The School of Information Managements 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.泭Click here泭to learn more about our research.
Here are some 2020 research highlights that showcase the breadth of our research impact:
Colin Conrad:
- COVID definitely limited neuroscience-type research as two of the ongoing studies I had earlier this year ground to a halt due to safety concerns. Nonetheless, I had the pleasure of once again serving on the committee and co-authoring in-progress articles in the泭2020 NeuroIS retreat:
- Conrad, C., Aziz, J., Smith, N. and Newman, A. (2020). What do users feel? Towards affective EEG correlates of cybersecurity notifications.泭Proceedings of the 2020 NeuroIS Retreat.
- Godfrey, D., Findlay, C., Mulchandani, D., Subramanilyer, R., Conrad, C., and Newman, A. (2020). Information systems applications for a tri-hybrid SSVEP, P300 and N170 brain-computer interface.泭Proceedings of the 2020 NeuroIS Retreat.
- Schlechtinger, M., Klesel, M., Oschinsky, F., Conrad, C. and Niehaves, B. (2020). Detecting mind wandering episodes in virtual realities using eye-tracking.泭Proceedings of the 2020 NeuroIS Retreat.
- We also have one forth coming conference paper to be presented at the泭2020 International Conference for Knowledge Management: Gone, P. and Conrad, C. (forthcoming). Comparing changes in attitudes towards COVID-19 expressed on social media: the case of USA and Canada.泭Proceedings of the International Conference on Knowledge Management泭(梆唬鬼紼).
- I had the pleasure of serving in some泭supervisory capacity (masters theses, masters projects, masters papers and directed readings) for 20 students泭since January. These students have largely been from the MEC/MDI and MI programs, though some have been in neuroscience and computer science as well. Of these students, 12 have finished their degrees, 4 have been coauthors in some published work (all described above), and 3 have highly promising data that will likely lead to publications in the first half of 2021. It is a pleasure to play a part in bringing so much student work to fruition!
- I have served as a reviewer for six conference papers (1 at the泭Americas Conference on Information Systems, 1 at泭International Conference on Information Systems泭and 3 at the泭NeuorIS Retreat). I also had the pleasure of reviewing a paper for the泭Journal of the Association for Information Systems泭as well as泭Information Technology & People.
- Though both of the major grants that I applied to were declined, I had the pleasure of attracting a泭SSHRC Explore grant泭($5000) for the project called泭What factors lead to gainful university online community experiences during COVID-19?
Bertrum MacDonald:
- In a year when greater emphasis has been placed on open access to information, open science, and the role of social media in disseminating information (and misinformation), Bertrum MacDonald and members of the泭泭research team泭have published two timely papers about their research on these issues:
- MacDonald, B. H., Cadman, R., Martin, C., Ryder-Burbidge, S., Soomai, S. S., Stewart, I., & Wells, P. G. (2020). Is the production and use of grey marine literature a model for open science?泭The Grey Journal, 16(2), 7383.
- Martin, C., & MacDonald, B. H. (2020). Using interpersonal communication strategies to encourage science conversations on social media.泭PLOS ONE, 15(11), e0241972.泭
- In addition, in research being conducted within an Ocean Frontier Institute research group, Bertrum has co-authored an essay with Dr. Patricia Manual of the AV整氈窒 School of Planning that highlights the泭importance of including local governments and communities in coastal and marine planning initiatives: Manuel, P., & MacDonald, B. H. (2020). Local governments and coastal communities are more than stakeholders in marine spatial planning.泭The Journal of Ocean Technology, 15(2), 128129.泭
- Evidence-based decision making has been front and centre this year as the ravages of the pandemic continue to play out globally. This subject is the focus of the graduate course,泭Information in Public Policy and Decision Making, which students discussed each class in the Winter 2020 term. COVID-19 quickly became a massive case study for consideration as a泭泭about the course notes.
Philippe Mongeon:
Presentations
- On the relationship between journal fit and scientific impact (METRICS2020)
- For-profit publishers are parasites, as part of the泭泭panel (CAIS2020)
- Do researchers cite what they tweet? (7:AM Altmetrics Conference)
- Cartographie de la recherche en sciences de linformation au Canada (invited presentation in INFO 6700, OttawaU)
- From Research Evaluation to Research Behaviour: Shifting the focus of bibliometrics (2020 International Library and Information Science Forum for Young Scholars)
- The Global Production and Use of Open Access Research (16th Nordic Workshop on Bibliometrics and Research Policy)泭*Presented by co-authors
Grant applications
- The mobilization of science in a global health crisis (SSHRC insight grant with co-pi Vincent Larivi癡re)
- Muzzled no more? Perceptions of Canadian environmental scientists abilities to communicate and conduct research without interference (Deans collaborative research grant with co-pi Alana Westwood)
- The mental health crisis in academia: tracking mental health signals from academics tweets (Deans collaborative research grant with co-pi Anika Cloutier and Colin Conrad)
New projects involving SIM colleagues
- Mapping Canadian LIS research, with Cora-Lynn Munroe Lynds, Marc-Andr矇 Simard, Ratna Dhaliwal, Azka Gowda, Vinson Li, Yifan Liu, Emily McClean
- Digging the archive, with Kendell Fitzgerald, Grace Bourret, Jordan Audas, and Ana Roeschley
- Tackling social justice in LIS research, with Ratna Dhaliwal, Alison Brown, Amber Matthews and Jessalyn Hill
- The visibility of shark research in the news and social media, with Tamanna Moharana, Kory Melnick, R矇mi Toupin, Pallavi Gone, and Bertrum MacDonald
Other research-related activities
- Launched the泭
- Chaired the泭泭*Many thanks to SIM student volunteers: Ashley MacKinnon, Cora-Lynn Munroe Lynds, and Erica Finch.
