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Faculty Research Update: Spring 2018

Posted by SIM on May 4, 2018 in Research, News

The School of Information Management鈥檚 faculty and students engage in research initiatives designed to answer significant questions in the field of information management. Our research falls into seven overlapping clusters.聽Click here聽to learn more about our research.

We have captured recent聽highlights聽that showcase the breadth of our research impact below. We are always interested in collaborating.聽 Please feel free to contact us with your thoughts and ideas.

Jennifer Grek Martin

Since January, I have:

  • completed a directed study in Memory, Imagination, and Landscapes as the final course for my IDPhD
  • given an IM Public lecture on memory, imagination, landscapes, and fantasy film and literature
  • presented a version of this lecture at the American Association of Geographers鈥 Annual Meeting in New Orleans
  • accepted an opportunity to assist Bertrum MacDonald and Fiona Black in writing an entry on Geographic Information Systems [GIS] as a Book-History Research Tool for The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature.

Vivian Howard

  • In November 2017, I was part of a team of FoM researchers (including Michelle Adams, Peggy Cunningham, Jeff Friesen, and Tony Walker and research assistants Allison Kader and Tyler Lightfoot) that conducted a national survey of perceptions of social license in various sectors (food retail, clothing retail, transportation, government departments and services).聽 This survey asked questions about trustworthiness, ethical practices, CSR, and sustainability. We had no sooner completed this survey when Loblaw reported that it had been involved in fixing the prices of packaged bread for 14 years and claimed this was an industrywide conspiracy.聽 How did this impact consumer trust in the retail sector?
  • My colleagues and I repeated the survey in March 2018, focusing exclusively on the food retail sector.聽 This survey revealed that overall trust in food retailers had dropped by 6.3% but trust in Loblaw had dropped by 10%.聽 In contrast, trust in Sobeys (which had strongly denied any involvement in price fixing) actually went up marginally.聽

Keith Lawson

  • In February, at the Centre for Learning and Teaching, I gave a talk outlining the changes I had made to the Professional Communications Skills course (MGMT 3602) in creating an online version which ran for the first time this winter term.
  • This May, Laura Little and I will present papers at the 2018 新加坡六合彩开奖直播 Conference on University Teaching and Learning reporting on our efforts to create social presence in the online Professional Communications Skills (MGMT 3602) class. Laura Little, who has completed the first year of her MLIS degree, was a TA this past year in both in-class and online versions of the MGMT 3602.

