Search (4 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × year_i:[2020 TO 2030}
  • × theme_ss:"Suchtaktik"
  1. Mattmann, B.; Regenass, N.: ¬Eine neue Form der Recherche in Bibliotheken : "Suchschlitz" contra Exploration - Reduktion statt Orientierung? (2021) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Suchportale von Bibliotheken haben im Laufe der Zeit immer stärker eine Reduktion auf einfachste Suchmöglichkeiten im Stile von Google erfahren. Das kommt zwar den Gewohnheiten der Nutzer:innen entgegen, schränkt aber die Möglichkeiten einer fundierten Recherche ein. Abhilfe schaffen explorative Suchinstrumente. Damit diese ökonomisch und bedarfsgerecht realisiert werden können, braucht es eine hohe Datenqualität und einen standardisierten Werkzeugkasten zur Umsetzung von Rechercheoberflächen. Anstelle eines Ausbaus der Funktionen von Suchportalen empfiehlt sich daher eine Ausrichtung und Individualisierung zusätzlicher Recherchetools auf konkrete Anwendungskontexte und Nutzertypen.
    Footnote
    Beitrag in einem Schwerpunktheft: Transfer und Transformation - Bibliotheken als Vermittler im globalen Kontext. Kolloquium anlässlich des 80. Geburtstages von Elmar Mittler.
    Source
    Bibliothek: Forschung und Praxis. 45(2021) H.2, S.304-316
  2. Bense, H.: Finden ohne Suchen : automatische Benachrichtigungen über relevante wissenschaftliche Publikationen mit regelbasierter KI (2021) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Jeden Tag erscheint eine Flut neuer wissenschaftlichen Publikationen. Für Forscher ist es schwierig, dabei den Überblick zu behalten. Aktualität und Relevanz der Ergebnislisten von Suchmaschinen wie Google, scholar.google.com und wissenschaftlichen Suchportalen entsprechen oft nicht den Erwartungen der Forscher. Vorgestellt wird eine Methode, die als Finden ohne Suchen (FwS = finding without searching) bezeichnet wird. Diese Methode nutzt künstliche Intelligenz in Kombination mit ausdrucksstarken benutzerdefinierten Regeln für Benachrichtigungen über neue Publikationen über eine App.
    Source
    Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 72(2021) H.5/6, S.265-270
  3. Wang, P.; Ma, Y.; Xie, H.; Wang, H.; Lu, J.; Xu, J.: "There is a gorilla holding a key on the book cover" : young children's known picture book search strategies (2022) 0.00
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    Abstract
    There is no information search system can assist young children's known picture book search needs since the information is not organized according to their cognitive abilities and needs. Therefore, this study explored young children's known picture book search strategies and extracted picture book search elements by simulating a search scenario and playing a picture book search game. The study found 29 elements children used to search for known picture books. Then, these elements are classified into three dimensions: The first dimension is the concept category of an element. The second dimension is an element's status in the story. The third dimension indicates where an element appears in a picture book. Additionally, it revealed a young children's general search strategy: Children first use auditory elements that they hear from the adults during reading. After receiving error returns, they add visual elements that they see by themselves in picture books. The findings can not only help to understand young children's known-item search and reformulation strategies during searching but also provide theoretical support for the development of a picture book information organization schema in the search system.
  4. Granikov, V.; El Sherif, R.; Bouthillier, F.; Pluye, P.: Factors and outcomes of collaborative information seeking : a mixed studies review with a framework synthesis (2022) 0.00
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