TY - GEN
T1 - Deletion Considered Harmful
AU - Englefield, Paul
AU - Beale, Russell
PY - 2025/11/13
Y1 - 2025/11/13
N2 - In a world of information overload, understanding how we can most effectively manage information is crucial to success. We set out to understand how people view deletion, the removal of material no longer needed: does it help by reducing clutter and improving the signal to noise ratio, or does the effort required to decide to delete something make it not worthwhile? How does deletion relate to other strategies like filing; do people who spend extensive time in filing also prune their materials too? We studied the behaviour of 51 knowledge workers though a series of questionnaires and interviews to evaluate a range of tactics they used aimed at organizing, filing, and retrieving digital resources. Our study reveals that deletion is consistently under-adopted compared to other tactics such as Filing, Coverage, Ontology, and Timeliness. Moreover, the empirical data indicate that deletion is actually detrimental to retrieval success and satisfaction. In this paper, we examine the practice of deletion, review the related literature, and present detailed statistical results and clustering outcomes that underscore its adverse effects.
AB - In a world of information overload, understanding how we can most effectively manage information is crucial to success. We set out to understand how people view deletion, the removal of material no longer needed: does it help by reducing clutter and improving the signal to noise ratio, or does the effort required to decide to delete something make it not worthwhile? How does deletion relate to other strategies like filing; do people who spend extensive time in filing also prune their materials too? We studied the behaviour of 51 knowledge workers though a series of questionnaires and interviews to evaluate a range of tactics they used aimed at organizing, filing, and retrieving digital resources. Our study reveals that deletion is consistently under-adopted compared to other tactics such as Filing, Coverage, Ontology, and Timeliness. Moreover, the empirical data indicate that deletion is actually detrimental to retrieval success and satisfaction. In this paper, we examine the practice of deletion, review the related literature, and present detailed statistical results and clustering outcomes that underscore its adverse effects.
KW - Personal Information Management
KW - PIM
KW - deletion
KW - user behaviour
U2 - 10.14236/ewic/BCSHCI2025.19
DO - 10.14236/ewic/BCSHCI2025.19
M3 - Conference contribution
T3 - Electronic workshops in computing
SP - 212
EP - 221
BT - 38th International BCS Human-Computer Interaction Conference (BCS HCI 25)
PB - BCS Learning & Development Ltd
T2 - 38th International BCS Human-Computer Interaction Conference
Y2 - 9 November 2025 through 11 November 2025
ER -