DocumentCode
3323627
Title
Assigned tasks are not the same as self-chosen Web search tasks
Author
Russell, Daniel M. ; Grimes, Carrie
fYear
2007
fDate
Jan. 2007
Firstpage
83
Lastpage
83
Abstract
Short assigned question-answering style tasks are often used as a probe to understand how users do search. While such assigned tasks are simple to test and are effective at eliciting the particulars of a given search capability, they are not the same as naturalistic searches. We studied the quantitative differences between assigned tasks and self-chosen "own" tasks finding that users behave differently when doing their own tasks, staying longer on the task, but making fewer queries and different kinds of queries overall. This finding implies that user\´s own tasks should be used when testing user behavior in addition to assigned tasks, which remain useful for feature testing in lab settings
Keywords
information retrieval; user interfaces; Web search tasks; short assigned question-answering style task; user behavior; Educational institutions; Information analysis; Laboratories; Pattern analysis; Probes; Search engines; System testing; Usability; User interfaces; Web search;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences, 2007. HICSS 2007. 40th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location
Waikoloa, HI
ISSN
1530-1605
Electronic_ISBN
1530-1605
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.2007.91
Filename
4076538
Link To Document