Researching Serendipity in Digital Information Environments. Lori McCay-Peet
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Researching Serendipity in Digital Information Environments - Lori McCay-Peet страница 2

СКАЧАТЬ Determination of Most Near Neighbors: Horseshoes, Hand Grenades, Web Search and Other Situations When Close is Close Enough

      Mark S. Manasse

      The Answer Machine

      Susan E. Feldman

      Theoretical Foundations for Digital Libraries: The 5S (Societies, Scenarios, Spaces, Structures, Streams) Approach

      Edward A. Fox, Marcos André Gonçalves, and Rao Shen

      The Future of Personal Information Management, Part I: Our Information, Always and Forever

      William Jones

      Search User Interface Design

      Max L. Wilson

      Information Retrieval Evaluation

      Donna Harman

      Knowledge Management (KM) Processes in Organizations: Theoretical Foundations and Practice

      Claire R. McInerney and Michael E. D. Koenig

      Search-Based Applications: At the Confluence of Search and Database Technologies

      Gregory Grefenstette and Laura Wilber

      Information Concepts: From Books to Cyberspace Identities

      Gary Marchionini

      Estimating the Query Difficulty for Information Retrieval

      David Carmel and Elad Yom-Tov

      iRODS Primer: Integrated Rule-Oriented Data System

      Arcot Rajasekar, Reagan Moore, Chien-Yi Hou, Christopher A. Lee, Richard Marciano, Antoine de Torcy, Michael Wan, Wayne Schroeder, Sheau-Yen Chen, Lucas Gilbert, Paul Tooby, and Bing Zhu

      Collaborative Web Search: Who, What, Where, When, and Why

      Meredith Ringel Morris and Jaime Teevan

      Multimedia Information Retrieval

      Stefan Rüger

      Online Multiplayer Games

      William Sims Bainbridge

      Information Architecture: The Design and Integration of Information Spaces

      Wei Ding and Xia Lin

      Reading and Writing the Electronic Book

      Catherine C. Marshall

      Hypermedia Genes: An Evolutionary Perspective on Concepts, Models, and Architectures

      Nuno M. Guimarães and Luís M. Carrico

      Understanding User-Web Interactions via Web Analytics

      Bernard J. (Jim) Jansen

      XML Retrieval

      Mounia Lalmas

      Faceted Search

      Daniel Tunkelang

      Introduction to Webometrics: Quantitative Web Research for the Social Sciences

      Michael Thelwall

      Exploratory Search: Beyond the Query-Response Paradigm

      Ryen W. White and Resa A. Roth

      New Concepts in Digital Reference

      R. David Lankes

      Automated Metadata in Multimedia Information Systems: Creation, Refinement, Use in Surrogates, and Evaluation

      Michael G. Christel

      Copyright © 2018 by Morgan and Claypool

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.

      Researching Serendipity in Digital Information Environments

      Lori McCay-Peet and Elaine G. Toms

       www.morganclaypool.com

      ISBN: 9781681730936 print

      ISBN: 9781681730943 ebook

      DOI: 10.2200/S00790ED1V01Y201707ICR059

      A Publication in the Morgan and Claypool Publishers series

       SYNTHESIS LECTURES ON INFORMATION CONCEPTS, RETRIEVAL, AND SERVICES, #59

      Series Editor: Gary Marchionini, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

      Series ISSN: 1947-945X Print 1947-9468 Electronic

       Researching Serendipity in Digital Information Environments

       Lori McCay-Peet

      Dalhousie University

       Elaine G. Toms

      The University of Sheffield

       SYNTHESIS LECTURES ON INFORMATION CONCEPTS, RETRIEVAL, AND SERVICES #59

Image

       ABSTRACT

      Chance, luck, and good fortune are the usual go-to descriptors of serendipity, a phenomenon aptly often coupled with famous anecdotes of accidental discoveries in engineering and science in modern history such as penicillin, Teflon, and Post-it notes. Serendipity, however, is evident in many fields of research, in organizations, in everyday life—and there is more to it than luck implies. While the phenomenon is strongly associated with in-person interactions with people, places, and things, most attention of late has focused on its preservation and facilitation within digital information environments. Serendipity’s association with unexpected, positive user experiences and outcomes has spurred an interest in understanding both how current digital information environments support serendipity and how novel approaches may be developed to facilitate it. Research has sought to understand serendipity, how it is manifested in people’s personality traits and behaviors, how it may be facilitated in digital information environments such as mobile applications, and its impacts on an individual, an organizational, and a wider level. Because serendipity is expressed and understood in different ways in different contexts, multiple methods have been used to study the phenomenon and evaluate digital information environments that may support it. This volume brings together different disciplinary perspectives and examines the motivations for studying serendipity, the various ways in which serendipity has been approached in the research, methodological approaches to build theory, and how it may be facilitated. Finally, a roadmap for serendipity research is drawn by integrating key points СКАЧАТЬ