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Finders/keepers: a longitudinal study of people managing information scraps in a micro-note tool

Finders/keepers: a longitudinal study of people managing information scraps in a micro-note tool
Finders/keepers: a longitudinal study of people managing information scraps in a micro-note tool

Mainstream PIM tools capture only a portion of the information that people need to manage. Many information scraps seem to exist that don't make their way into these tools, instead being relegated to sticky notes, text files, and other makeshift storage, or simply being lost. In an effort to understand the role of these information scraps, the underlying needs they reflect, and the way PIM tools must be modified to support those needs, we created List-it, a micronote tool for quick and simple capture of information scraps. In this article, we analyze the notes and interaction logs of 420 volunteer users of List-it over a two-year period of study (August 2008-August 2010). We contextualize our analysis with results of two surveys and an e-mail interview we conducted in October 2009. We find that people are drawn to List-it by the ease and speed of note capture and by the ability to record scraps with arbitrary content that blends or completely escapes the types and roles imposed by our rigid PIM tools. Notes are taken to serve a variety of needs - reminding, reference, journaling/activity logging, brainstorming, and to indefinitely archive information of sentimental or personal value. Finally, while people differ considerably in the ways they keep information, our findings suggest such differences can be described as a combination of four distinct strategies, enriching the Filer/Piler distinction identified for classic document management.

Note-taking, Personal information management
2907-2916
Association for Computing Machinery
Van Kleek, Max
4d869656-cd47-4cdf-9a4f-697fa9ba4105
Styke, Wolfe
6d80a24d-b329-4916-85bf-19efb02c9f9c
Karger, David
7ecc1fdb-fc2f-41fe-87a3-55f7f4ec81ce
Schraefel, Mc
ac304659-1692-47f6-b892-15113b8c929f
Van Kleek, Max
4d869656-cd47-4cdf-9a4f-697fa9ba4105
Styke, Wolfe
6d80a24d-b329-4916-85bf-19efb02c9f9c
Karger, David
7ecc1fdb-fc2f-41fe-87a3-55f7f4ec81ce
Schraefel, Mc
ac304659-1692-47f6-b892-15113b8c929f

Van Kleek, Max, Styke, Wolfe, Karger, David and Schraefel, Mc (2011) Finders/keepers: a longitudinal study of people managing information scraps in a micro-note tool. In CHI 2011 - 29th Annual CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Conference Proceedings and Extended Abstracts. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 2907-2916 . (doi:10.1145/1978942.1979374).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Mainstream PIM tools capture only a portion of the information that people need to manage. Many information scraps seem to exist that don't make their way into these tools, instead being relegated to sticky notes, text files, and other makeshift storage, or simply being lost. In an effort to understand the role of these information scraps, the underlying needs they reflect, and the way PIM tools must be modified to support those needs, we created List-it, a micronote tool for quick and simple capture of information scraps. In this article, we analyze the notes and interaction logs of 420 volunteer users of List-it over a two-year period of study (August 2008-August 2010). We contextualize our analysis with results of two surveys and an e-mail interview we conducted in October 2009. We find that people are drawn to List-it by the ease and speed of note capture and by the ability to record scraps with arbitrary content that blends or completely escapes the types and roles imposed by our rigid PIM tools. Notes are taken to serve a variety of needs - reminding, reference, journaling/activity logging, brainstorming, and to indefinitely archive information of sentimental or personal value. Finally, while people differ considerably in the ways they keep information, our findings suggest such differences can be described as a combination of four distinct strategies, enriching the Filer/Piler distinction identified for classic document management.

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More information

Published date: 2011
Keywords: Note-taking, Personal information management

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500664
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500664
PURE UUID: c705e467-a1ce-4035-8611-4bdf15fe50fd
ORCID for Mc Schraefel: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9061-7957

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Date deposited: 08 May 2025 17:03
Last modified: 09 May 2025 01:39

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Contributors

Author: Max Van Kleek
Author: Wolfe Styke
Author: David Karger
Author: Mc Schraefel ORCID iD

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