402 research outputs found
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Brookes equation: The basis for a qualitative characterization of information behaviours
Brookes equation, which has hitherto been regarded as a kind of non-mathematical shorthand description of information use, is extended so as to show the qualitative pattern of information access. Information inputs are represented by a simple power law, and changes in knowledge structure by possible changes to a simple mental map. The resulting pattern shows seven forms of information input and three forms of change in knowledge structure, giving 21 categories overall. These have the potential for use as an explanatory tool and taxonomy for studying and summarizing information behaviour, and offer the possibility of being developed into more sophisticated and quantitative treatments
E-government and the digital divide: A study of English-as-a-Second-Language Users' Information Behaviour
Internet-based technologies are increasingly used by organisations and governments to offer services to consumers and the public in a quick and efficient manner, removing the need for face-to-face conversations and human advisors. Despite their obvious benefits for most users, these online systems may present barriers of access to certain groups in society which may lead to information poverty.
In this study we consider the information behaviour of ten ESL (English as a Second Language) participants as they conduct four search tasks designed to reflect actual information seeking situations. Our results suggest that, despite a perception that they have a good understanding of English, they often choose documents that are only partially or tangentially relevant. There were significant differences in the behaviour of participants given their perceived confidence in using English to perform search tasks. Those who were confident took riskier strategies and were less thorough, leading to them bookmarking a larger proportion of non-relevant documents. The results of this work have potentially profound repercussions for how e-government services are provided and how second-language speakers are assisted in their use of these
Evaluating a workspace's usefulness for image retrieval
Image searching is a creative process. We have proposed a novel image retrieval system that supports creative search sessions by allowing the user to organise their search results on a workspace. The workspace’s usefulness is evaluated in a task-oriented and user-centred comparative experiment, involving design professionals and several types of realistic search tasks. In particular, we focus on its effect on task conceptualisation and query formulation. A traditional relevance feedback system serves as a baseline. The results of this study show that the workspace is more useful in terms of both of the above aspects and that the proposed approach leads to a more effective and enjoyable search experience. This paper also highlights the influence of tasks on the users’ search and organisation strategy
Searching Data: A Review of Observational Data Retrieval Practices in Selected Disciplines
A cross-disciplinary examination of the user behaviours involved in seeking
and evaluating data is surprisingly absent from the research data discussion.
This review explores the data retrieval literature to identify commonalities in
how users search for and evaluate observational research data. Two analytical
frameworks rooted in information retrieval and science technology studies are
used to identify key similarities in practices as a first step toward
developing a model describing data retrieval
Systematic review of the behavioural assessment of pain in cats
Objectives The objectives were to review systematically the range of assessment tools used in cats to detect the
behavioural expression of pain and the evidence of their quality; and to examine behavioural metrics (considering
both the sensory and affective domains) used to assess pain.
Methods A search of PubMed and ScienceDirect, alongside articles known to the authors, from 2000 onwards, for
papers in English was performed. This was followed by a manual search of the references within the primary data
sources. Only peer-reviewed publications that provided information on the assessment tool used to evaluate the
behavioural expression of pain in cats, in conscious animals (not anaesthetised cats), were included.
Results No previous systematic reviews were identified. One hundred papers were included in the final assessment.
Studies were primarily related to the assessment of pain in relation to surgical procedures, and no clear distinction
was made concerning the onset of acute and chronic pain. Ten broad types of instrument to assess pain were
identified, and generally the quality of evidence to support the use of the various instruments was poor. Only
one specific instrument (UNESP-Botucatu scale) had published evidence of validity, reliability and sensitivity at
the level of a randomised control trial, but with a positive rather than placebo control, and limited to its use in the
ovariohysterectomy situation. The metrics used within the tools appeared to focus primarily on the sensory aspect
of pain, with no study clearly discriminating between the sensory and affective components of pain.
