Measuring the Psychological Characteristics of Titles of Journal Articles and their Subject Headings

  • Leon James Professor Department of Psychology, University of Hawaii, 744 Pahumele Place, Kailua, Hawaii, USA-96734
Keywords: Information search behaviour, titles analysis, subject headings, psychological characteristics, affective, cognitive, sensorimotor

Abstract

This paper gives the results of three measures given to 200 college students who rated the positivity of titles of articles and books shown either as full bibliographic citation or as title only. Half of the titles were taken from the university’s academic library’s section on humanities-social sciences, and the other half from the science-technology section. Several ANOVA tests are reported. Titles from humanities-social sciences were more correctly associated with their subject headings and were recalled better than titles from the science-technology area. The results are discussed in the context of a theory of titles that specifies three psychological characteristics of all titles that are present within the linguistic or bibliographic meta-information. The relationship of these characteristics to general features of human behaviour is specified as the affective, cognitive, and sensorimotor properties of titles.

http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/djlit.34.6.7852

Author Biography

Leon James, Professor Department of Psychology, University of Hawaii, 744 Pahumele Place, Kailua, Hawaii, USA-96734
Professor of Psychology, University of Hawaii
Published
2014-11-19
How to Cite
James, L. (2014). Measuring the Psychological Characteristics of Titles of Journal Articles and their Subject Headings. DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology, 34(6). https://doi.org/10.14429/djlit.34.6.7852