Epperson-Zemel2008
Epperson-Zemel2008 | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Epperson-Zemel2008 |
Author(s) | Terrence W. Epperson, Alan Zemel |
Title | Reports, Requests, and Recipient Design:The Management of Patron Queries in Online Reference Chats |
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Tag(s) | EMCA, Ethnomethodology, Conversation Analysis, virtual reference services, library and informa- tion science |
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Year | 2008 |
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Journal | Journal of the American Society for Information Science & Technology |
Volume | 59 |
Number | 14 |
Pages | 2268-2283 |
URL | |
DOI | 10.1002/asi.20930 |
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Abstract
The related fields of ethnomethodology (EM), founded by Harold Garfinkel, and conversation analysis (CA), as epit- omized by thework ofHarvey Sacks,offer unique insights into the operation of virtual reference services (VRS).The tradition of phenomenology within library and informa- tion science (LIS) provides a context for this research, although EM/CAdiffers in important respects, providing a program for grounded empirical investigations. Rele- vant EM/CAresearch concerns include the documentary method of interpretation, trust, indexicality, instructed action, and sequential organization. Review of the LIS literature on reference interactions in both face-to-face and virtual settings reveals a tendency to impose ana- lytic categories and classificatory schemes that obscure the extremely situated and collaborative nature of refer- encework;however, an EM/CAexamination of transcripts from the first 4 months of a newly implemented VRS at a large university library suggests the need for a more nuanced approach. Close-order examination of two chat reference transcripts reveals the interactional com- plexities and nuances that characterize even the most succinct encounters. Analyzing the reference query as a service request demonstrates how librarians deploy their interactional skills to address “face” concerns and ame- liorate potentially problematic aspects of the reference encounter.
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