Conclusions and relevance Further studies are required to provide a higher quality of evidence for methods used
to assess pain in cats. Furthermore, a consistent definition for acute and chronic pain is needed. Tools need to
be validated that can detect pain in a range of conditions and by different evaluators (veterinary surgeons and
owners), which consider both the sensory and emotional aspects of pain
An explorative study of interface support for image searching
In this paper we study interfaces for image retrieval systems. Current image retrieval interfaces are limited to providing query facilities and result presentation. The user can inspect the results and possibly provide feedback on their relevance for the current query. Our approach, in contrast, encourages the user to group and organise their search results and thus provide more fine-grained feedback for the system. It combines the search and management process, which - according to our hypothesis - helps the user to onceptualise their search tasks and to overcome the query formulation problem. An evaluation, involving young design-professionals and di®erent types of information seeking scenarios, shows that the proposed approach succeeds in encouraging the user to conceptualise their tasks and that it leads to increased user satisfaction. However, it could not be shown to increase performance. We identify the problems in the current setup, which when eliminated should lead to more effective searching overall
Indicators for the Data Usage Index (DUI): an incentive for publishing primary biodiversity data through global information infrastructure
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A professional recognition mechanism is required to encourage expedited publishing of an adequate volume of 'fit-for-use' biodiversity data. As a component of such a recognition mechanism, we propose the development of the Data Usage Index (DUI) to demonstrate to data publishers that their efforts of creating biodiversity datasets have impact by being accessed and used by a wide spectrum of user communities.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>We propose and give examples of a range of 14 absolute and normalized biodiversity dataset usage indicators for the development of a DUI based on search events and dataset download instances. The DUI is proposed to include relative as well as species profile weighted comparative indicators.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>We believe that in addition to the recognition to the data publisher and all players involved in the data life cycle, a DUI will also provide much needed yet novel insight into how users use primary biodiversity data. A DUI consisting of a range of usage indicators obtained from the GBIF network and other relevant access points is within reach. The usage of biodiversity datasets leads to the development of a family of indicators in line with well known citation-based measurements of recognition.</p
Foodmaster and three stories
Graduation date: 2004The purpose of this thesis was to create a sustained piece of fiction that both\ud
represented my growth as a writer throughout my time at Oregon State University, and\ud
wove together a mixture of imagination, language, and creativity. My hope was to write\ud
a novella that incorporated and drew from themes including work, community, and\ud
family relationships, and also was an exploration in the very structure and form of literary\ud
fiction.\ud
After completing the novella, I found that similar themes continued to appear\ud
within my fiction during my ongoing growth as a writer. What I ended up with was a\ud
novella and collection of related stories that reflected the influences of my advisor Tracy\ud
Daugherty and his tutelage, the courses that I took at this university and my\ud
undergraduate university, and my own personal history.\ud
This thesis was written over a two-year period, during which drafts of this novella\ud
and stories were written and rewritten. Each story and chapter was submitted to a writing\ud
workshop, read and edited by my major and minor advisor, and carefully reworked and\ud
redrafted after much scrutiny and attention.\ud
During the course of writing this thesis, many things influenced me, the most\ud
prominent being the world of fiction that existed all around me. I was influenced by\ud
fiction that I was reading in my course work, such as Donald Barthelme and Philip Roth,\ud
but writers that I had grown up with, like Edgar Allen Poe and Ray Bradbury also\ud
influenced me. Beyond the world of published fiction, I found not only influence, but\ud
also more importantly inspiration from the work and criticism of the writers and students\ud
within the Creative Writing Program here at Oregon State University.\ud
The end result of these two years of work, study, writing, and criticism was a\ud
piece of fiction that I am proud of, and plan to publish. This collection of fiction\ud
represents not only a sustained study on the craft of creative writing, but also serves an\ud
exploration of my own voice and style, and an awakening of my identity as a fiction\ud
writer
Interactions of Generated Weather Raster and Soil Profiles in Simulating Adaptive Crop Management and Consequent Yields for Five Major Crops throughout a Region in Southern Germany
Klimaanpassung und MitigationThe ability of bioeconomic simulation modelling to realistically predict agricultural adaptation is limited by the degree of detail in crucial model components. Model robustness must be tested before localized calibrations can be applied to regions of heterogenous environmental conditions. The agent-based model FARMACTOR was used to simulate the timing of field management actions (planting, harvest etc.) in response to environmental conditions, and consequent yields of winter wheat, barley and rapeseed, spring barley and silage maize as the predominant crops in a distinct region of Germany, by linking weather data and the crop growth simulation model EXPERT-N. The integrated models were calibrated to observed experimental data and official phenological observations and then run from 1990 to 2009, forced with climate data from ERA-interim Reanalyses data which was downscaled with the Weather and Research Forecast (WRF) model to a 12 X 12 km² grid. Variability in regional soils was replicated with 10 different soil profiles mapped at 1/25,000 scale. The nature of the forcing climate data dictates temporal aggregation for analysis, so that validity is examined by comparing mean simulated planting and harvest dates and yields to official records in the area. The mean predicted planting dates are very close to observations over the period, within a few days of observations, but show less variance. Harvest dates are accurately predicted as well, within one to two weeks, and the variances are closer to observations. Predicted winter wheat yields are well simulated in comparison to observed data, but maize yields are underestimated, while winter and spring barley and winter rapeseed yields are greater than observed district ("Landkreis") yields. The degree of variance in simulated yields is acceptable in wheat, winter barley and maize, but excessive in spring barley and winter rapeseed. Cross-sectional examination of yields shows that the different soil profiles are responsible for more yield variance than simulated weather cells in all crops. While the coupled models appear accurate in predicting crop management dates and physiological development, the inaccuracy in yields in all crops except winter wheat calls into question the reliability of the integrated models when applied, as is, outside of calibration conditions. That soil parameterization is responsible for more variance than generated weather is helpful in seeking to improve performance and encouraging in terms of the method of weather generation. Reliable extension of the coupled models to include all soils in an area together with artificial spatial climatic variability may require regionalized calibration to increase crop model stability
An analysis of the cost and benefit of search interactions
Interactive Information Retrieval (IR) systems often provide various features and functions, such as query suggestions and relevance feedback, that a user may or may not decide to use. The decision to take such an option has associated costs and may lead to some benefit. Thus, a savvy user would take decisions that maximises their net benefit. In this paper, we formally model the costs and benefits of various decisions that users, implicitly or explicitly, make when searching. We consider and analyse the following scenarios: (i) how long a user's query should be? (ii) should the user pose a specific or vague query? (iii) should the user take a suggestion or re-formulate? (iv) when should a user employ relevance feedback? and (v) when would the "find similar" functionality be worthwhile to the user? To this end, we build a series of cost-benefit models exploring a variety of parameters that affect the decisions at play. Through the analyses, we are able to draw a number of insights into different decisions, provide explanations for observed behaviours and generate numerous testable hypotheses. This work not only serves as a basis for future empirical work, but also as a template for developing other cost-benefit models involving human-computer interaction
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