Trial and error

Psychological theory stating that our learning should be understood as a successive elimination of error based on feedback. It is associated with behaviorism, whereas Gestalt psychologists attacked the theory and claimed that human learning is mainly based on sudden insights ("aha-erlebniz").

In information science claims Swanson (1977, 1986) that information retrieval is performed by a  "trial and error"-process. He is influenced by Karl Popper, who regards scientific theories as conjunctions to be falsified by other researchers. In the same way regards Swanson a search strategy as a guess, which may be falsified (but never completely verified). Swanson's view is critically discussed by Hjørland (1997)

 

 

Literature:

 

Hjørland, B. (1997): Information Seeking and Subject Representation. An Activity-theoretical approach to Information Science. Westport & London: Greenwood Press. 
 

Swanson, D. R. (1977). Information Retrieval as a Trial-and-Error Process. Library Quarterly, 47(2). (Reprinted in: Key Papers in Information Science. Ed. by Belver C. Griffith. New York: Knowledge Industry Publ., 1980, 328-348).
 

Swanson, D. R.(1986). Undiscovered Public Knowledge. Library Quarterly, 56, 103-118.
 

 

See also: Behaviorism (Epistemological lifeboat); Behaviorism in LIS

 

 

 

 

Birger Hjørland

Last edited: 16-05-2006

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