Bertrum MacDonald

  • Bertrum MacDonald has received research funding from the Ocean Frontier Institute (OFI):
  1. $275,300, in collaboration with Dr. Patricia Manuel, Director of the School of Planning, for research on marine spatial planning and community decision-making in the OFI Module on Social License and Planning in Coastal Communities. Tobbi Dyer, MLIS student, will complete a thesis in this research group; and
  2. $100,000, in collaboration with members of the OFI Module on Ecosystem Indicators for Changing Oceans, to study the use of ocean science indicators by environmental decision makers.
  • Science, information, and policy interface for effective coastal and ocean management,聽edited by Bertrum H. MacDonald, Suzuette S. Soomai, Elizabeth M. De Santo, and Peter G. Wells was released in a paperback edition by CRC Press (Taylor & Francis) in February 2018. CRC Press has signed a contract with a Chinese publisher to publish a complete translation of the book in Chinese for the Chinese market.
  • Two papers were published by members of the Environmental Information: Use and Influence research team: a) Sarah D. Chamberlain, Peter G. Wells, and Bertrum H. MacDonald. (2018). The Gulfwatch contaminants monitoring program in the Gulf of Maine: Are its data being used for ocean protection, with special reference to Nova Scotia, Canada?聽Marine Pollution Bulletin, 127,聽781-787; and b) Lee Wilson and Bertrum H. MacDonald. (2018). Characterizing bridger organizations and their roles in a coastal resource management network.聽Ocean & Coastal Management, 153,听59-69.
  • Two new Masters students joined the Environmental Information: Use and Influence research team in May 2018 鈥 Jillian Pulsifer (MLIS student) and Curtis Martin (MMM student) 鈥 to undertake research projects as part of their graduate work.
  • Several members of the Environmental Information: Use and Influence research team are participating in the 12th聽BoFEP Bay of Fundy Science Workshop, Truro, 9-12 May 2018:
    1. to present a panel session on 鈥淚nformation Use at the Science鈥揚olicy Interface in Decision-Making in the Bay of Fundy Region鈥 with Bertrum MacDonald, Suzuette Soomai, Simon Ryder-Burbidge, Rachael Cadman, and James Ross; and
    2. to present research posters:
      • 鈥淕lobal Resource, Local Needs: A Case Study of the Use of the International Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts Database鈥 by Diana Castillo, Bertrum H. MacDonald, and Suzuette S. Soomai;
      • 鈥淭he Important Role of Technical Working Groups in Evidence-Based Decision-Making for Marine Fisheries Management鈥 by Kalene L. Eck, Suzuette S. Soomai, and Bertrum H. MacDonald;
      • 鈥淪haring Victories: Enablers and Barriers to Collaborative Relationships within the Conservation Sector鈥 by Rachael Cadman, Bertrum H. MacDonald, and Suzuette S. Soomai;
      • 鈥淓xamining Socioecological Ocean Connections in a Coastal Community: Implications for Local Policy and Science Communication鈥 by Simon R. Ryder-Burbidge, Bertrum H. MacDonald, and Suzuette S. Soomai; and
      • 鈥淐haracteristics of the Science-Policy Interface: Scientific Information Use in Coastal and Ocean Decision-Making鈥 by Suzuette S. Soomai, Bertrum H. MacDonald, James D. Ross, Peter G. Wells, and Lee Wilson

Mike Smit

  • We presented two papers at IEEE Big Data in Boston, with great feedback
  • Completed a major research project with DFO, and about to launch two newly funded projects
  • Attended Research Data Access and Preservation 2018 in Chicago
  • Looking forward to a busy summer with lots of students and papers underway

Louise Spiteri

  • Spiteri, L.F. (2018). Extending the scope of library discovery systems via hashtags.聽15th International ISKO Conference, July 9-11, Porto, Portugal.
  • Spiteri, L.F., & Pecoskie, J. (2018). Expanding the scope of affect: Taxonomy construction for emotions, tones, and associations.聽Journal of Documentation,听74(2), 383-397.
  • Allam, H., Bliemel, M., Spiteri, L.F., & Blustein, J. (2018). Applying a 3-D hedonic concept of intrinsic motivation on the acceptance of social tagging tools: A theoretical model and empirical validation.聽Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology.聽 (under review)
  • Allam, H., Bliemel, M., Spiteri, L.F., & Blustein, J. (2018). If you build it, they won鈥檛 come: What motivates employees to create and share tagged content. Journal of Knowledge Management(under review).
  • Spiteri, L.F., & Pennington, D. M. (2018).聽Social tagging for lined data across environments. London: Facet (Tentative publication date: Fall, 2018)

Sandra Toze

  • Along with Dr. David Brown she published an article on聽Information governance in digitized public administration聽in Canadian Public Administration 60(4):581-604.
  • Sandra will be presenting at the ARMA Canada Conference in Vancouver in May on聽Transforming through Open Data.
  • She will be a keynote Speaker at the CALL Conference in Halifax, speaking on聽Connecting Through Digital Transformation.
  • Sandra worked with her PhD student Elham Alghamdi and her committee on a paper聽Saudi Females in Human-Computer Interaction Studies: Challenges in Data Collection聽which was accepted for a Workshop at CHI 2018.
  • Over the summer Sandra will be partnering with Jeff Roy and Markus Sharaput from the School of Public Administration to complete a Training Needs Analysis To Build Digital Capacity within the Government of Canada. Stay tuned for more details.