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6.4: What is Relevance?

  • Page ID
    324697
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    When you're doing research, it can sometimes be difficult to wade through the mountains of useless information. The internet is filled with information. Even in a library's carefully curated collection, there are millions of sources that you could review. Despite most of these being useful to someone, somewhere, most of them aren't going to be relevant to your current information need!

    Definition: Relevance

    The degree to which your information source is closely connect or appropriate for your information need.

    It probably sounds obvious but when you're doing research you want to find sources that provide information directly related to your topic! This is a big part of why we've spent so much time learning how to form research questions and choose good search keywords, to help weed out the unrelated (or irrelevant) sources. However, it does get a little more complex than that. Sources can be relevant without being as relevant as needed. For example, you can find one source that discusses your topic without adding any new or useful information.

    If you're researching video marketing on social media and your source discusses social media marketing but not using videos specifically, then while that source is possibly relevant it isn't nearly as relevant as one specifically discussing online video marketing.

    To help you identify the source's relevance consider the:

    • Title: The first glance at the source's intended content.
    • Depth of the information provided: Does it provide useful, new information?
    • Is the timeliness appropriate?

    Relevance Clues

    Look for these clues to help determine the relevance of the source.

    • Title
    • Abstract or Summary
    • Conclusion or Findings section
    • Prominent quotes or highlighted information
    • Tables, charts, or other presentations of data
    • Source citations and/or hyperlinks to other relevant sources
    Consider This

    If you were conducting research into the history of the gay rights movement and healthcare, which of these sources would be more relevant to you?

    Book: Stonewall: The Riots that Sparked the Gay Revolution

    book title stonewall the riot that sparked the gay revolution

    [Book record by Daniel Wilson, licensed CC BY NC 4.0]

    Article: The Stonewall Riots, the AIDS Epidemic, and the Public's Health

    Article titled The Stonewall Riots, the AIDS Epidemic, and the Public's Health

    [Article record by Daniel Wilson, licensed CC BY NC 4.0]


    6.4: What is Relevance? is shared under a CC BY-NC license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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