91ɬ

Conference Program

Information for Presenters

  • Presentations for full papers will be 30 minutes - 20 minutes for the presentation and 10 minutes for questions.

  • Presentations for short papers will be 15 minutes - 10 minutesfor the presentation and 5 minutes for the presentation.

  • Posters will be displayed on poster boards that are4’ x 7’ (121 cm x 213 cm). The poster session will take place on Tuesday, June 2 from 5-7:00.

Conference Proceedings

Proceedings for the short and long papers are published in Information Research and will be available at the end of May.

Proceedings for the posters, panels, and workshops are available here:PDF icon ISIC 2026 Poster, Panels, and Workshops Proceedings

ISIC 2026 Final Conference Program

All events (except the conference dinner) take place in the .

A PDF of the final conference program is available here:PDF icon ISIC 2026 Final Conference Program

Monday, June 1

9:00-16:00

Doctoral Workshop

Trottier 0060

accepted students only

4-5:00

Tour of 91ɬ's Rare Books and Special Collections

5:30

Meet at a downtown pub (pub to be confirmed)

16:15-18:00

ISIC Steering Committee meeting

by invitation only

Tuesday, June 2

8:30

Registration opens

9:00-10:30

Conference opening

First keynote speaker: Nadia Caidi

Trottier 0100

10:30-11:00

Coffee break

LOCATION Trottier Mezzanine

11:00-12:30

Session 1

1.a. Conceptual matters

Trottier 0100

Moderator: Heidi Julien

Information practices are environmental

Isto Huvila

Information behaviours and the inner life

Ian Ruthven

Who’s a heretic now? Conceptualizing information seeking on controversial topics

George Buchanan, Dana McKay, Yimin Chen, Ian Ruthven

1.b. Parents & families

Trottier 0060

Moderator: Leanne Bowler

Is trust enough? Parents’ health information behaviour around childhood vaccination

Anna Mierzecka

“Transparency would be lovely”: Differences in information seeking and assessing behaviours between vaccine hesitant and vaccine confident mothers of newborns

Maria Mulder, Emily Gemmell, Julie A. Bettinger, Devon Greyson

Repetition, regulation, and reappraisal: Information behaviour in persistent coping with chronic illness in families

Lindsay K. Brown, Tiffany C.E. Veinot

1.c. Student life & technology

Trottier 0070

Moderator: Owen Stewart-Robertson

Educational technology and the everyday information practices that shape student thinking and learning

Kayla Burt, Damian Bebell

Information behavior as a mediator of the influence of e-health literacy on counseling decisions among Universitas Indonesia students

Muhammad Yusrizal, Rahmi

iSchool students’ mental models of genAI

Irene Lopatovska, Conor Mack, Ellen Connors

12:30-13:30

Lunch

LOCATION Trottier Mezzanine

13:30-15:00

Session 2

2.a - Methods

Trottier 0100

Moderator: Jenny Bronstein

Situated storywalks: A participant-led elicitation method

Elke Greifeneder, Maria Gäde, Katlin E. Montague

Navigating subjectivity in causal context: a non-deterministic approach for information behaviour research

Marek Deja

Exploring emerging knowledge landscapes through preprints: a DIKW-based computational framework for transforming data into actionable scholarly insights

Tzu-Yu Lin, Pei-Chun Lee

2.b - Age & health

Trottier 0060

Moderator: Emma Nicol

Constructing trust in complex information environments: Older adults’ information behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic

Maryline Vivion, Valérie Reid, Alexandre Coutant, Eve Dubé, Christopher Fletcher, André Tourigny

The impact of information encountering on the health literacy of older adults in health science short video

Xiaojuan Xu, Li Pan, Manli Wu, Yuxiang Zhao, Zerui Zhao

Exploring health information needs in Islamic contexts through health fatwa questions in Saudi Arabia

Mahmud Alblowi, Ian Ruthven, Perla Innocenti

2.c - Academics

Trottier 0070

Moderator: Pam McKenzie

Social media practices among academics: The case of Sri Lankan universities

Nishantha Gamage, Pethigamage Perera, Sangeetha Kutty, Ritesh Chugh

Taxonomies as boundary objects for social change: Enhancing visibility of academics’ impact-related information behaviours

Joann Cattlin, Lisa M. Given, Rolf Hvidfeldt, Marianne Lykke

Foraging for instruction: A microethnography of information behaviours and practices exhibited by academic librarians in instructional planning

