the path to enlightenment, or at least useful statistics

We’re in the midst of gathering the usage statistics for our electronic journal collection.  Our titles are mixed in with the rest of USC’s electronic journals.  Here’s how we’re extricating our titles from the giant list of subscribed journals.

  1. Pulled COUNTER Journal Report 1 stats from 13 vendors/aggregators.
  2. Deleted all header information from each report, leaving behind title, publisher, gateway, print issn, e-issn, and a column for each month (july 07-june 08)
  3. Compiled all reports into one giant Excel file.
  4. Pulled our title list from our in-house electronic resource database into an Excel file, added 16 columns after each title, with each cell containing HSL, coloring all cells pink.
  5. Merged our title list into the giant Excel file, sorted by title.
  6. We’re now going through this 15,000 row file, line by line, title matching.  If there is a row with usage statistics that matches a pink row, we keep the statistics.  If there is no match that means the title belongs to the main campus library, and we discard it from our count (i.e., delete the row).
  7. At the end we should have a file of statistics that we can then sum, giving us a total number of successful PDF downloads for our fiscal year.

Why are we causing ourselves so much pain, going through the titles like this? We initially looked for a join feature but there aren’t any fields that match consistently enough to merge the files automatically (not all titles are entered the same way, not all titles have print or e-issns, etc.). We subscribe to a commercial electronic resource management system that does not allow for ‘ownership’ to be identified in their system, so our titles are mixed in with the main campus titles without a way to distinguish who bought what. This time consuming process is the only way we can think to gather our data. I’m posting this with the hope that a reader will have a suggestion for us. We’re willing to experiment!

Posted in e-resource mgmt, usage statistics | 1 Comment

the academic process

i’m so enjoying looking at all the parts of the illustrations in my anatomy, by tom giesle. here’s a portion of plate 5, which i think perfectly sums up the academic process.

a portion of Plate 5 of Tom Giesle's My Anatomy portfolio

and this is a visualization of how i feel before and after completing a manuscript:

Posted in art | 1 Comment

electronic journal usage statistics

electronic journal usage statistics

Posted in comic, e-resource mgmt | 1 Comment

wondering if i am larry the language nerd

Posted in the grammar doctor checks in | 2 Comments

photos released under a creative commons license

i’m slowly releasing my photographs under a creative commons attribution-noncommercial-share alike 3.0 united states license. this means that you may share/remix as long as you attribute the original work to me, share the resulting remix with a similar license, and don’t use my images for commercial purposes. the decision comes as a result of my work in librarianship, which focuses a lot on sharing and openness. i realized recently that i wasn’t being quite as open with my photographs as i could be, thus this new approach.

find the works at http://marie-kennedy.com or at my flickr page.

if you’d like an archival print of any of the photos, contact me.

Creative Commons License
These works by Marie R. Kennedy are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Posted in art, images, OA | 2 Comments

organizing pdfs in itunes

i have trouble sometimes figuring out which is the final version of a manuscript that i’ve submitted.  usually by the time i get to the final version i am so tired of looking at the manuscript that i drag it into some folder and wave goodbye.  this is fine until i need to find that file again, which usually has “_final” in the file name…unless i’ve forgotten to add it.  as fanatical as i am about organizing things, you’d think i’d have come up with an awesome system for wrangling these files.  well, now i have.  i will drag a final pdf copy into itunes.

yes, it really works.  i saved the file as a pdf and dragged it from my hard drive into my itunes library.  the copy resides in the music folder of the library.  there i added myself as the artist, the journal title as the album, create a genre named “manuscript”, and in the comments i put the title of the article.  i can even give the articles a rating, but giving my own articles 5 stars seems a little conceited :).  presto, organized.  i can sort by artist (kennedy) and it pulls up all of my files.  i can double click on the file name and it opens the document in a pdf reader.

nb: this doesn’t work with powerpoint, word, or excel files, just pdf.

thanks a million to dr. dobb’s portal for the idea.

sorted by Artist

sorted by Artist

Posted in organization tips, writing | Comments Off on organizing pdfs in itunes