Title of article :
The effect of folder structure on personal file navigation
Author/Authors :
Ofer Bergman1، نويسنده , , Steve Whittaker2، نويسنده , , Mark Sanderson3، نويسنده , , Rafi Nachmias4، نويسنده , , Anand Ramamoorthy5، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
16
From page :
2426
To page :
2441
Abstract :
Folder navigation is the main way that personal computer users retrieve their own files. People dedicate considerable time to creating systematic structures to facilitate such retrieval. Despite the prevalence of both manual organization and navigation, there is very little systematic data about how people actually carry out navigation, or about the relation between organization structure and retrieval parameters. The aims of our research were therefore to study usersʹ folder structure, personal file navigation, and the relations between them. We asked 296 participants to retrieve 1,131 of their active files and analyzed each of the 5,035 navigation steps in these retrievals. Folder structures were found to be shallow (files were retrieved from mean depth of 2.86 folders), with small folders (a mean of 11.82 files per folder) containing many subfolders (M=10.64). Navigation was largely successful and efficient with participants successfully accessing 94% of their files and taking 14.76 seconds to do this on average. Retrieval time and success depended on folder size and depth. We therefore found the usersʹ decision to avoid both deep structure and large folders to be adaptive. Finally, we used a predictive model to formulate the effect of folder depth and folder size on retrieval time, and suggested an optimization point in this trade-off.
Journal title :
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Record number :
994346
Link To Document :
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