2004 Dan Greenstein article; "Data collected recently by UC libraries suggest that where information is available in both print and digital formats, faculty and students prefer digital by an order of magnitude" Move to digital: savings in storage. Shared print collections.
"E-books could transform teaching and study. Collections are growing steadily but no in-depth user studies have yet been carried out. Chris Armstrong, Ray Lonsdale and Dave Nicholas introduce the SuperBook Project that aims to put that right."
"Using a database of 34 million articles, their citations (1945 to 2005), and online availability (1998 to 2005), I show that as more journal issues came online, the articles referenced tended to be more recent, fewer journals and articles were cited, and more of those citations were to fewer journals and articles."
CIBER projects
Live projects
Digital Lives for the Arts & Humanities Research Council (September 2007 to April 2009).
Evaluating the Usage and Impact of E-Journals in the UK for the Research Information Network (January to November 2008).
UK National E-Books Observatory for JISC Collections (January 2008 to April 2009).
Recently completed projects
MaxData for the US Institute of Museum & Library Studies. Completed December 2007.
SuperBook for a consortium of publishers. Completed December 2007.
The Impact of Open Access Journal Publishing II for Oxford University Press. Completed November 2007.
The Researcher of the Future for the British Library and JISC. Completed November 2007.
"Overview
A survey of nearly 900 Internet stakeholders reveals fascinating new perspectives on the way the Internet is affecting human intelligence and the ways that information is being shared and rendered.
The web-based survey gathered opinions from prominent scientists, business leaders, consultants, writers and technology developers. It is the fourth in a series of Internet expert studies conducted by the Imagining the Internet Center at Elon University and the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project. In this report, we cover experts' thoughts on the following issues:
* Will Google make us stupid?
* Will the internet enhance or detract from reading, writing, and rendering of knowledge? "
Welcome to the Toolkit for the Impact of Digitised Scholarly Resources.
This toolkit, first assembled in 2009, is an effort to give a variety of people interested in understanding ways of measuring the impacts that their online scholarly resources are having. This website is meant to be a growing resource, with additional contributions from experts expanding and modifying it over time. If you have a contribution you would like to make, we encourage your participation!
"'E-journals: their use, value and impact' takes an in-depth look at how researchers in the UK use electronic journals, the value they bring to universities and research institutions and the contribution they make to research productivity, quality and outcomes.
Journal publishers began to provide online access to full-text scholarly articles in the late 1990s, triggering a revolution in the scholarly communications process. A very high proportion of journal articles are now available online - 96 per cent of journal titles in science, technology and medicine, and 86 per cent of titles in the arts, humanities and social sciences. "