- Chaired the泭
- Joined the泭
- Joined the泭泭as associate member.
Louise Spiteri:
- Over the past year, I have engaged in a new area of research, namely the information behaviours of members of online zero waste communities. Ive incorporated different disciplines into my research, including consumer behaviour, social theory, economic theory, and environmental theory. In the first stage of this research plan, I conducted a thematic analysis of over 2,000 posts across five popular zero waste Instagram communities. This research has been featured in the annual conference of the泭Canadian Society for Information Science, as will be published soon in the泭Canadian Journal of Library and Information Science. The next phase of this search is underway and will examine in more depth a number of matters that were revealed in the thematic analysis, including environmental racism and eco-feminism.
- I am working with a multi-disciplinary and international team on a project that seeks to address the value gap problem arising in the creative industries by taking a comprehensive and interdisciplinary approach to explore the泭potential implementation of blockchain-based solutions capable of enabling neutral trusted exchanges in otherwise highly politicised environment of copyright. Team members from AV整氈窒, University of Copenhagen, Erasmus University, Bocconi University, University of Plymouth, and Warsaw University represent a variety of disciplines, including copyright law, computer science, political science, economics, and information management. We have applied for a泭New Frontiers in Research Fund and are awaiting the results.
- I am working on a泭SSHRC Partnership Grant泭that explores trauma and violence informed outreach with women affected by violence. This project features researchers from the University of British Columbia, as well as AV整氈窒 (Scott Comber, Greg Hebb, and Sandra Toze). The AV整氈窒 team will be working with local organizations that provide outreach services to victims of domestic violence.
Sandra Toze:
- Over the past six months I have been working to complete some ongoing research projects, and to initiate some new ones. I have a paper related to our work with泭Digital Skills in the Federal Government,泭Smart Technologies, Digital Competencies and Workforce Development: An Examination of the Government of Canadas Current and Future Capacities泭which is currently being reviewed. The final report from that study泭Building Digital Capacity: Report On The Training Needs Analysis泭is available in DalSpace:泭
- I am excited to be working as part of the Halifax team, led by Dr. Scott Comber and including泭 Dr. Louise Spiteri, Dr. Greg Hebb, and Dr. Liz Wilson on a泭SSHRC Partnership Grant Scaling Up Trauma and Violence Informed Outreach with Women Affected by Violence. The AV整氈窒 team is exploring objectives within this project related to tailoring the example from Vancouver to the local context, how to best evaluate the success, as well as how to increase and measure engagement with women and services.
- The fall I was successful in receiving a SSHRC Explore grant for泭Exploring Business-to-Business Information Sharing in Two Nova Scotian Industries. The proposed research seeks to understand information sharing habits of competing businesses within two rural-tourism industries in Nova Scotia: the wine industry and the artisanal cheese industry. I look forward to completing this research over the next year.
- I have submitted a proposal to extend the pilot study by Dr. Louis Beaubien, Dr. Colin Conrad Janet Music and myself that examined泭Evaluating simplified web interfaces of risk models for clinical use泭related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). The aim of the proposed research is to address the critical need for better testing, diagnosis and education related to COPD in Nova Scotia, to reduce the burden, and positively affect health care and the patient experience. The goal is to determine how better information sharing among COPD clinicians and patients can create a more cost effective, efficient, and effective way to manage COPD assessment, diagnosis and treatment.
Recent News
- MLIS alumna wins 2023 RBC/PEN Canadas New Voices Award
- Job Postings: PartTime Academics (Fall 2023)
- Charlie Hook (MI 23) on her upcoming PhD Program at the University of Leicester
- Alison Brown Featured in 2023 AV整氈窒 Open Think Initiative
- Job Posting: PartTime Academics (Summer 2023)
- MLIS Graduate Chosen as 2023 Black Changemaker
- Dal SIM Appoints Two New Professors Emeriti
- Dr. Colin Conrad on his new role as Interim Director (Master of Digital Innovation)