Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media

Background. Social media often adds a layer of intermediation between sources and information consumer, with users outsourcing some of the information work to others. Social media “synthesists” have been identified as a group of volunteer information providers fulfilling this role. Approach. Through...

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Main Author: Matthews, Paul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154269
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1542692021-12-22T20:11:29Z Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media Matthews, Paul Library and information science Background. Social media often adds a layer of intermediation between sources and information consumer, with users outsourcing some of the information work to others. Social media “synthesists” have been identified as a group of volunteer information providers fulfilling this role. Approach. Through a review of evidence from philosophy, information science and knowledge management, this paper explores the implications of cognitive outsourcing, presents quality standards for synthesis and asks how well synthesists meet these. In the process, the role of intermediary is discussed, along with the non-specialist status of the synthesist. Results. Findings show that social media synthesists fulfil a useful role and that their importance in terms of knowledge translation is clear. While their synthesis quality may fall far short of LIS standards, there are a number of ways that some quality issues can be addressed, including the involvement of the information profession itself on the same social platforms. Contribution. Through a comparison of synthesis best practice with current informal information behaviour on social media, the paper draws attention to quality issues and new opportunities to address them. This represents an attempt to identify ways to bridge formal and emerging, informal information markets. Published version 2021-12-16T07:27:27Z 2021-12-16T07:27:27Z 2014 Journal Article Matthews, P. (2014). Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media. Library and Information Science Research E-Journal, 24(2), 97-107. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LIBRES.2014.2.3 1058-6768 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154269 10.32655/LIBRES.2014.2.3 2 24 97 107 en Library and Information Science Research E-Journal © 2014 Paul Matthews. All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Library and information science
spellingShingle Library and information science
Matthews, Paul
Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media
description Background. Social media often adds a layer of intermediation between sources and information consumer, with users outsourcing some of the information work to others. Social media “synthesists” have been identified as a group of volunteer information providers fulfilling this role. Approach. Through a review of evidence from philosophy, information science and knowledge management, this paper explores the implications of cognitive outsourcing, presents quality standards for synthesis and asks how well synthesists meet these. In the process, the role of intermediary is discussed, along with the non-specialist status of the synthesist. Results. Findings show that social media synthesists fulfil a useful role and that their importance in terms of knowledge translation is clear. While their synthesis quality may fall far short of LIS standards, there are a number of ways that some quality issues can be addressed, including the involvement of the information profession itself on the same social platforms. Contribution. Through a comparison of synthesis best practice with current informal information behaviour on social media, the paper draws attention to quality issues and new opportunities to address them. This represents an attempt to identify ways to bridge formal and emerging, informal information markets.
format Article
author Matthews, Paul
author_facet Matthews, Paul
author_sort Matthews, Paul
title Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media
title_short Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media
title_full Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media
title_fullStr Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media
title_full_unstemmed Search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media
title_sort search delegation, synthesists and expertise on social media
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/154269
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