Information discernment and online reading behaviour: an experiment

Matthew Pointon, G. Walton, Martin J. Turner, Michael Lackenby, Jamie Barker, Andrew Wilkinson
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Abstract

PurposeThis paper intends to explore the relationship between participants' eye fixations (a measure of attention) and durations (a measure of concentration) on areas of interest within a range of online articles and their levels of information discernment (a sub-process of information literacy characterising how participants make judgements about information).Design/methodology/approachEye-tracking equipment was used as a proxy measure for reading behaviour by recording eye-fixations, dwell times and regressions in males aged 18–24 (n = 48). Participants' level of information discernment was determined using a quantitative questionnaire.FindingsData indicates a relationship between participants' level of information discernment and their viewing behaviours within the articles' area of interest. Those who score highly on an information discernment questionnaire tended to interrogate the online article in a structured and linear way. Those with high-level information discernment are more likely to pay attention to an article's textual and graphical information than those exhibiting low-level information discernment. Conversely, participants with low-level information discernment indicated a lack of curiosity by not interrogating the entire article. They were unsystematic in their saccadic movements spending significantly longer viewing irrelevant areas.Social implicationsThe most profound consequence is that those with low-level information discernment, through a lack of curiosity in particular, could base their health, workplace, political or everyday decisions on sub-optimal engagement with and comprehension of information or misinformation (such as fake news).Originality/valueGround-breaking analysis of the relationship between a persons' self-reported level of information literacy (information discernment specifically) and objective measures of reading behaviour.
信息识别与在线阅读行为:一个实验
本文旨在探讨参与者在一系列在线文章中对感兴趣领域的注视(一种注意力测量)和持续时间(一种注意力测量)与他们的信息识别水平(表征参与者如何对信息做出判断的信息素养的子过程)之间的关系。设计/方法/方法使用眼动追踪设备,通过记录18-24岁男性(n = 48)的注视、停留时间和回归,作为阅读行为的替代测量。参与者的信息识别水平是通过定量问卷来确定的。调查数据表明,参与者的信息识别水平与他们在文章感兴趣的领域内的观看行为之间存在关系。那些在信息识别问卷中得分较高的人倾向于以结构化和线性的方式询问在线文章。具有高水平信息识别能力的人比具有低水平信息识别能力的人更容易关注文章的文本和图形信息。相反,信息识别能力较低的参与者不会询问整篇文章,这表明他们缺乏好奇心。他们的跳眼运动不系统,花了很长时间观察不相关的区域。最深刻的后果是,那些信息识别能力较低的人,特别是缺乏好奇心的人,可能会将他们的健康、工作场所、政治或日常决策建立在对信息或错误信息(如假新闻)的次优参与和理解之上。原创性/价值一个人自我报告的信息素养水平(特别是信息识别)与阅读行为的客观测量之间关系的开创性分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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