Title: User behaviour in largescale resource discovery contexts
1User behaviour in large-scale resource
discovery contexts
- Dick Hartley and Helen Booth
- CERLIM
- Manchester Metropolitan University
2User behaviour introduction
- Aims
- Methods
- Results
- Comments
3User behaviour aims
-
- CERLIMs role was to study user behaviour in
the searching of union catalogues whether
physical or virtual
4User behaviour methods
- Data collection consisted of three distinct
phases - End-user searches
- Interviews
- Focus groups
- Data collection took place in three different
university libraries LSE, Leeds and Strathclyde
5User behaviour end-user searching
- Manufactured but realistic queries developed with
the advice of staff from clumps and COPAC, 4
types - Find a common item in a library close by
- Lot of information provided (what used?)
- Find an obscure or unique item
- Subject query giving large results
6User behaviour example queries
- You urgently need to get hold of a copy of
Clinical Medicine edited by Parveen Kumar and
Michael Clark. You need to get the most up to
date edition you can find in the nearest library. - You are doing some research into monasticism and
are interested in books on monks behaving badly.
Someone has told you about a book that was
published some time in the late 90s. They arent
sure of the title but think that the author might
be Justice or Jestice.
7User behaviour searching
- Each searcher undertook 4 queries, 2 on COPAC and
2 on local clump - No training but exploration time
- Stop when
- searcher was satisfied that the appropriate
search result had been achieved, - searcher was not satisfied but did not want to
proceed further, - searcher was not able to proceed further,
- searcher was fed up and wanted to go to the next
task. - Searches logged
8User behaviour interviews
- Post search interviews explored
- Search options used
- Selecting libraries
- Results
- Error messages and feedback
- Problems encountered
- Search session
- Features liked, disliked and desired
- Overall feelings
9User behaviour focus groups
- Took the view that librarians are users of union
catalogues - Given their knowledge and experience, used focus
groups to enable discussion and ideas to flow - Discussion based on a checklist of topics
- Taped and notes
10Data analysis
- Search logs analysed into a large spreadsheet
with a search as a row and a feature used as a
column - Enabled easy analysis of features used
- Interviews and focus groups transcribed and
manually analysed.
11Results
- Profile of the end users
- Briefly consider results of searches
- Concentrate on attitudes and perceptions of end
users - Briefly pick up some points from focus groups of
library staff
12Profile of end users (1)
- Mix of genders
- 20 female and 14 male
- Spread of ages
- 21-30 19
- 31-40 04
- 41-50 05
- 51-60 05
- 61-70 01
-
13Profile of end users (2)
- Range of academic levels, FT and PT
-
FT PT - PGCE 1
- Taught Masters 4 3
- Research student 9 2
- Research staff 8 2
- Academic staff 3 1
- Admin staff 1
14Profile of end users (3)
- Wide range of disciplines represented
- Accounting and finance, Archaeology, Biology,
Counselling, Economics, Education, English,
Environmental science, Genetics, Information
management, Linguistics, Marketing, Media and
communications, Medicine, Neuroscience,
Philosophy, Politics, Psychology, Sociology,
Statistics
15Searchers use of e-resources
- Internet search engines
- Daily 28
- 4-5 times per week 1
- Once or twice per week 5
16Searchers use of e-resources
- Bibliographic databases
- 3-4 times per week 3
- Once or twice a week 13
- Every other week 6
- Once or twice a month 5
- Less than once a month 6
- Have not used yet 1
17Searchers use of e-resources
- OPACs
- Daily 3
- 3-4 times per week 3
- Once or twice per week 15
- Every other week 6
- Once or twice a month 4
- Less than once or twice a month 2
- Never 1
18Results from searches
- 30 out of 228 searches were abandoned without
getting results - Numerous spelling errors, some of which were
never noticed and some of which produced results
egs - Econimics, Bryon, Liguistics, Parlement,
Shapespeare
19Results from searches frequently used features
- CAIRNS
- Refine search
- Select libraries
- COPAC
- Help
- LanguageEnglish
- Select libraries
- InforM25
- Map
- List of libraries
20Results from searches
- Searches for Books
- Almost equal use of author, title and isbn as
search criteria - Searches for periodicals
- ISSN followed by title most used search criteria
- But different searchers used a wide range of
search criteria both singly and in combination
21End-user perceptions of Union Catalogues(1)
- The term was almost completely unknown even by
those who were using them - Two or three users hazarded a guess that they
were associated with Trades Unions.
