Author/Authors :
Sandra Hirsh، نويسنده , , Jamie Dinkelacker، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The essential characteristic of knowledge workers is
that they use information to produce information subsequently.
Hence, information seeking is a knowledge
worker’s central aspect of work life. In a corporate research
laboratory environment, this is even more pronounced
because the results produced are often in the
form of more information, such as publications, tech
reports, patent applications, or the embodiment of these
into prototypes. The practices and expectations regarding
information seeking and collaboration are fundamental
to productive research in a corporate setting. To
this end, a survey research project sampled researchers
from selected labs of Hewlett Packard and Compaq
Computer shortly after their merger. This survey examined
researchers’ usage of information sources, their
preferred means of information seeking, and the types of
information assets they produced. Findings indicated
that participants relied heavily on the Internet and other
Web-based resources, more so than on their colleagues
inside the company. Participants chose which information
resources to use based on the time it took them to
track down the information as well as the authoritativeness
of the sources. Most information assets were generated
collaboratively by teams rather then by individuals.
Findings suggested that behavior was affected by
the unstable environment resulting from the merger and
the process of integrating the two research organizations.