How do we find personal files?: the effect of OS, presentation & depth on file navigation

Folder navigation is the main way that computer users retrieve their personal files. However we know surprisingly little about navigation, particularly about how it is affected by the operating system used, the interface presentation and the folder structure. To investigate this, we asked 289 participants to retrieve 1,109 of their own active files. We analyzed the 4,948 resulting retrieval steps, i.e. moves through the hierarchical folder tree. Results show: (a) significant differences in overall retrieval time between PC and Mac that arise from different organizational strategies rather than interface design; (b) the default Windows presentation is suboptimal - if changed, retrieval time could be reduced substantially and (c) contrary to our expectations, folder depth did not affect step duration. We discuss possible reasons for these results and suggest directions for future research.

[1]  Bonnie A. Nardi,et al.  Finding and reminding: file organization from the desktop , 1995, SGCH.

[2]  M. Angela Sasse,et al.  "Stuff goes into the computer and doesn't come out": a cross-tool study of personal information management , 2004, CHI.

[3]  Joaquim A. Jorge,et al.  An Empirical Study of Personal Document Spaces , 2003, DSV-IS.

[4]  Harry Bruce,et al.  Don't take my folders away!: organizing personal information to get ghings done , 2005, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[5]  Rafi Nachmias,et al.  The project fragmentation problem in personal information management , 2006, CHI.

[6]  Abigail Sellen,et al.  Understanding photowork , 2006, CHI.

[7]  Arnon Hershkovitz,et al.  How do Students Organize Personal Information Spaces? , 2009, EDM.

[8]  Ananth Srinivasan,et al.  An Empirical Analysis of Personal Digital Document Structures , 2009, HCI.

[9]  Rafi Nachmias,et al.  The effect of folder structure on personal file navigation , 2010, J. Assoc. Inf. Sci. Technol..

[10]  Rafi Nachmias,et al.  Improved search engines and navigation preference in personal information management , 2008, TOIS.

[11]  Jacek Gwizdka,et al.  Personal information management , 2004, CHI EA '04.

[12]  Ben Shneiderman,et al.  Designing The User Interface , 2013 .

[13]  Mark S. Ackerman,et al.  The perfect search engine is not enough: a study of orienteering behavior in directed search , 2004, CHI.

[14]  Susan T. Dumais,et al.  Searching to eliminate personal information management , 2006, CACM.

[15]  Arnon Hershkovitz,et al.  Students' Organization Strategies of Personal , 2009, J. Digit. Inf..

[16]  William Jones Personal Information Management , 2007, Annu. Rev. Inf. Sci. Technol..