Making the news interesting: Understanding the relationship between familiarity and interest

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

News feeds are an important element of information encountering, feeding our (new) interests but also leading to a state of information overload. Current solutions often select information similar to the user's interests. However, long-term interest in one topic, and being highly familiar with that topic, does not necessarily imply an actual interest response will occur when more of the same topic is selected. This study explores how important familiarity is in predicting an interest response. In a study with 30 subjects, interest was manipulated by topical familiarity using novel stimuli from a popular news source. This study shows, within this context, familiarity is moderately important for an interest response: familiarity does indeed make the news interesting, but only to a certain extent. The results set a baseline for predicting interest during information encountering, indicating familiarity is important, but not the only influential variable a system should consider when selecting information for users. Copyright © 2012 ACM.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationIIiX 2012 - Proceedings 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium: Behaviors, Interactions, Interfaces, Systems
Number of pages4
Publication date2012
Pages314-317
ISBN (Print)9781450312820
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2012
SeriesIIiX 2012 - Proceedings 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium: Behaviors, Interactions, Interfaces, Systems

    Research areas

  • Familiarity, Filtering and recommender systems, Information feeds, Interest

ID: 209746371