Search strategies on a new health information retrieval system

Purpose - The goals of this study are: to evaluate the merits of a newly developed health information retrieval system; to investigate users' search strategies when using the new search system; and to study the relationships between users' search strategies and their prior topic knowledge....

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Published inOnline information review Vol. 34; no. 3; pp. 440 - 456
Main Authors Mu, Xiangming, Lu, Kun, Ryu, Hohyon
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bradford Emerald Group Publishing Limited 01.01.2010
Emerald
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ISSN1468-4527
1468-4535
DOI10.1108/14684521011054062

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Summary:Purpose - The goals of this study are: to evaluate the merits of a newly developed health information retrieval system; to investigate users' search strategies when using the new search system; and to study the relationships between users' search strategies and their prior topic knowledge.Design methodology approach - The paper developed a new health information retrieval system called MeshMed. A term browser and a tree browser are included in the new system in addition to the traditional search box. The term browser allows a user to search Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) terms using natural language. The tree browser presents a hierarchical tree structure of related MeSH terms. A user study with 30 participants was conducted to evaluate the benefits of MeshMed.Findings - The paper found that MeshMed provides a user with more choices to select an appropriate searching component and form more effective search strategies. Based on the time a participant spent using different MeshMed components, the paper identified three different search styles: the traditional style, the novel style, and the balanced style, which falls in between. MeshMed was particularly helpful for users with low topic knowledge.Originality value - A new health information retrieval system (MeshMed) was designed and developed (and is currently available at http: 129.89.43.129 meshmed). This is the first study to explore users' search strategies on such a system. The study results can inform the design of future clinical-oriented health information retrieval systems.
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ISSN:1468-4527
1468-4535
DOI:10.1108/14684521011054062