Conference Paper

Batching, Error Checking and Data Collecting: Understanding Data Entry in a Financial Office

Fulltext URI

Document type

Text/Conference Paper

Additional Information

Date

2017

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies (EUSSET)

Abstract

Data entry is a core computing activity performed by office workers every day. Prior research on this topic has tended to study data entry in controlled lab environments. In this paper, we interviewed nine financial administrators from two large universities to learn about their practices for conducting data entry work. We found that financial information often has to be retrieved from multiple electronic and paper sources, and involves briefly keeping items in memory when switching between sources. Interviewees reported that they batched a lot of data entry tasks into a single session to complete the work quickly, and mitigated the risk of data entry errors by time-consuming practices of double-checking. However, prior lab studies suggest that double-checking is a poor strategy as it takes time and people are poor at spotting errors. This work has implications for how future data entry research should be conducted.

Description

Borghouts, Judith; Brumby, Duncan; Cox, Anna (2017): Batching, Error Checking and Data Collecting: Understanding Data Entry in a Financial Office. Proceedings of 15th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work - Exploratory Papers. DOI: 10.18420/ecscw2017-4. European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies (EUSSET). PISSN: 2510-2591. pp. 91-101. Digitalizing Workplaces. Sheffield, UK. 28 August - 1 September 2017

Keywords

Citation

Tags