Aleksandar Golijanin

15:00-15:30

Coffee break

LOCATION Trottier Mezzanine

15:30-17:00

Session 3 - Plenary session

Trottier 0100

Chaired by Ian Ruthven

Moderator: Rebekah Willson

Paper: Celebrating 30 years of the ISIC conference: Citation impact and collaboration

Mette Skov, Birger Larsen

Panel: Reflecting on the field: 30 years of information behaviour and practices research

Heidi Julien, Lisa Given, and Isto Huvila

17:00-19:00

Poster session and conference reception

LOCATION Trottier Mezzanine [see the proceedings for poster titles and abstracts]

Wednesday, June 3

8:30

Registration opens

9:00-10:30

Conference update

ISIC Steering Committee presentation
Second keynote speaker: Sara Grimes

Trottier 0100

10:30-11:00

Coffee break

Trottier Mezzanine

11:00-12:30

Session 4

4.a - Intersectional identities

Trottier 0100

Moderator: Africa Hands

Race, identity, and everyday life information-seeking: A study of African American teens in Chicago

Faith Rice

Supporting a new generation of informed voters: An interdisciplinary literature review pairing informed voting and current events information behaviours [short paper]

Nancy Ross Dribin

Passing the vibe check: Initial findings from an investigation into the health information behaviours of LGBTQ+ individuals with disabilities [short paper]

Miranda Downey, Marilyn Harbert, Sarina Li

A literature review of the information needs and behaviors of Black adults and the predominance of studies on health information [short paper]

Jamillah R. Gabriel

Information behaviour as a framework for exploring STEM participation of Black women [short paper]

Joanna Adewunmi

4.b - At work

Trottier 0060

Moderator: Elke Greifeneder

When digital systems meet human-centred work: a qualitative study of information behaviour

Marie Ollerup Sall, Trove Faber Frandsen

What is left unshared: Using a third space lens to explore information sharing behaviour within Scrum in Agile Software Development

Anika Meyer, Ina Fourie, Preben Hansen

‘It's helping people, but it's helping people with literally everything under the sun.’ Exploring the work and information behaviours of constituency caseworkers

Charlotte Jackson, Emma Nicol, Ian Ruthven

4.c - Avoidance & regret

Trottier 0700

Moderator: Anna Mierzecka

“I’d rather not have known this”: A study of information regret

Dirk Lewandowski

Information behaviour of data breach victims and the relevance of health information avoidance

Hung Fai Joseph Cheng, Paul Scifleet, Misita Anwar

Rethinking information practices to embrace avoidance: Everything old is new again [short paper]

Jenny Bronstein, Alison Hicks, Jette Seiden Hyldegård, Pam McKenzie, Ian Ruthven

Information is a gun: Recognising information facilitated interpersonal harms [short paper]

Yimin Chen, Dana McKay

12:30-13:30

Lunch

LOCATION Trottier Mezzanine

13:30-15:00

Session 5

5.a - Emplaced experiences

Trottier 0010

Moderator: Rebecca Noone

Floating libraries and Bible rolling papers: Accessing books and information while incarcerated

Elizabeth Willson Gordon, Rebekah Willson

'I know a place': The informational value and loss of queer spaces

Vanessa Kitzie, Travis Wagner

“Get rid of the unimportant so that the important can shine”: An exploration of vehicle residents’ personal collections and information practices [short paper]

Kaitlin E. Montague, Helene Hellmich

Information as compost: Decentring humans in information practices research [short paper]

Owen Stewart-Robertson, Kaitlin E. Montague

5.b - Newcomers & language learners

Trottier 0060

Moderator: Leanne Bowler

Cultural community as an information ground of Middle Eastern women refugees in Sweden - a road to better integration into society

Khadijah Kainat, Kristina Eriksson-Backa

Understanding immigrant information acculturation: Perspectives and recommendations for information behaviour research

Ana Ndumu, Hayley Park,Connie Siebold

Hiding in plain sight: the linguistic and behavioural challenges of second language learners in academic search [short paper]

Tim Leigh, Frances Johnson

5. c - Uncertainty & stigma

Trottier 0070

Moderator: Devon Greyson

How catastrophic misinterpretation triggers health anxiety: Health information seeking as a mediator in rural China’s information-poor populations

Lin Wang, Chi Xu,Sisi Song

Self-stigma, alcohol use disorder, information behaviour: A theoretical & conceptual synthesis

