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Hartley, J., & Betts, L. (2008). Revising and polishing a structured abstract: Is it worth the time and effort? Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 59(12), 1870–1877.
Savolainen, R. (2008). Everyday information practices: A social phenomenological perspective. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press.
Sellen, A., Rogers, Y., Harper, R., & Rodden, T. (2009). Reflecting human values in the digital age. Communications of the ACM, 52(3), 58––66.
Zhang, C., & Liu, X. (2011). Review of James Hartley's research on structured abstracts. Journal of Information Science, 37(6), 570––576.
Marketing professionals' work activities are heavily reliant on access to and the use of large amounts of quality information. This study aims to examine the information journey experienced by marketing professionals, including task-driven information .
Through this article, we highlight that there are discernibly different patterns among conceptualizations of information, technology, and people across information systems and information science literatures. We do this to clarify the differences in .