As access to hypermedia documents becomes generally available, it becomes increasingly important to understand how casual users search for information. We have studied search patterns used in a small hypermedia museum exhibit. Our goal has been to identify preferred search strategies that can be supported for effective information retrieval from web-based information systems. Our data indicates that users make little use of the embedded links enabling associative selection. Instead, topic selection was predominantly serially through first-in-index and next-page sequences. Further, sessions were short in both time and number of documents viewed, indicating little general interest in `exploring' the exhibit. Keywords hypermedia, browsing patterns, electronic museum exhibits Hypermedia databases Printed documents, containing administrative records, texts, tables, charts, images, music scores, and/or maps have long been used for information dissemination by libraries, museums, news m...
Joan C. Nordbotten, Svein Nordbotten