Opeyemi Oboh

Mapping information uncertainty in hospital wayfinding through patient journey maps [short paper]

Ladislava Zbiejczuk Suchá

15:00-15:30

Coffee break

LOCATION Trottier Mezzanine

Session 6

15:30-17:00

Session 6.a - Panel

Trottier 0100

Moderator: Owen Stewart-Robertson

Agnotology, Disinformation, and Epistemicide: Exploring conceptual and methodological approaches to understanding and resisting information behaviours that silence and suppress

Beth Patin, Maria Mulder, Tyler Youngman

Chaired by Devon Greyson

Session 6.b - Information-seeking & mediation

Trottier 0060

Moderator: Africa Hands

Platforms, Algorithms, and the Shifting Boundaries of Information Horizons

Kayla Burt

Push Me, Pull You: Factors that Drive Information-Seekers away from Traditional Environments and Towards LLMs

Priti Shah, Stephann Makri, George Buchanan, Dana McKay

Non-events and nothings: The potentiality of negatively defined phenomena for Information Science [short paper]

Andrea Kampen, Kaitlin E. Montague

Information behaviour concepts in the reference service research [short paper]

Amy VanScoy

Session 6.c - N/A

No papers in Trottier 0700 at this time

18:00/19:00

Conference dinner

Hotel William Gray
421 Rue Saint-Vincent, Montréal, QC H2Y 3A4

18:00 cocktails
19:00 dinner

Google Map from Trottier to Hotel William Gray

Thursday, June 4

8:30

Registration opens

9:00-10:30

Session 7

7.a - Indigenous experiences

Trottier 0100

Moderator: Pam McKenzie

Bridging Theory and Practice: Affordance Theory as a Methodological Link in Information Interaction and Repository Design

Danica Pawlick-Potts

Seeking Relations and Kin: pursuing the information seeking practices and experiences of Indigenous students

Cora Coady, Tina Liu, Desmond Wong

Decolonizing information – Comparing Western conceptions of information to Indigenous Knowledge and Indigenous Knowledge Systems [short paper]

Connor White

7.b - Artists, fans, & leisure

Trottier 0060

Moderator: Leanne Bowler

Viewing leisure as experience

Priya Kizhakkethil

Authenticity, performativity, and contextuality [short paper]

Tyler Youngman

'Bonnetheads' fandom: Information experiences of Little House on the Prairie cast members [short paper]

Amy Lanier, Tara Zimmerman, Priya Kizhakkethil

'The industry will tell you what you’re good for:' Theatrical typecasting, information embodiment, and body capital [short paper]

Julia Anne Maxwell

Exploring fandom as Information practices: A phenomenographic pilot study of Chinese K-Pop music fans [short paper]

Chengling Li, Somsak Sriborisutsakul

10:30-11:00

Coffee break

Trottier Mezzanine

11:00-12:30

Plenary panel

Trottier 0100

Moderator: Rebekah Willson

Emerging voices: Exploring futures for information behaviour and practices research

Anika Meyer, Ana Ndumu, Danica Pawlick Potts, Sarah Polkinghorne, Connor White

Chaired by Pam McKenzie

12:30-13:30

Closing of the conference; Conference awards

Trottier 0100

Followed by lunch - Trottier Mezzanine

13:30-17:00

includes coffee break,

15:00-15:30

Workshops

Workshop 1

Trottier 0100

Methods on the move: kinaesthetic capture and analysis of situated embodied information behaviour

Lee Pretlove, Sophie Rutter

Workshop 2

Trottier 0060

States of Uncertainty: A collaborative exploration of the potentiality and inevitability of uncertainty

Andrea Kampen, Helene Hellmich

Workshop 3

Trottier 0070

Governance as a new Context: The Governing Knowledge Commons Framework for Studying Information Spaces

Melissa Ocepek, Aparajita Bhandari, Rebecca Noone, Ana Santos Rutschman, Elizabeth Wickes

END OF CONFERENCE - SEE YOU IN 2028!


