How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study

<br><b>Introduction.</b> The purpose of this study was to determine if and how human information behaviour (HIB) research is used by others. <br><b>Method.</b> Using ISI Web of Knowledge, a citation analysis was conducted on 155 English-language HIB articles pub...

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Main Authors: Lynne McKechnie, George R. Goodall, Darian Lajoie-Paquette, Heidi Julien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2005-01-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://informationr.net/ir/10-2/paper220.html
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spelling doaj-c22d2b3acc6444c0a99710d81792769c2020-11-25T00:39:16ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132005-01-01102220How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis studyLynne McKechnieGeorge R. GoodallDarian Lajoie-PaquetteHeidi Julien<br><b>Introduction.</b> The purpose of this study was to determine if and how human information behaviour (HIB) research is used by others. <br><b>Method.</b> Using ISI Web of Knowledge, a citation analysis was conducted on 155 English-language HIB articles published from 1993 to 2000 in six prominent LIS journals. The bibliometric core of 12 papers was identified. Content analysis was performed on papers citing the core (n=377) to determine how the papers were cited. A domain visualization was constructed of the citing relationships within the entire corpus. <br><b>Analysis.</b> Citation analysis, content analysis and social network analysi were used to analyse the data. <br><b>Results.</b> HIB literature is being cited, primarily (81.5%) by LIS authors. Fields outside of LIS citing HIB articles include engineering, psychology, education and medicine. Papers were cited generally (36.0%), for findings (28.5%) and for theory (25.3%) with few citations for method (6.0%). The domain visualization depicted a clear core of HIB scholarship surrounded by a periphery of largely uncited literature. <br><b>Conclusion.</b> HIB literature is yet to have a significant impact on other disciplines. It appears to be a second stage discipline, marked by theoretical consistency and exponential growth in publications and new researchers. More attention should be paid to writing and citation practices to allow HIB literature to become a rich guide to the act of doing HIB research. http://informationr.net/ir/10-2/paper220.htmlInformation behaviour research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lynne McKechnie
George R. Goodall
Darian Lajoie-Paquette
Heidi Julien
spellingShingle Lynne McKechnie
George R. Goodall
Darian Lajoie-Paquette
Heidi Julien
How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Information behaviour research
author_facet Lynne McKechnie
George R. Goodall
Darian Lajoie-Paquette
Heidi Julien
author_sort Lynne McKechnie
title How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study
title_short How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study
title_full How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study
title_fullStr How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study
title_full_unstemmed How human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study
title_sort how human information behaviour researchers use each other's work: a basic citation analysis study
publisher University of Borås
series Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
issn 1368-1613
publishDate 2005-01-01
description <br><b>Introduction.</b> The purpose of this study was to determine if and how human information behaviour (HIB) research is used by others. <br><b>Method.</b> Using ISI Web of Knowledge, a citation analysis was conducted on 155 English-language HIB articles published from 1993 to 2000 in six prominent LIS journals. The bibliometric core of 12 papers was identified. Content analysis was performed on papers citing the core (n=377) to determine how the papers were cited. A domain visualization was constructed of the citing relationships within the entire corpus. <br><b>Analysis.</b> Citation analysis, content analysis and social network analysi were used to analyse the data. <br><b>Results.</b> HIB literature is being cited, primarily (81.5%) by LIS authors. Fields outside of LIS citing HIB articles include engineering, psychology, education and medicine. Papers were cited generally (36.0%), for findings (28.5%) and for theory (25.3%) with few citations for method (6.0%). The domain visualization depicted a clear core of HIB scholarship surrounded by a periphery of largely uncited literature. <br><b>Conclusion.</b> HIB literature is yet to have a significant impact on other disciplines. It appears to be a second stage discipline, marked by theoretical consistency and exponential growth in publications and new researchers. More attention should be paid to writing and citation practices to allow HIB literature to become a rich guide to the act of doing HIB research.
topic Information behaviour research
url http://informationr.net/ir/10-2/paper220.html
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