Papers



Martha Sabelli (University of the Republic, Montevideo, Uruguay)

Library and information sciences in the information disciplines environment: towards integrative models of disciplines, professional community and information and communication public policies


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Christine Urquhart (Aberystwyth, UK)

Systematic reviewing, meta-analysis and meta-synthesis for evidence-based library and information science


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Stasa Milojevic, Erjia Yan, Ying Ding (Indiana University, USA)

The social and cognitive structure of library and information science: an historical overview


Abstract

A paper based on this presentation is in preparation; contact the author at smilojev@indiana.edu for details. An abstract of the presentation will be added here.



Monica Lassi and Diane Sonnenwald (Boras, Sweden and UCD, Ireland)

Identifying factors that may impact the adoption and use of a collaboratory within LIS: a synthesis of relevant literature


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Kerstin Rydbeck (Uppsala, Sweden)

The research circle as a meeting place for researchers and practitioners


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Gillian Oliver (Wellington, New Zealand)

Transcending silos, developing synergies: libraries and archives


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Taeda Tomic (Uppsala University, Sweden and Institute for Future Studies, Stockholm)

Philosophy of information as underlying and unifying theory of information science


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Iris Xie, Edward Benoit III, Huan Zing (Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA)

How do users evaluate individual documents? An analysis of dimensions of evaluation activities


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Anna Lundh (Boras and Gothenburg, Sweden)

Studying information needs as question-negotiations in an education context: a methodological comment


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Helena Francke and Olof Sundin (Boras and Lund, Sweden)

An inside view: credibility in Wikipedia from the perspective of the editors


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Annemaree Lloyd (Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga, Australia)

Corporeality and practice theory: exploring emerging research agendas for information literacy


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Brendan Luyt and Intan Azura (Singapore)

The oppressed sigh of the information literate: an examination of the potential for oppression in information literacy


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Jela Steinerova (Commenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia)

Ecological dimensions of information literacy and relevance


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Theresa Anderson (Sydney, Australia)

Kickstarting Creativity: Supporting the productive faces of uncertainty in information practice


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Jan Nolin and Katriina Bystrom (Boras, Sweden)

From HTML to XML and more? A case study of language games within portal server technology implementation


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Murat Karamuftouglu (Bilkent, Turkey) and Lyn Robinson (City London, UK)

Information science; is it for real ?


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Jan Pisanski and Maja Zumer (Ljubljana, Slovenia)

Intuitiveness of FRBR: a study in broader context


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Birger Hjorland and Jeppe Nicolaisen (Copenhagen, Denmark)

The social psychology of information use: seeking friends, avoiding enemies


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Jarkko Kari (Tampere, Finland)

Diversity in the conceptions of information use


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Jens-Erik Mai (Toronto, Canada)

Trusting tags, terms and recommendations


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Sanna Talja (Tampere, Finland)

The problem with problematic situations: differences between situations, tasks and practices as units of analysis within information science research.


Abstract

A paper based on this presentation is in preparation; contact the author at Sanna.K.Talja@uta.fi for details.



Jenna Hartel (University of Toronto, Canada)

Time as framework for information science: insights from the hobby of gourmet cooking


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Melanie Feinberg (U Texas Austin, USA)

Designing collection for storytelling: purpose, pathos and poetry


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Deborah Turner and warren Allen (Drexel University, Philadelphia, USA)

Investigating oral information


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Mike Thelwall (Wolverhampton, UK)

Webometrics: emergent or doomed


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Debbie Rabina (Pratt Institute, New York, USA)

A Case of Social Scholarship for Multi-player Research in Government Information Sources: Senator Ted Kennedy at the Democratic National Convention


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK

Isto Huvila (Uppsala, Sweden)

The Cool and Belkin Faceted Classifications on information interactions revisited


A paper based on this presentation has been published in Information Research. LINK