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Combining Ethnographic and Clickstream Data to Identify Browsing Strategies

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Lillian Clark
  Author I-Hsien Ting (National University of Kaohsiung)
  Author Chris Kimble (University of York)
  Author Peter Wright
  Author Daniel Kudenko
JOURNAL:
  Information Research, 11(2), ?? - ??.
YEAR: 2006
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): Human-Computer interaction, Web Mining, Web usage mining, Information seeking behaviour, Ethnographic Studies, Web Browsing Strategies
DISCIPLINE: Computer Science
HTTP: http://InformationR.net/ir/11-2/paper249.html
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-425-049 (Last edited on 2006/05/12 09:06:56 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Introduction: The strategies that people use to browse Websites are difficult to analyse and understand: quantitative data can lack information about what a user actually intends to do, while qualitative data tends to be localised and is impractical to gather for large samples. Method: This paper describes a novel approach that combines data from direct observation, user surveys and server logs to analyse users' browsing behaviour. It is based on a longitudinal study of university students' use of a Website related to one of their courses. Analysis: The data were analysed by using Footstep graphs to categorise browsing behaviour into pre-defined strategies and comparing these with data from questionnaires and direct observation of the students' actual use of the site. Results: Initial results indicated that in certain cases the patterns from server logs matched the observed browsing strategies as described in the literature. In addition, by cross-referencing the quantitative and qualitative data, a number of insights were gained into potential problems. Conclusion: This study shows how combining quantitative and qualitative approaches can provide an insight into changes in user browsing behaviour over time. It also identifies some potential methodological problems in studies of browsing behaviour and indicates some directions for future research.
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