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Understanding Feeling-of-Knowing in Information Search: An EEG Study

Dominika Michalkova, Mario A. Parra, Yashar Moshfeghi

2023ACM Transactions on Information Systems11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The realisation and the variability of information needs (IN) with respect to a searcher’s gap in knowledge is driven by the perceived Anomalous State of Knowledge (ASK). The concept of Feeling-of-Knowing (FOK), as the introspective feeling of knowledge awareness, shares the characteristics of an ASK state. From an IR perspective, FOK as a premise to trigger IN is unexplored. Motivated by the neuroimaging studies in IR, we investigate the neurophysiological drivers associated with FOK, to provide evidence validating FOK as a distinctive state in IN realisation. We employ Electroencephalography to capture the brain activity of 24 healthy participants performing a textual Question Answering IR scenario. We analyse the evoked neural patterns corresponding to three states of knowledge: i.e., (1)“I know”, (2)“FOK”, (3)“I do not know”. Our findings show the distinct neurophysiological signatures (N1, P2, N400, P6) in response to information segments processed in the context of our three levels. They further reveal that the brain manifestation associated with “FOK” does not significantly differ from the ones associated with “I do not know”, indicating their association with recognition of a gap in knowledge and as such could further inform the IN formation on different levels of knowing.

Topics & Concepts

FeelingRealisationPsychologyElectroencephalographyContext (archaeology)PremiseIntrospectionNeural correlates of consciousnessBrain activity and meditationCognitive psychologyCognitionPerspective (graphical)N400NeuroimagingSocial psychologyNeuroscienceEvent-related potentialComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceEpistemologyPaleontologyQuantum mechanicsPhilosophyPhysicsBiologyMemory Processes and InfluencesEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
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