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This house believes that A&I is RIP

This house believes that A&I is RIP. JIBS Workshop 13 November 2009. Disclaimer!. This presentation does not reflect the views of the University of Huddersfield Nor does it necessarily mean ALL A&I databases!. Context. University of Huddersfield 50,000 e-journals 50,000 e-books

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This house believes that A&I is RIP

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  1. This house believes that A&I is RIP JIBS Workshop 13 November 2009

  2. Disclaimer! This presentation does not reflect the views of the University of Huddersfield Nor does it necessarily mean ALL A&I databases!

  3. Context • University of Huddersfield • 50,000 e-journals • 50,000 e-books • 1,000+ full text repository items • 200,000 library records • 80 A&Is • First European customer for Serial Solutions Summon

  4. Are we fighting a losing battle? • By relying on A&Is: • Do we support our users in the way they expect and demand? • Do we overload them with different systems or lack of intuitive interfaces? • Is Google actually a problem? • Can we afford to cut journals and keep A&Is?

  5. Quality vs. Cost (1) Article abstracts: many A&I databases are still only indexes, which is often frustrating to the user Cover to cover indexing: An A&I with a low proportion of core content or a high proportion of tertiary content is at risk Duplication of content: Two resources with similar content are not economically justifiable Full-text linking: an A&I that does not link does not promote resource discovery

  6. Quality vs. Cost (2) Date coverage: unless specifically covering an archive period, A&I databases that purport to be current, but index a high number of ceased titles are not relevant Geographical Coverage: if specific geographical areas are not adequately covered then the A&I is not valuable for research

  7. Quality vs. Cost (3) • Publisher coverage: libraries want to use A&I databases to achieve a good spread of publishers; if this is not the case, then the resource is little better than searching a publisher’s platform • Intuitive interface: is the resource as easy to use as Google? • Shibboleth authentcation, EZProxy access as standard: any A&I database that relies on individual usernames and passwords for access is creating a barrier to use

  8. Quality vs. Cost (4) • Unrestricted access: analysis of turnaways and usage data at the University of Huddersfield shows that resources that restrict access by number of simultaneous users often leads to dramatic drop in usage over a period of time as users become frustrated by turnaway messages • COUNTER compliant usage data: a lack of COUNTER compliance means that accurate comparisons cannot be made

  9. Primary material • In a digital environment this information is becoming more retrievable – A&Is only cover a small proportion of what is out there • JISC Digitisation Programme • Sound, images, journals, moving pictures, newspapers etc. • UK Research Data Service Feasibility Study final report • Research data has remained a “substantially untapped resource” and that it is “often unstructured and inaccessible to others”.

  10. Federated (Meta) Searching (1) • Many librarians do not recommend federated search • “[f]ederated systems remain controversial because they focus on what we think users want, at the expense of functionality, precision, and finesse. They are still a long way from providing a single, simple solution to information retrieval.” Tenopir, C, Online databases: Can Johnny search? Library Journal, 2007, 132(2), 30. http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6407784.html?industryid=47130

  11. Federated (Meta) Searching (2) • Research at Stockholm University shows that students were not enthusiastic about Google Scholar or MetaLib; however, they agreed that Google Scholar was easy to use Nygren, E, Haya, G and Widmark, W, Students experience of Metalib and Google Scholar, 2006, Stockholm, universitetsbiblioteket • Is federated searching a transient technology like the CD-ROM and is the real Holy Grail just over the horizon?

  12. Pre harvested search:the true one-stop shop? • The key for the medium term is to provide Google-like interfaces with Google-like results • There is a race to provide this through systems that use preharvested data rather than federated searching • Primo (Ex Libris) • Summon (Serials Solutions) • WorldCat Local (OCLC)

  13. This house believes that A&I is RIP • “Why is Google so easy and the library so hard?” Duddy, C, A student perspective on accessing academic information in the Google era, 32nd UKSG Annual Conference and Exhibition, 30 March - 1 April 2009, Riviera International Conference Centre, Torquay • “Why do we want to teach our users to be librarians?” Pattern, D, OPAC 2.0 and beyond. 32nd UKSG Annual Conference and Exhibition, 30 March - 1 April 2009, Riviera International Conference Centre, Torquay. http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/4143/

  14. …and finally… Visualization

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