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  5. Users’ Help-Seeking Behaviors within the Context of Computer Task Accomplishment: An Exploratory Study
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Users’ Help-Seeking Behaviors within the Context of Computer Task Accomplishment: An Exploratory Study

Date Issued
August 1, 2011
Author(s)
Wu, Lei
Advisor(s)
Peiling Wang
Additional Advisor(s)
Dania Bilal, Robert T. Ladd, Vandana Singh, Carol Tenopir
Abstract

This study investigated computer users’ help-seeking behaviors within the context of accomplishing a novel and challenging computer task. In addition, this study examined how different help-seeking behavioral variables relate to both personal factors and outcome measures in an exploratory manner. Finally, a structural model examined the effect of personal factors on task performance through the mediating function of help-seeking effectiveness. A total of 67 undergraduate students participated in the study. Participants were asked to perform a challenging task in Microsoft Word. The usability software MORAE was used to record the interactions between participants and computer systems. Participants had access to five help sources: “F1 help,” “reference book,” “the Web,” “video tutorial,” and “lab assistant,” which differ in media type (electronic vs. non-electronic) and interactivity levels (high vs. low).


This study found that participants showed a wide range of help-seeking behaviors. Some participants were more active in seeking help than others. Participants also engaged in different help-seeking patterns when using different help sources. A dominant help-seeking strategy was to stay with the same source used in the previous help-seeking episode. Help-seeking behavior affected task performances, but personal factors had no significant effect on help seeking or task performances. Based on the findings, the research value of this study, its practical implications, its limitations, and future research directions are discussed.

Subjects

help-seeking behavior...

help source features

help-seeking factors

human-computer intera...

Disciplines
Library and Information Science
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
Communication and Information
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

Dissertation_LeiWu_final.doc

Size

1.88 MB

Format

Microsoft Word

Checksum (MD5)

50a3afce25819c46e2b8693c1a1f8507

Thumbnail Image
Name

auto_convert.pdf

Size

5.05 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

370ec66926bf17574720171785c3c69a

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