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anonymous

What Multitasking Does To Our Brains - 1 views

  • In the image below, you can see the different brain activities for various tasks that the brain switches between. It jumps back and forth as you focus on each task for a few seconds at a time:
  • What's more is that Clifford Nass, a researcher at Stanford assumed that those who multitask heavily will nonetheless develop some other outstanding skills. He thought that they will be amazing at 1. filtering information, 2. being very fast at switching between the tasks and 3. keeping a high working memory. He found that none of these 3 points are true: We were absolutely shocked. We all lost our bets. It turns out multitaskers are terrible at every aspect of multitasking. People who multitask a lot are in fact a lot worse at filtering irrelevant information and also perform significantly worse at switching between task, compared to singletaskers.
  • Quick last fact: listening to music whilst working isn't multitasking
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    [People who multitask] are not being more productive-they just feel more emotionally satisfied from their work.
adrienne_mobius

Librarians are Completely Awesome - EdTech Researcher - Education Week - 1 views

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    If you want to read something that makes you feel all warm and fuzzy about being a librarian... this is it.
Jennifer Parsons

College & Research Libraries News | Relational communications: Developing key connections - 0 views

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    Florida State University librarians describe a program devised by FSU to encourage faculty to use open access publishing. I like how they focused just as much on educating their library staff and giving them the time and space needed to then go and open recruit faculty, and the resources to keep up the interest.
adrienne_mobius

'Library of the Future' Gets $1-Million Boost From Humanities Endowment - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    The Digital Public Library of America initiative received $1 million to support the creation of the infrastructure for a national open-access digital library.
adrienne_mobius

Loud Debate Rages Over N.Y. Library's Quiet Stacks : NPR - 1 views

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    "If the library has its way, this Beaux Arts-style building on Manhattan's 42nd Street - the one with the giant lions out front - will soon see some changes. A hotly debated renovation plan would demolish the seven stuffy floors of stacks. Some of the books would be stored under nearby Bryant Park, and up to 2 million books would be moved to climate-controlled storage in Princeton, N.J."
Jennifer Parsons

[Series] Emerging Careers in Librarianship: Data Curation « Hack Library School - 0 views

  • Data curation is defined as “the active and ongoing management of data through its lifecycle of interest and usefulness to scholarship, science, and education.” (GSLIS) The volume of scientific data is growing exponentially across all scientific disciplines. This phenomenon has been termed the “data deluge.” The data deluge is now a fundamental characteristic of e-science and “big science,” especially in disciplines such as physics, astronomy, and earth and atmospheric sciences. Moreover, stakeholders are beginning to recognize the value in sharing data assets with each other and in curation of data for re-use over the long term. Competent information professionals are needed to curate this data for future research and education requirements.
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    After the opening keynote at our conference, this seemed relevant.  I think the need for data curation will become more and more relevant as we move to a paperless society.  Though, given the challenges of what to preserve and how, that day may be long in coming.
adrienne_mobius

Affection for PDA | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    "Approximately 400 to 600 libraries worldwide have switched to a patron-driven system for purchasing new works, and that number is likely to double over the next year and a half, according to Joseph Esposito, a digital publishing consultant who has spent the last nine months studying the implications of PDA with a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation."
Scott Peterson

American Youth Read Books in Print (For Now) - 0 views

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    An interesting survey where it shows younger readers 16-29 are more likely to use books, use traditional library services, and read e-books on an computer rather than an e-book reader than their older (30-49) counterparts.
Megan Durham

The-3-Click-Dilemma: are library databases nearing the tipping point of obsolescence? - 0 views

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    As we get more and more databases/ebooks/whatnot this is an interesting read. Esp. since the person complaining about too many clicks is a historian! Its their job to research and they hate clicking too much-what do our average users think? I had an interesting conversation with a faculty member last week that went something like this: "Brian, I want you to know that it's getting harder for me to get students to use the library- especially the databases- anything beyond three clicks is just too many."
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