Information Navigation Task

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An Information Navigation Task is a User Interaction Task that requires the User to effectively navigate from one Information Artifact to another relevant Information Artifact.



References

2004

  • (Miller & Remington, 2004) ⇒ Craig S. Miller, and Roger W. Remington. (2004). “Modeling information navigation: implications for information architecture.” In: Human-Computer Interaction, 19(3). doi:10.1207/s15327051hci1903_2
    • ABSTRACT: Previous studies for menu and Web search tasks have suggested differing advice on the optimal number of selections per page. In this article, we examine this discrepancy through the use of a computational model of information navigation that simulates users navigating through a Web site. By varying the quality of the link labels in our simulations, we find that the optimal structure depends on the quality of the labels and are thus able to account for the results in the previous studies. We present additional empirical results to further validate the model and corroborate our findings. Finally we discuss our findings' implications for the information architecture of Web sites.

1994

  • (Dourish & Chalmers, 1994) ⇒ P. Dourish, and M. Chalmers. (1994). “Running out of Space: models of information navigation.” In: Proceedings of HCI Conference (HCI 1994).