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"Digital libraries Case studies."
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The high-impact digital library : innovative approaches for outreach and instruction
by
Neatrour, Anna, 1975- author
,
Myntti, Jeremy, author
,
Wittmann, Rachel Jane, author
in
Digital libraries Management.
,
Digital libraries Marketing.
,
Digital libraries User education.
2025
\"This book explores background information on outreach and instruction efforts by digital library practitioners, detailed survey results from practitioners themselves, and instructional ideas such as drop-in class sessions, course-integrated instruction, training, and ways digital library practitioners can contribute to the Open Educational Resources (OER) and open pedagogy movements\"-- Provided by publisher.
Managing Digital Resources in Libraries
by
Linda S Katz
in
Copyright
,
Copyright -- Electronic information resources -- United States
,
Digital libraries
2013,2005
Advice from the expertson collecting and managing the digital resources that are an increasingly vital part of librarianship!
Managing Digital Resources in Libraries is a practical guide to managing library materials in digital formats. Working librarians share their expertise in the acquisition and management of digital resources, addressing questions of licensing, funding, and providing access. The contributors also examine innovative projects and systems, such as the integration of PDA-accessible resources into a library collection and the development of all-digital libraries. You'll also find supplementary reading lists and bibliographies of additional resources, including relevant Web sites.
Addressing the challenges of and barriers to the preservation and dissemination of electronic information, Managing Digital Resources in Libraries explores vital questions, such as:
How are librarians coping with digital resources?
How do they compare and select titles and formats to purchase?
How do they allocate limited fundsto lease or to purchase high-priced electronic titles?
Does consortium membership provide the answer to funding problems, or does it force librarians to pay for content their users neither want nor need?
Is MARC still an appropriate format for cataloging?
How can librarians make themselves familiar with the multitude of available resources? Managing Digital Resources in Libraries will update your working knowledge of:
online resources
open archivestheir uses and their history
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the First Sale Doctrine, and the Fair Use Doctrineand their implications for librarians
e-journal cataloging and e-journal management software
electronic collection development and management
personal digital assistants
digital licensing agreements
electronic searching systems, including ELIN@, Electronic Journal Finder, Pirate Source, OPAC, and cold fusion databases
Introduction: Managing Digital Resources (Audrey Fenner)
LICENSING
The Impact of Licenses on Library Collections (Min Chou and Oliver Zhou)
Travels into Several Remote Corners of the Information Universe: A Voyage to the
Department of the Houyhnhnmists, or, Licensing Issues and the Integrated Collection (Timothy Shipe)
OPINIONS, RESEARCH, AND ANALYSIS
Harvesting for Disseminating: Open Archives and the Role of Academic Libraries (Eugenio Pelizzari)
The Electronic Librarian: Inching Towards the Revolution (Emerita M. Cuesta)
The Method Behind the Madness: Acquiring Online Journals and a Solution to Provide Access (Donna Skekel)
SYSTEMS AND SOFTWARE
Choices in Cataloging Electronic Journals (Cecilia A. Leathem)
ELIN@: Electronic Library Information NavigatorTowards the One Stop Shop (Anna Alwerud and Lotte Jorgensen)
Western Michigan University Libraries' Electronic Journal Finder (Randle Gedeon and George Boston)
Integrating Print and Electronic Resources: Joyner Library's Pirate Source (Clark Nall and Janice Steed Lewis)
Electronic Journals in Aggregated Collections: Providing Access Through the Catalog and a Cold Fusion Database (Sue Anderson)
SPECIAL PROJECTS AND HISTORIES
Just Another Format: Integrating Resources for Users of Personal Digital Assistants (Denise Koufogiannakis, Pam Ryan, and Susan Dahl)
Issues in the Development of an All-Digital Public Health Library in Michigan: The Michigan Community Health Electronic Library (Harvey R. Brenneise)
Electronic Collection Management: Completing the CycleExperiences at Two
Libraries (Judith Hiott and Carla Beasley)
Index
Reference Notes Included
Building trustworthy digital repositories
by
Bantin, Philip C
in
Digital libraries
,
Digital libraries -- Case studies
,
Digital libraries -- Standards
2016
Building Trustworthy Digital Repositories: Theory and Implementation combines information on both theory and practice related to creating trustworthy repositories for records into one up-to-date source.
This book will bring all the credible theories into one place where they will be summarized, brought up to date, and footnoted. Moreover, the book will be international in its scope, and will discuss ideas coming from such important sources as Australia, Canada, and Western Europe.
Until about five years ago, there were very few implementation projects in this area. This book brings together information on implementation projects that answer these questions:
What is a trustworthy repository for digital records?Who is building these repositories, and what have been the results?How are institutions building or creating these repositories?How are institutions addressing the essential requirement related to the ingest or capture of records?How are institutions automatically and manually capturing essential metadata and audit trails?How are institutions implementing retention and disposal decisions within these systems?How are institutions implementing preservation strategies to ensure that digital objects are accessible over long periods of time?What is the current status of trustworthy repositories, and what will these systems look like in the future?
Using massive digital libraries
The creation of massive digital libraries is your existential crisis. After all, some say they may lead to the demise of traditional libraries. