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Critical Incident Technique in Information Behavior

The Critical Incident Technique (CIT), set out by John Flanagan in his 1954 Psychological Bulletin article, is a flexible set of procedures for collecting first-hand accounts of specific, observable incidents that were especially helpful or unhelpful in achieving some aim, and content-analyzing them to understand effective and ineffective behaviour. In library and information science it has become a widely used method for studying information seeking and use: instead of asking people in the abstract how they look for information, researchers ask them to recount concrete recent episodes — a time they urgently needed information, succeeded or failed to find it, encountered a barrier, or used a source to good or ill effect. Analyzing many such incidents yields grounded categories of information needs, behaviours, barriers and source roles. A 2025 Libri review documents the technique's broad application across LIS information-behaviour research.

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Sources

  1. Flanagan, J. C. (1954). The critical incident technique. Psychological Bulletin, 51(4), 327-358. DOI: 10.1037/h0061470
  2. Sadeghi, H., Nowkarizi, M., & Tajafari, M. (2025). Applications of the Critical Incident Technique in Library and Information Science Research: A Literature Review. Libri, 75(2), 145-157. DOI: 10.1515/libri-2024-0065

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Critical Incident Technique in Information Behavior (Flanagan's CIT Applied to Information Seeking and Use). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/library-information-science/critical-incident-technique-lis

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ScholarGateCritical Incident Technique in Information Behavior (Critical Incident Technique in Information Behavior (Flanagan's CIT Applied to Information Seeking and Use)). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/library-information-science/critical-incident-technique-lis · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026