Marie Kennedy on Feb 21st 2008
i’ve saved this link in my blog feed reader for a while now, unsure how to make practical use of 80 million tiny images, described as “a visualization of all the nouns in the English language arranged by semantic meaning.” i think i’m going to allow myself just to enjoy the site for its aesthetic qualities and not worry about practicality for the moment.
* note that the magenta blocks point to medical images.
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Marie Kennedy on Feb 18th 2008
2006 was the first year that my library gathered usage statistics, thanks to project counter (counter). counter is a cooperative initiative that provides librarians with usage statistics for the electronic journals to which they subscribe. the list of vendors providing usage statistics in this way is growing, which is good, because it means that i can now compare the amount of usage of one journal to another. before counter, vendors all had their own definitions of a “use,” making comparisons across journals impossible. still, about 20% of the electronic journals to which we subscribe do not provide statistics using the standard, so we don’t have a complete picture of how our entire electronic journal collection is being used.
in order to evaluate usage across journals i go to each vendor’s website, log in with an administrative username/password and download a file. in gathering 2007 statistics i went to 15 vendors’ sites. we then merge all those separate files into one large file and sort by title for an alphabetical list.
as cumbersome as putting the master title list together is, the evaluation of this title list is where things get tricky. we get access to many of our electronic journals from more than one vendor. one vendor may supply an archive and another vendor may provide current material. the counter standard does not dictate how the journal title information must be entered into the title field. this means that the vendor that provides the archive may call the title “the journal of the …” and the vendor that provides current material may call it “journal of the …”. these display in my merged title list as two different titles and if i don’t catch what happened i’ll only see partial usage for that journal, as the rest of the usage is hidden under another title. this is disastrous when you’re looking at a title list of over 3000 titles and you’re trying to count how much usage “the journal of the …” got.
one report i pulled put my university’s subscriber number after the title in the title field, so the problem isn’t as easily solved as a macro to delete those stop words (the, a, an) from the beginning of titles. a friend in the industry is also concerned about the way platform data are entered into counter reports, so this problem extends beyond my concerns about the title and really encompasses all the data entered into these reports.
what needs to happen now is some standardization of the way data are entered into counter reports. the upcoming protocol, sushi, won’t resolve this problem, as i was hoping it would. sushi is just a mechanized call and respond protocol, so it will go out and gather the files from the different vendors for me (which is nice!) but i will all still be left with dirty data.
if you’re currently gathering electronic journal usage statistics like i am, and you’re interested in working with me to lobby to standardize the way data are entered into counter statistics reports, drop me a line or leave a comment.
Filed in library,management,metadata,publishers | 2 responses so far
Marie Kennedy on Feb 14th 2008
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Marie Kennedy on Feb 12th 2008
in an earlier post i mentioned a grass roots effort that seems to be growing roots quickly, sciencedebate 2008. it is getting all kinds of press and discussion, which is excellent. the presidential candidates have now been invited to a debate specifically about science and technology, and it is scheduled three days before the pennsylvania primary, on april 18. read their latest press release at this site: http://www.sciencedebate2008.com/www/index.php?id=21. consider adding your name to those interested in a debate on this topic.
quoted from one of the organizers of the debate, “Most of the major policy challenges the next president will face, from climate chance to jobs and economic competitiveness to healthcare to the health of the oceans, center on science and technology.”
these are exciting times. have your voice heard on topics you care about!
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Marie Kennedy on Feb 6th 2008
headed to las vegas for the joint meeting of some regional medical library groups. the meeting’s theme is clever: viva librarians! there is a promise of an up-close elvis sighting at tonight’s welcome reception, so really, what could be better? i’m on the planning committee for the conference, and worked on getting exhibitors and sponsors. adam and i will be presenting a paper on our electronic journal usage statistics gathering project (summary: gathering usage stats isn’t easy, even with counter, but i’ll write more about that later). in between conferencing i’ll be gambling a chance at a megabucks progressive slot for bill.
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Marie Kennedy on Feb 4th 2008
i got a lovely request from someone wanting my permission to use an image from an article i wrote in her upcoming course. i checked the transfer of copyright form i signed with the publisher and confirmed that i had given the publisher the rights to the published version of that article. darn. but, wait! i had reserved my rights to post the accepted authors manuscript in my institution’s repository. a minute later i had uploaded that document and responded to the person that i couldn’t grant permission to use the published version (and gave her contact info for the publisher, if she needed a shiny copy) but that i could grant permission to link to my version at the USC Institutional Repository. sharing for educational purposes is a good thing, and i’m happy my institution has a mechanism in place to help me do this.
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