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Jumping between context and users: A difficulty in tracing information practices
Author(s) -
Tabak Edin
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the association for information science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.903
H-Index - 145
eISSN - 2330-1643
pISSN - 2330-1635
DOI - 10.1002/asi.23116
Subject(s) - centrality , focus (optics) , computer science , context (archaeology) , field (mathematics) , tracing , set (abstract data type) , data science , information behavior , epistemology , sociology , human–computer interaction , mathematics , paleontology , philosophy , physics , combinatorics , pure mathematics , optics , biology , programming language , operating system
A constant shifting between two main tenets of the information behavior ( IB ) field—centrality of the user and the essential role of context—has become a differentiation point for contemporary approaches in the field, but it also poses a major difficulty in tracing information practices. On one side, the user‐centered paradigm asks researchers to focus on the individual; on the other, emerging context‐centered approaches move the position of context into the foreground of information studies. Although there have been attempts to create “in between” approaches to achieve a compromise between these two positions, they have merely generated more positions between the two poles in a continuum between approaches focusing on the individual and those focusing on context. Such positioning not only creates an endless debate about the research focus of information studies but also limits such studies to a set of factors, a priori defined by the researcher. This article argues that IB research could benefit from actor‐network theory, which could give the actors a space to perform their own positioning.