A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations: A meta-evaluation

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A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations : A meta-evaluation . / Borlund, Pia.

I: Journal of Documentation, Bind 72, Nr. 3, 2016, s. 394-413.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Borlund, P 2016, 'A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations: A meta-evaluation ', Journal of Documentation, bind 72, nr. 3, s. 394-413. https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-06-2015-0068

APA

Borlund, P. (2016). A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations: A meta-evaluation . Journal of Documentation, 72(3), 394-413. https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-06-2015-0068

Vancouver

Borlund P. A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations: A meta-evaluation . Journal of Documentation. 2016;72(3):394-413. https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-06-2015-0068

Author

Borlund, Pia. / A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations : A meta-evaluation . I: Journal of Documentation. 2016 ; Bind 72, Nr. 3. s. 394-413.

Bibtex

@article{fa708df3a41742bb9338c830419bd05b,
title = "A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations: A meta-evaluation ",
abstract = "Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to report a study of how the test instrument of a simulated work task situation is used in empirical evaluations of interactive information retrieval (IIR) and reported in the research literature. In particular, the author is interested to learn whether the requirements of how to employ simulated work task situations are followed, and whether theserequirements call for further highlighting and refinement.Design/methodology/approach – In order to study how simulated work task situations are used, the research literature in question is identified. This is done partly via citation analysis by use of Web of Science{\textregistered}, and partly by systematic search of online repositories. On this basis, 67 individual publications were identified and they constitute the sample of analysis.Findings – The analysis reveals a need for clarifications of how to use simulated work task situations in IIR evaluations. In particular, with respect to the design and creation of realistic simulated work task situations. There is a lack of tailoring of the simulated work task situations to the test participants.Likewise, the requirement to include the test participants{\textquoteright} personal information needs is neglected. Further, there is a need to add and emphasise a requirement to depict the used simulated work task situations when reporting the IIR studies.Research limitations/implications – Insight about the use of simulated work task situations has implications for test design of IIR studies and hence the knowledge base generated on the basis of such studies.Originality/value – Simulated work task situations are widely used in IIR studies, and the present study is the first comprehensive study of the intended and unintended use of this test instrument since its introduction in the late 1990{\textquoteright}s. The paper addresses the need to carefully design and tailor simulated work task situations to suit the test participants in order to obtain the intended authentic and realistic IIR under study.Keywords Interactive information retrieval study, IIR study, Test design,Simulated work task situations, Meta-evaluation",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Interactive information , retrieval study, IIR study, Test design",
author = "Pia Borlund",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1108/JD-06-2015-0068",
language = "English",
volume = "72",
pages = "394--413",
journal = "Journal of Documentation",
issn = "0022-0418",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A study of the use of simulated work task situations in interactive information retrieval evaluations

T2 - A meta-evaluation

AU - Borlund, Pia

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to report a study of how the test instrument of a simulated work task situation is used in empirical evaluations of interactive information retrieval (IIR) and reported in the research literature. In particular, the author is interested to learn whether the requirements of how to employ simulated work task situations are followed, and whether theserequirements call for further highlighting and refinement.Design/methodology/approach – In order to study how simulated work task situations are used, the research literature in question is identified. This is done partly via citation analysis by use of Web of Science®, and partly by systematic search of online repositories. On this basis, 67 individual publications were identified and they constitute the sample of analysis.Findings – The analysis reveals a need for clarifications of how to use simulated work task situations in IIR evaluations. In particular, with respect to the design and creation of realistic simulated work task situations. There is a lack of tailoring of the simulated work task situations to the test participants.Likewise, the requirement to include the test participants’ personal information needs is neglected. Further, there is a need to add and emphasise a requirement to depict the used simulated work task situations when reporting the IIR studies.Research limitations/implications – Insight about the use of simulated work task situations has implications for test design of IIR studies and hence the knowledge base generated on the basis of such studies.Originality/value – Simulated work task situations are widely used in IIR studies, and the present study is the first comprehensive study of the intended and unintended use of this test instrument since its introduction in the late 1990’s. The paper addresses the need to carefully design and tailor simulated work task situations to suit the test participants in order to obtain the intended authentic and realistic IIR under study.Keywords Interactive information retrieval study, IIR study, Test design,Simulated work task situations, Meta-evaluation

AB - Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to report a study of how the test instrument of a simulated work task situation is used in empirical evaluations of interactive information retrieval (IIR) and reported in the research literature. In particular, the author is interested to learn whether the requirements of how to employ simulated work task situations are followed, and whether theserequirements call for further highlighting and refinement.Design/methodology/approach – In order to study how simulated work task situations are used, the research literature in question is identified. This is done partly via citation analysis by use of Web of Science®, and partly by systematic search of online repositories. On this basis, 67 individual publications were identified and they constitute the sample of analysis.Findings – The analysis reveals a need for clarifications of how to use simulated work task situations in IIR evaluations. In particular, with respect to the design and creation of realistic simulated work task situations. There is a lack of tailoring of the simulated work task situations to the test participants.Likewise, the requirement to include the test participants’ personal information needs is neglected. Further, there is a need to add and emphasise a requirement to depict the used simulated work task situations when reporting the IIR studies.Research limitations/implications – Insight about the use of simulated work task situations has implications for test design of IIR studies and hence the knowledge base generated on the basis of such studies.Originality/value – Simulated work task situations are widely used in IIR studies, and the present study is the first comprehensive study of the intended and unintended use of this test instrument since its introduction in the late 1990’s. The paper addresses the need to carefully design and tailor simulated work task situations to suit the test participants in order to obtain the intended authentic and realistic IIR under study.Keywords Interactive information retrieval study, IIR study, Test design,Simulated work task situations, Meta-evaluation

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Interactive information

KW - retrieval study

KW - IIR study

KW - Test design

U2 - 10.1108/JD-06-2015-0068

DO - 10.1108/JD-06-2015-0068

M3 - Journal article

VL - 72

SP - 394

EP - 413

JO - Journal of Documentation

JF - Journal of Documentation

SN - 0022-0418

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 150713352