The nature of the overall search process changes in that users don’t obtain a single final set of retrieved items but obtain bits of information at each stage of the search as it changes, following a berrypicking pattern. The nature of the query changes and evolves because new information gives the user new directions to follow which results in not just a change in search terms but in a change in the query itself. The model has four differing elements from the traditional information retrieval model that illustrate how users move smoothly between searching and browsing: Thus, Bates (1989) called this “bit-at-a-time retrieval” berrypicking and believes it to be “a realistic model of how people go about looking for information…” (p. The different bits of information discovered at each stage of the ever-changing search scattered throughout different sources are compared to the way berries are scattered on bushes, not coming in bunches. Bates calls this an “evolving search” (p. So, not just search terms but the actual query might be changed with each new document discovered. “Each new piece of information they encounter gives them new ideas and directions to follow and, consequently, a new conception of the query” (Bates, 1989, pp. In his book, Ambient Findability, Peter Morville (2005) credits Bates with furthering our understanding of information seeking behavior through her berrypicking model that exposed the inadequacy of the classic information retrieval model by illustrating that queries and information needs evolve as users interact with documents and systems (p. These events, coupled with the appearance of online catalogs that were designed for the end user with little to no search training led Bates to develop her 1989 model of the berrypicking search that underlies design features she thought might aid the end users in accomplishing successful searches (Bates, 2005, pp. The appearance of research that showed how people really searched for information, specifically social science and humanities scholars who employed more a more complex method of seeking information, pinpointed the flaws of the one query, one use model. 58-59).Īssumptions were also made that trained librarians would be searching the online databases available and would obtain all necessary results in one search using one search language. Of course, if the answer was not quite what the user was seeking, the question may be altered by the user or even by the system, but still, when the best answer was found, it was assumed the user would print out the records and the search was over (Bates, 2005, pp. What this means is that researchers made the assumption that the user submitted one question to an information system and that the system would respond with an answer to that question. For many years, research on information retrieval was focused on the system rather than on the user.
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