“…Other researchers have presented a plethora of IB and activities, some of which are sub-categories of information seeking, such as starting, chaining, browsing, differentiating, monitoring, extracting, verifying and ending (Ellis, 1989;Ellis et al, 1993), browsing, formatting, grouping, highlighting, indexing, citing, digesting, abstracting, formulating, transmitting, interpreting, connecting, skimming (Dervin, 1989), information retrieval (Spink and Sollenberger, 2004), browsing, environmental scanning, information encountering (Erdelez, 1999(Erdelez, , 2004, environmental scanning (Auster and Choo, 1994;Jogaratnam and Law, 2006;Hambrick, 1981;Jain, 1984), noticing, stopping, examining, capturing, returning (Erdelez, 2004), browsing (Bates, 2002;Qui, 1993;Chang and Rice, 1993), information managing including verifying, networking and accessing (Meho and Tibbo, 2003), information dissemination (Morris, 1985;Mchombu, 2003;Duggan and Banwell, 2004;Song et al, 2005), selecting, acquiring and evaluating (Fodness and Murray, 1999), incidental information acquisition (Williamson, 1998), information processing (Savolainen, 2009), human information organising behaviour (Cole and Leide, 2006), information production (Thivant, 2005), quality assuring (Shannon et al, 2000), and safety reporting and information sharing (Leighton and Davies, 2009). Some of the information activities of information providers exist in communication literature such as information manipulation (Jung, 2009), and decoding, interpreting, understanding, conveying, transmitting (Narula, 2006).…”