Research Article
Collaborative information synthesis I: A model of information behaviors of scientists in medicine and public health
Article first published online: 31 AUG 2006
DOI: 10.1002/asi.20487
Copyright © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., A Wiley Company
Issue

Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Volume 57, Issue 13, pages 1740–1749, November 2006
Additional Information
How to Cite
Blake, C. and Pratt, W. (2006), Collaborative information synthesis I: A model of information behaviors of scientists in medicine and public health. J. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci., 57: 1740–1749. doi: 10.1002/asi.20487
Publication History
- Issue published online: 23 OCT 2006
- Article first published online: 31 AUG 2006
- Manuscript Accepted: 30 OCT 2005
- Manuscript Revised: 12 AUG 2005
- Manuscript Received: 14 OCT 2004
- Abstract
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- Cited By
Abstract
Scientists engage in the discovery process more than any other user population, yet their day-to-day activities are often elusive. One activity that consumes much of a scientist's time is developing models that balance contradictory and redundant evidence. Driven by our desire to understand the information behaviors of this important user group, and the behaviors of scientific discovery in general, we conducted an observational study of academic research scientists as they resolved different experimental results reported in the biomedical literature. This article is the first of two that reports our findings. In this article, we introduce the Collaborative Information Synthesis (CIS) model that reflects the salient information behaviors that we observed. The CIS model emerges from a rich collection of qualitative data including interviews, electronic recordings of meetings, meeting minutes, e-mail communications, and extraction worksheets. Our findings suggest that scientists provide two information constructs: a hypothesis projection and context information. They also engage in four critical tasks: retrieval, extraction, verification, and analysis. The findings also suggest that science is not an individual but rather a collaborative activity and that scientists use the results of one analysis to inform new analyses. In Part 2, we compare and contrast existing information and cognitive models that have inadvertently reported synthesis, and then provide five recommendations that will enable designers to build information systems that support the important synthesis activity.

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