Title of article
How doctors search: A study of query behaviour and the impact on search results
Author/Authors
Marianne Lykke Nielsen، نويسنده , , Susan Price، نويسنده , , Lois Delcambre، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
20
From page
1151
To page
1170
Abstract
Professional, workplace searching is different from general searching, because it is typically limited to specific facets and targeted to a single answer. We have developed the semantic component (SC) model, which is a search feature that allows searchers to structure and specify the search to context-specific aspects of the main topic of the documents. We have tested the model in an interactive searching study with family doctors with the purpose to explore doctors’ querying behaviour, how they applied the means for specifying a search, and how these features contributed to the search outcome. In general, the doctors were capable of exploiting system features and search tactics during the searching. Most searchers produced well-structured queries that contained appropriate search facets. When searches failed it was not due to query structure or query length. Failures were mostly caused by the well-known vocabulary problem. The problem was exacerbated by using certain filters as Boolean filters. The best working queries were structured into 2–3 main facets out of 3–5 possible search facets, and expressed with terms reflecting the focal view of the search task. The findings at the same time support and extend previous results about query structure and exhaustivity showing the importance of selecting central search facets and express them from the perspective of search task. The SC model was applied in the highest performing queries except one. The findings suggest that the model might be a helpful feature to structure queries into central, appropriate facets, and in returning highly relevant documents.
Keywords
Query behaviour , Work-place retrieval , Retrieval performance , Family doctors
Journal title
Information Processing and Management
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Information Processing and Management
Record number
1229308
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