Keynote Speakers

Sara M. Grimes

Sara M.Grimes headshot

Keynote Title: The Imagined Child: Information, Rights, and Children's Digital Worlds

Children's information worlds are often designed around an imagined child — one increasingly shaped by AI and algorithmic recommendation systems, the commercial logics of the big data economy, and a surge of new regulations aimed at defining their rights, risks, and capacities. Drawing on a series of case studies from current developments and her own ongoing research in this space, Sara Grimes presents a theoretical framework for understanding how children are configured as both information subjects and information objects across three intertwined realms: as data used (or not used) to train AI models, as emerging citizens participating in digital culture, and as learners developing the literacies needed to inhabit and make sense of the information society. The talk opens up what is at stake when these three configurations collide with the lived experiences and practices of actual children, and what the technologization of childhood reveals about our broader hopes and fears for the digital futures we are now building.

Biography: Sara M.Grimesis the Wolfe Chair in Scientific and Technological Literacy, Director and Founder of the Kids Play Tech Lab, and a Full Professor in the Department of Art History and Communication Studies at 91ɬ. Her research centers on understanding emerging trends and issues related to the technologization of childhood and supporting the development of ethical designs, business practices, and policies that advance children’s rights and wellbeing in the digital games and across the digital environment.Her current and upcoming projects include examinations of age-appropriate design in games, the legal and ethical dimensions of algorithmic marketing to children, as well as an upcoming study of children's creativity, play and emerging parasocial relationships with AI in digital platforms. She is the author of the award-winning book,Digital Playgrounds: The Hidden Politics of Children’s Online Play Spaces, Virtual Worlds, and Connected Games, and the upcomingKidfluenced: Children’s Digital Media-Making, Content Creation, and Cultural Rights. She was also the lead author of the recently published CIFAR AI InsightsResponsible AI and Childrenpolicy brief, a critical review of the literature and best practices for regulating and developing data-centric and AI technologies for children that advance a rights-based approach to AI governance.

Nadia Caidi

Nadia Caidi headshot

Keynote Title:Securitizing the Sacred: Pilgrims’ Trails Across Digital Landscapes

Pilgrimage is alive and well! Over 300M people engage in religious (or spiritual) journeying every year, resulting in hundreds of billions of dollars of profit for the sectors involved. This talk examines spiritual and religious experiences as information contexts, with a particular emphasis on the evolving landscape of pilgrimage. In its simplest form, pilgrimage is about the movement of people over space, and the infrastructures that underpin the management of large crowds and the provision of goods and services. Increasingly, though, other infrastructural configurations are permeating (and reshaping) the experiences of pilgrims worldwide. Even before reaching the shrines or sacred places, pilgrims encounter and interact with a range of systems. The design and use of digital platforms that mediate pilgrims’ experiences—including web-based booking systems, social media, virtual pilgrimage applications, and AI agents—shape and reconstitute pilgrims’ identities in myriad ways (e.g., as consumers, content creators, data subjects). Not only do pilgrims leave trails behind as they engage in ritualized travel, but pilgrimage sites are also becoming significant gatherers of data owing to the constant monitoring and policinginfrastructure of CCTV, biometrics, and othertechnologies of governance. Taken together, these developments offer an exceptionally rich opportunity for examining the pilgrimage infrastructurally rather than through the lens of pilgrims’ information practices alone. In doing so, the aim is not to do away with the “sacred” but, rather, to inscribe it in a wider debate about faith and technology. As AI touches every aspect of the human experience, pilgrimage may offer a useful glimpse into a new kind of religious imaginary.

Biography: Dr. Nadia Caidi is a Professor at the Faculty of Information, University of Toronto. Trained in Linguistics and Communications, she also holds an MLIS and a Ph.D. in Information Studies from the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). Dr. Caidi’s contributions aim to inform and promote a critical LIS lens and a public interest approach to the information fields. She has published extensively in the areas of information behaviour, socio-technical practices of marginalized communities, digital diasporas and techno-religious practices. She sits on several journal editorial boards and has been recognized with numerous research grants and awards. In 2019, the Association of LIS Education awarded her the Pratt-Severn Faculty Innovation Award.

Dr. Caidi is committed to community-engaged research and has been academic lead on recently-funded research by the Public Health Agency of Canada examining misinformation in newcomer digital spaces (with partner Refugee613) ; Workfinding and Immigrant Women’s Prosperity in STEM (with partner TechGirls Canada) ; Reading as Belonging in multilingual youth (School of Cities), and the intersections of pilgrimage and data in Securitizing the Sacred (funded by SSHRC). Dr. Caidi was the the 2016 President of the International Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T), and the 2011 President of the Canadian Association for Information Science (CAIS).

Back to top