01177nas a2200217 4500000000100000000000100001000000100002008004100003653002400044653002100068653001500089100001600104700002100120700001500141700001700156700001700173245004400190300001600234490000700250520070200257 2017 d10ainformation science10aboundary objects10aboundaries1 aIsto Huvila1 aTheresa Anderson1 aEva Jansen1 aPam McKenzie1 aAdam Worrall00aBoundary objects in Information Science a1807–18220 v683 aBoundary objects are abstract or physical artefacts that exist in the liminal spaces between adjacent communities of people. The theory of BOs was originally introduced by Star and Griesemer in a study on information practices at the Berkeley Museum of Vertebrate Zoology but has since been adapted in a broad range of research contexts in a large number of disciplines including the various branches of information science. The aim of this review article is to present an overview of the state of the art of information science research informed by the theory of BOs, critically discuss the notion, and propose a structured overview of how the notion has been applied in the study of information.