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Information Encountering Analysis×Critical Incident Technique in Information Behavior×
DomeniuLibrary Information ScienceLibrary Information Science
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Anul apariției19991954
Autorul originalSanda ErdelezJohn C. Flanagan (technique); applied to information behavior in LIS
TipConceptual framework and analysis of accidental information discoveryIncident-based qualitative technique for studying effective and ineffective behavior
Sursa seminalăErdelez, S. (1999). Information encountering: It's more than just bumping into information. Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science, 25(3), 26-29. DOI ↗Flanagan, J. C. (1954). The critical incident technique. Psychological Bulletin, 51(4), 327-358. DOI ↗
Denumiri alternativeInformation Encountering, Erdelez Information Encountering, Accidental Information Discovery, Incidental Information Acquisition AnalysisCIT in Information Behavior, Critical Incident Technique (LIS), Incident-Based Information Behavior Study, Flanagan CIT for Information Seeking
Înrudite33
RezumatInformation Encountering Analysis, developed by Sanda Erdelez and articulated in her 1999 Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science article 'Information encountering: It's more than just bumping into information,' studies how people acquire useful information by accident — while searching for something else, or while not searching at all. Against the dominant picture of information behaviour as goal-directed seeking, Erdelez foregrounds serendipitous, incidental discovery as a distinct and important mode. She models an encounter as a sequence of functional steps — noticing, stopping, examining, capturing and returning — and classifies people by how readily they encounter information, from non-encounterers to 'super-encounterers' who experience and exploit accidental discovery frequently. The framework gives a vocabulary and analytic structure for a phenomenon long dismissed as mere luck.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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