“…The paradigm shift to the user-centered approach (e.g. Aydin, 2017;Savolainen, 1992;Talja & Hartel, 2007;Vakkari & Cronin, eds., 1992;Wilson, 1981), which began in the late 1970s, did not lead to the rejection of the earlier perspective, which remains widely present in empirical studies (Julien, 1999, 207;Julien et al, 2018). Instead, it introduced new approaches, which, generally speaking, (1) focused on information users seen as individual actors, more or less complex entities potentially able to initiate and realize various relations with information as causative agents, and (2) conceptualized information users as human beings (also in social terms).…”