Information Horizons Mapping
Information Horizons Mapping is a research method developed by Diane Sonnenwald and colleagues, formalized in their 2001 paper in The New Review of Information Behaviour Research, for studying how people seek information within a specific context. Grounded in Sonnenwald's theory of information horizons — the idea that, in any given situation, an individual perceives a 'horizon' of information resources (people, documents, tools, systems) that they may consult — the method asks participants to draw a map of those sources for a particular information need and to explain it. By analyzing which sources appear, how close or central they are placed, how they relate to one another, and why some are included or excluded, researchers gain a situated, participant-centered picture of information-seeking behaviour that goes beyond simple source-use surveys.
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출처
- Sonnenwald, D. H., Wildemuth, B. M., & Harmon, G. L. (2001). A research method to investigate information seeking using the concept of information horizons: An example from a study of lower socio-economic students' information seeking behavior. The New Review of Information Behaviour Research, 2, 65-86. link ↗
- Savolainen, R. (1995). Everyday life information seeking: Approaching information seeking in the context of 'way of life'. Library & Information Science Research, 17(3), 259-294. DOI: 10.1016/0740-8188(95)90048-9 ↗
이 페이지 인용 방법
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Information Horizons Mapping (Sonnenwald's Information Horizon Maps for Studying Situated Information Seeking). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/ko/library-information-science/information-horizons-mapping
어떤 방법일까요?
이 방법을 가장 가까운 동류의 방법들과 나란히 놓고 비교해 보세요 — 라이브러리는 책을 펼쳐 놓을 뿐, 선택은 여러분의 몫입니다.
- Critical Incident Technique in Information BehaviorLibrary Information Science↔ 비교
- Everyday Life Information SeekingLibrary Information Science↔ 비교
- Sense-Making MethodologyLibrary Information Science↔ 비교