
publisher = "Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interactive Information Retrieval

T2 - An Introduction

AU - Borlund, Pia

PY - 2013/9

Y1 - 2013/9

N2 - The paper introduces the research area of interactive information retrieval (IIR) from a historical point of view. Further, the focus here is on evaluation, because much research in IR deals with IR evaluation methodology due to the core research interest in IR performance, system interaction and satisfaction with retrieved information. In order to position IIR evaluation, the Cranfield model and the series of tests that led to the Cranfield model are outlined. Three iconic user-oriented studies and projects that all have contributed to how IIR is perceived and understood today are presented: The MEDLARS test, the Book House fiction retrieval system, and the OKAPI project. On this basis the call for alternative IIR evaluation approaches motivated by the three revolutions (the cognitive, the relevance, and the interactive revolutions) put forward by Robertson & Hancock-Beaulieu (1992) is presented. As a response to this call the ‘IIR evaluation model’ by Borlund (e.g., 2003a) is introduced. The objective of the IIR evaluation model is to facilitate IIR evaluation as close as possible to actual information searching and IR processes, though still in a relatively controlled evaluation environment, in which the test instrument of a simulated work task situation plays a central part.

AB - The paper introduces the research area of interactive information retrieval (IIR) from a historical point of view. Further, the focus here is on evaluation, because much research in IR deals with IR evaluation methodology due to the core research interest in IR performance, system interaction and satisfaction with retrieved information. In order to position IIR evaluation, the Cranfield model and the series of tests that led to the Cranfield model are outlined. Three iconic user-oriented studies and projects that all have contributed to how IIR is perceived and understood today are presented: The MEDLARS test, the Book House fiction retrieval system, and the OKAPI project. On this basis the call for alternative IIR evaluation approaches motivated by the three revolutions (the cognitive, the relevance, and the interactive revolutions) put forward by Robertson & Hancock-Beaulieu (1992) is presented. As a response to this call the ‘IIR evaluation model’ by Borlund (e.g., 2003a) is introduced. The objective of the IIR evaluation model is to facilitate IIR evaluation as close as possible to actual information searching and IR processes, though still in a relatively controlled evaluation environment, in which the test instrument of a simulated work task situation plays a central part.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 1

SP - 12

EP - 32

JO - Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice

JF - Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice

SN - 2287-9099

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 96359832