When Complexity Becomes Interesting

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

When Complexity Becomes Interesting. / van der Sluis, Frans; van den Broek, Egon L.; Glassey, Richard J.; van Dijk, Betsy (E.)M.A.G.; de Jong, Francisca M.G.

I: Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, Bind 65, Nr. 7, 2014, s. 1478-1500.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

van der Sluis, F, van den Broek, EL, Glassey, RJ, van Dijk, BEMAG & de Jong, FMG 2014, 'When Complexity Becomes Interesting', Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, bind 65, nr. 7, s. 1478-1500.

APA

van der Sluis, F., van den Broek, E. L., Glassey, R. J., van Dijk, B. E. M. A. G., & de Jong, F. M. G. (2014). When Complexity Becomes Interesting. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 65(7), 1478-1500.

Vancouver

van der Sluis F, van den Broek EL, Glassey RJ, van Dijk BEMAG, de Jong FMG. When Complexity Becomes Interesting. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 2014;65(7):1478-1500.

Author

van der Sluis, Frans ; van den Broek, Egon L. ; Glassey, Richard J. ; van Dijk, Betsy (E.)M.A.G. ; de Jong, Francisca M.G. / When Complexity Becomes Interesting. I: Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 2014 ; Bind 65, Nr. 7. s. 1478-1500.

Bibtex

@article{46511a04e6d44fc798667129d53882cd,
title = "When Complexity Becomes Interesting",
abstract = "How to provide users a positive experience during interaction with information (i.e., the “Information eXperience” (IX)) is still an open question. As a starting point, this work investigates how the emotion of interest can be influenced by modifying the complexity of the information presented to users. The appraisal theory of interest suggests a “sweet spot” where interest will be at its peak: information that is novel and complex yet still comprehensible. This “sweet spot” is approximated using two studies. Study One develops a computational model of textual complexity founded on psycholinguistic theory on processing difficulty. The model was trained and tested on 12,420 articles, achieving a classification performance of 90.87% on two classes of complexity. Study Two puts the model to its ultimate test: Its application to change the user's IX. Using 18 news articles the influence of complexity on interest and its appraisals is unveiled. A structural equation model shows a positive influence of complexity on interest, yet a negative influence of comprehensibility, confirming a seemingly paradoxical relationship between complexity and interest. By showing when complexity becomes interesting, this paper shows how information systems can use the model of textual complexity to construct an interesting IX.",
keywords = "Appraisal theory of interest, textual complexity, Information eXperience",
author = "{van der Sluis}, Frans and {van den Broek}, {Egon L.} and Glassey, {Richard J.} and {van Dijk}, {Betsy (E.)M.A.G.} and {de Jong}, {Francisca M.G.}",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "65",
pages = "1478--1500",
journal = "Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - When Complexity Becomes Interesting

AU - van der Sluis, Frans

AU - van den Broek, Egon L.

AU - Glassey, Richard J.

AU - van Dijk, Betsy (E.)M.A.G.

AU - de Jong, Francisca M.G.

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - How to provide users a positive experience during interaction with information (i.e., the “Information eXperience” (IX)) is still an open question. As a starting point, this work investigates how the emotion of interest can be influenced by modifying the complexity of the information presented to users. The appraisal theory of interest suggests a “sweet spot” where interest will be at its peak: information that is novel and complex yet still comprehensible. This “sweet spot” is approximated using two studies. Study One develops a computational model of textual complexity founded on psycholinguistic theory on processing difficulty. The model was trained and tested on 12,420 articles, achieving a classification performance of 90.87% on two classes of complexity. Study Two puts the model to its ultimate test: Its application to change the user's IX. Using 18 news articles the influence of complexity on interest and its appraisals is unveiled. A structural equation model shows a positive influence of complexity on interest, yet a negative influence of comprehensibility, confirming a seemingly paradoxical relationship between complexity and interest. By showing when complexity becomes interesting, this paper shows how information systems can use the model of textual complexity to construct an interesting IX.

AB - How to provide users a positive experience during interaction with information (i.e., the “Information eXperience” (IX)) is still an open question. As a starting point, this work investigates how the emotion of interest can be influenced by modifying the complexity of the information presented to users. The appraisal theory of interest suggests a “sweet spot” where interest will be at its peak: information that is novel and complex yet still comprehensible. This “sweet spot” is approximated using two studies. Study One develops a computational model of textual complexity founded on psycholinguistic theory on processing difficulty. The model was trained and tested on 12,420 articles, achieving a classification performance of 90.87% on two classes of complexity. Study Two puts the model to its ultimate test: Its application to change the user's IX. Using 18 news articles the influence of complexity on interest and its appraisals is unveiled. A structural equation model shows a positive influence of complexity on interest, yet a negative influence of comprehensibility, confirming a seemingly paradoxical relationship between complexity and interest. By showing when complexity becomes interesting, this paper shows how information systems can use the model of textual complexity to construct an interesting IX.

KW - Appraisal theory of interest

KW - textual complexity

KW - Information eXperience

UR - https://ssrn.com/abstract=2955744

M3 - Journal article

VL - 65

SP - 1478

EP - 1500

JO - Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology

JF - Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 209745395