Reading between the lines: identifying user behaviour between logged interactions. Wilson, M. & schraefel In SIGIR09 Workshop: Understanding the User - Logging and interpreting user interactions in information search and retrieval, 2009. Position Paper
Paper abstract bibtex Log analyses are often used simply to quantify interactions with different aspects of a user interface. The position held here is that much of a user?s search experience does not involve direct interaction with the interface, and may not be logged at all. Many models highlight the cognitive aspects of searching behaviour, and many consider that if a user does not like a user interface, then they do not interact with it very much. Consequently, we suggest that a grand challenge for logging searcher experiences should be to study the gaps in usage logs rather than the entries alone.
@inproceedings{ ecs17586,
author = {Max Wilson and schraefel},
title = {Reading between the lines: identifying user behaviour between logged interactions},
abstract = {Log analyses are often used simply to quantify interactions with different aspects of a user interface. The position held here is that much of a user?s search experience does not involve direct interaction with the interface, and may not be logged at all. Many models highlight the cognitive aspects of searching behaviour, and many consider that if a user does not like a user interface, then they do not interact with it very much. Consequently, we suggest that a grand challenge for logging searcher experiences should be to study the gaps in usage logs rather than the entries alone.},
booktitle = {SIGIR09 Workshop: Understanding the User - Logging and interpreting user interactions in information search and retrieval},
note = {Position Paper},
url = {http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/17586/},
year = {2009}
}
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The position held here is that much of a user?s search experience does not involve direct interaction with the interface, and may not be logged at all. Many models highlight the cognitive aspects of searching behaviour, and many consider that if a user does not like a user interface, then they do not interact with it very much. 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The position held here is that much of a user?s search experience does not involve direct interaction with the interface, and may not be logged at all. Many models highlight the cognitive aspects of searching behaviour, and many consider that if a user does not like a user interface, then they do not interact with it very much. Consequently, we suggest that a grand challenge for logging searcher experiences should be to study the gaps in usage logs rather than the entries alone.},\n booktitle = {SIGIR09 Workshop: Understanding the User - Logging and interpreting user interactions in information search and retrieval},\n note = {Position Paper},\n url = {http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/17586/},\n year = {2009}\n}","author_short":["Wilson, M.","schraefel"],"author":["Wilson, Max","schraefel"],"abstract":"Log analyses are often used simply to quantify interactions with different aspects of a user interface. 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