22End-user perceptions of Union Catalogues(2)
- End-user expectations of the performance of a
union catalogue are heavily influenced by the Web - Predictably this referred largely to Google but
also to Amazon - If cannot learn to use a search tool very rapidly
then users would go to Google or Amazon - Some demand for greater information about book
content
23End-user perceptions of Union Catalogues(3)
- End users expect search tools to be easy to
master - A typical comment was If I cant get the hang of
what I am doing in the first half an hour then
Id reject the package and look for something
else.
24End-user perceptions of Union Catalogues(4)
- Whilst there was the odd exception, most
searchers were unwilling to wade through a large
number of retrieved items - Various approaches to dealing with large number
of hits - Narrow search
- Find out more about topic then try again
- Give up and use the Web instead
25End-user perceptions of Union Catalogues(5)
- End users have problems with on-screen language
that is taken for granted by information
professionals. - Examples quoted to us included
- Miniclumps
- Holdings
- Tag
- Z39.50
- Anything (COPAC search option)
26End-user perceptions of Union Catalogues(6)
- End users do not like the presence of duplicate
records in search output - (fortunately for them they do not have to develop
matching algorithms to remove dupes and only
dupes!) - ( how do they react to duplicate retrieval of the
same website by Google?)
27End-user perceptions of Union Catalogues(7)
- Many users expect Google-like speed of
response. - This was evidenced by the number of abandoned
searches.
28Librarians perceptions of end-users and union
catalogues
- End-user awareness
- I would say that I dont think students are
particularly aware but some researchers might be - Researchers use
- Location
- Bibliographic details
- Researchers willingness to travel
29Librarians and union catalogues
- Well aware of the concept
- Quoted a far wider range at us than those which
were the focus of our study eg RLIN, WorldCat,
even BUCOP! - Limited trust in search output
- Uptodateness of physical union catalogues
- Doubts about efficacy of Z39.50 searches for
virtual union catalogues -
30Librarians views on scope of union catalogues
- Serials union catalogue is the most important
- After serials concentrate on rare books
- Some support for regional union catalogues
- No enthusiasm for subject based union catalogues
31Facilities wanted in union catalogues
- Ability to sort by date
- Ability to sort by author, title
- Ability to place own library first
- Ability to sort geographically
- Ability to link search output to inter-library
loan software - Ability to pass search output to reference
management software
32Comments and observations (1)
- COPAC usage data shows that there is clearly a
demand for union catalogues - How much greater could that demand be if there
was greater awareness amongst potential users of
the existence of such tools?
33Comments and observations (2)
- There is a need for a major awareness-raising
effort to increase use of union catalogues and
other tools into which there has been
considerable investment
34Comments and observations (3)
- Designers need to take into account user
expectations - Simple interface
- Speedy response
- Manage expectations eg indications of processing
35Comments and observations (4)
- Investment in SUNCAT appears to be the correct
decision - Is it worth investigating the notion of what is a
rare book and concentrating on adding those to
union catalogues of books?
36Comments and observations (5)
- Perhaps useful to recall Mooers Law
- an information retrieval system will tend not to
be used whenever it is more painful and
troublesome for a customer to have information
than for him not to have it
37The full report is
- Helen Booth and R.J. Hartley
- User behaviour in the searching of union
catalogues an investigation for Work Package C
of CC-interop. Manchester CERLIM, February 2004. - (http//ccinterop.cdlr.strath.ac.uk/documents/f
inalreportWPC.pdf )
38- Thank you to all colleagues at CAIRNS, COPAC and
InfoM25 and Tracey Stanley at University of Leeds
for help in organising the searching, interviews
and focus groups and devising the questions
39 40(No Transcript)