Laypeople's source selection in online health information-seeking process
Journal
Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology
Journal Volume
71
Journal Issue
12
Pages
1484-1499
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Abstract
For laypeople, searching online health information resources can be challenging due to topic complexity and the large number of online sources with differing quality. The goal of this article is to examine, among all the available online sources, which online sources laypeople select to address their health-related information needs, and whether or how much the severity of a health condition influences their selection. Twenty-four participants were recruited individually, and each was asked (using a retrieval system called HIS) to search for information regarding a severe health condition and a mild health condition, respectively. The selected online health information sources were automatically captured by the HIS system and classified at both the website and webpage levels. Participants' selection behavior patterns were then plotted across the whole information-seeking process. Our results demonstrate that laypeople's source selection fluctuates during the health information-seeking process, and also varies by the severity of health conditions. This study reveals laypeople's real usage of different types of online health information sources, and engenders implications to the design of search engines, as well as the development of health literacy programs. ? 2020 Association for Information Science and Technology
SDGs
Other Subjects
Clustering algorithms; Health; Information use; Websites; Behavior patterns; Health condition; Health informations; Health related informations; Information seeking process; Online health information; Retrieval systems; Source selection; Search engines; adult; article; clinical article; health literacy; human; human experiment; information retrieval; information seeking; layperson; male; medical information; search engine
Type
journal article