Serendipity and information seeking: an empirical study
Top Cited Papers
- 1 June 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Journal of Documentation
- Vol. 59 (3) , 321-340
- https://doi.org/10.1108/00220410310472518
Abstract
“Serendipity” has both a classical origin in literature and a more modern manifestation where it is found in the descriptions of the problem solving and knowledge acquisition of humanities and science scholars. Studies of information retrieval and information seeking have also discussed the utility of the notion of serendipity. Some have implied that it may be stimulated, or that certain people may “encounter” serendipitous information more than others. All to some extent accept the classical definition of serendipity as a “fortuitous” accident. The analysis presented here is part of a larger study concerning the information‐seeking behaviour of interdisciplinary scholars. This paper considers the nature of serendipity in information‐seeking contexts, and reinterprets the notion of serendipity as a phenomenon arising from both conditions and strategies – as both a purposive and a non‐purposive component of information seeking and related knowledge acquisition.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Improving the “darkness to light” ratio in user‐related information retrieval researchJournal of Documentation, 2000
- Information Encountering: It's More Than Just Bumping into InformationBulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 1999
- Study of interactive feedback during mediated information retrievalJournal of the American Society for Information Science, 1997
- The Information-Seeking Behavior of Artists: Exploratory InterviewsThe Library Quarterly, 1996
- Access versus Ownership: How Real an Alternative Is It?IFLA Journal, 1996
- COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVES OF INFORMATION RETRIEVAL INTERACTION: ELEMENTS OF A COGNITIVE IR THEORYJournal of Documentation, 1996
- The discovery of [Ru(NH3)5N2]2+: A case of serendipity and the scientific methodJournal of Chemical Education, 1990
- Information systems and the stimulation of creativityJournal of Information Science, 1986
- Serendipity and discoveryJournal of Chemical Education, 1980
- The Discovery of Grounded Theory; Strategies for Qualitative ResearchNursing Research, 1968