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Geneva Henry

A library without the books - The Boston Globe - 0 views

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    digital_transition mass_digitization economics new_libraries ebooks
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    Welcome to the library. Say goodbye to the books. Cushing Academy embraces a digital future.
Lisa Spiro

Research Librarians Discuss How to Sell Scholars on Open Access, and More - Libraries -... - 0 views

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    "The ARL has hired two consultants, October Ivins of Ivins eContent Solutions and Judy Luther of Informed Strategies, to study at-risk, peer-reviewed journals with no electronic incarnation or good e-subscription model. The team is assessing 4,000 such journals "to see if there isn't an opportunity for the libraries to help" them survive, Ms. Luther explained. She and Ms. Ivins described the study at a working session of the ARL's Scholarly Communication Steering Committee, chaired by James G. Neal, university librarian at Columbia University, and again at a briefing for the wider meeting."
Lisa Spiro

E-Readers: The Future Of Libraries? - 0 views

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    Lots of ebook uptake in UK increasing library usage
Geneva Henry

Views: Reviving the Academic Library - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    Library in Transition
Lisa Spiro

Kenney DSS Webcast Now Available [OCLC] - 0 views

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    "Webcast of Anne R. Kenney's Distinguished Seminar Series Presentation, "Approaching an Entity Crisis: Reconceiving Research Libraries in a Multi-institutional Context," Now Available"
Lisa Spiro

Electronic Journals and Changes in Scholarly Article Seeking and Reading Patterns - 0 views

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    Tenopir & King: "Abstract A recent article by James Evans in Science (Evans 2008) is being widely discussed in the science and publishing communities. Evans' in-depth research on citations in over 34 million articles and how online availability affects citing patterns, found that the more issues of a journal that are available online, the fewer numbers of articles in that journal are cited. If the journal is available for free online, it is cited even less. Evans attributes this phenomenon to more searching and less browsing (which he feels eliminates marginally relevant articles that may have been found by browsing) and the ability to follow links to see what other authors are citing. He concludes that electronic journals have resulted in a narrowing of scientific citation patterns. This brief article expands on the evidence cited by Evans (Boyce et al. 2004; Tenopir et al. 2004) based on the authors' ongoing surveys of academic readers of scholarly articles. Reading patterns and citation patterns differ, as faculty read many more articles than they ultimately cite and read for many purposes in addition to research and writing. The number of articles read has steadily increased over the last three decades, so the actual numbers of articles found by browsing has not decreased much, even though the percentage of readings found by searching has increased. Readings from library-provided electronic journals has increased substantially, while readings of older articles have recently increased somewhat. Ironically, reading patterns have broadened with electronic journals at the same time citing patterns have narrowed."
Lisa Spiro

Welcome to Against the Grain | Against the Grain - 0 views

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    "Against the Grain (ISSN: 1043-2094) is your key to the latest news about libraries, publishers, book jobbers, and subscription agents. It is a unique collection of reports on the issues, literature, and people that impact the world of books and journals"
Geneva Henry

Emerald: Book Chapter Request - 0 views

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    This is a chapter of book from the series "Advances in Library Administration and Organization, Volume 26, pages 71-149. ISSN: 0732-0671. This chapter discusses a study at an academic library in Illinois that looked at how well librarians adapted to changes in formats of information.
Cynthia Gillespie

ScienceDirect - Future Generation Computer Systems : Arts and humanities e-science-Curr... - 0 views

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    This is a fairly extensive study detailing "E-science". There is a section devoted to managing e-science resources in the library, including the architecture of the "Fedora" system, and "E-Curator: 3D colour scans for remote object identification and assessment."
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