1989
DOI: 10.1177/102831538901500306
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Minimizing information overload: the ranking of electronic messages

Abstract: The decision to examine a message at a particular point in time should be made rationally and economically if the message recipient is to operate efficiently. Electronic message distribution systems, electronic bulletin board systems, and telephone systems capable of leaving digitized voice messages can contribute to "information overload," defined as the economic loss associated with the examination of a number of non-or less-relevant messages. Our model provides a formal method for minimizing expected inform… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…For each thread in the test and training sets, we read the content of the email to determine if it is a broadcast message; if a message is to inform of a decision, a result, news, a meeting time, or anything that doesn't require a reply, we categorize it as a broadcast, otherwise it is considered as a normal message. The ICF of each thread at each f setting is calculated by minimizing (8). A threshold is then chosen to determine if a thread is a broadcast, i.e., a thread is a broadcast if the ICF of the thread is not larger than the threshold, and it is a normal message otherwise.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For each thread in the test and training sets, we read the content of the email to determine if it is a broadcast message; if a message is to inform of a decision, a result, news, a meeting time, or anything that doesn't require a reply, we categorize it as a broadcast, otherwise it is considered as a normal message. The ICF of each thread at each f setting is calculated by minimizing (8). A threshold is then chosen to determine if a thread is a broadcast, i.e., a thread is a broadcast if the ICF of the thread is not larger than the threshold, and it is a normal message otherwise.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The enormous data can easily overwhelm people interested in analyzing the data for social science purposes [2,8]. Needless to say, the data contains valuable information.…”
Section: Www2008mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, as discussions grow larger, the amount of information that merits attention can exceed the ability of the user's ability to process it [14]. Individuals who attempt to manage more information than they need or want can become overloaded, which in turn leads to inefficiencies for the information system and the user [11]. When confronted with too much information, users tend to resort to the path of least effort [21] and develop strategies to evade being overloaded [8].…”
Section: Managing Information Overloadmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Another flaw of this linkless approach is that it assumes statistical feature independence of features. One may wish to assume explicitly that features are statistically dependent, or features that are statistically independent may be developed (Borko, 1985;Deerwester, Dumais, Furnas, Landauer, & Harshman, 1990;Losee, 1989Losee, , 1994. A more elaborate model not making the assumption of statistical feature independence is possible, but more complex.…”
Section: Types Of Links and Their Representationmentioning
confidence: 99%