Social and interactional practices for disseminating current awareness information in an organisational setting

Simon Attfield, Ann Blandford, Stephann Makri
2010 Information Processing & Management  
An open access repository of Middlesex University research http://eprints.mdx.ac.uk Attfield, Simon and Blandford, Ann and Makri, Stephann (2010) Social and interactional practices for disseminating current awareness information in an organisational setting. Information Processing and Management, 46 (6). pp. 632-645. ISSN 0306-4573 http://dx.Abstract: Current awareness services are designed to keep users informed about recent developments based around user need profiles. In organisational
more » ... gs, they may operate through both electronic and social interactions aimed at delivering information that is relevant, pertinent and current. Understanding these interactions can reveal the tensions in current awareness dissemination and help inform ways of making them more effective and efficient. We report an in-depth, observational study of electronic current awareness use within a large London law firm. The study found that selection, re-aggregation and forwarding of information by multiple actors gives rise to a complex sociotechnical distribution network. Knowledge management staff act as a layer of "intelligent filters" sensitive to complex, local information needs; their distribution decisions address multiple situational relevance factors in a situation fraught with information-overload and restrictive time-pressures. Their decisions aim to optimise conflicting constraints of recall, precision and information quantity. Critical to this is the use of dynamic profile updates which propagated back through the network through formal and informal social interactions. This supports changes to situational relevance judgements and so allows the network to 'self-tune'. These findings lead to design requirements, including that the system should support rapid assessment of information items against an individual's interests; that it should be possible to organise information for different subsequent uses; and that there should be back-propagation from information consumers to providers, to tune the understanding of their information needs.
doi:10.1016/j.ipm.2009.10.003 fatcat:56e5564npnfprg37ockczfg2ty