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Treffer: Are Self-Assessments Reliable Indicators of Topic Knowledge?

Title:
Are Self-Assessments Reliable Indicators of Topic Knowledge?
Contributors:
The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Collection:
CiteSeerX
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift text
File Description:
application/pdf
Language:
English
Rights:
Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it.
Accession Number:
edsbas.C26E2EB6
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

Self-assessment of topic/task knowledge is a human metacognitive capacity that impacts information behavior, for example through selection of learning and search strategies. It is often used as a measure in experiments for evaluation of results and those measurements are taken to be generally reliable. We conducted a user study (n=40) to test this by constructing a concept-based topic knowledge representation for each participant and then comparing it with the participant judgment of their topic knowledge elicited with Likert-scale questions. The tasks were in the genomics domain and knowledge representations were constructed from the MeSH thesaurus terms that indexed relevant documents for five topics. The participants rated their familiarity with the topic, the anticipated task difficulty, the amount of learning gained during the task, and made other knowledge-related judgments associated with the task. Although there is considerable variability over individuals, the results provide evidence that these selfassessed topic knowledge measures are correlated in the expected way with the independently-constructed topic knowledge measure. We argue the results provide evidence for the general validity of topic knowledge selfassessment and discuss ways to further explore knowledge self-assessment and its reliability for prediction of individual knowledge levels.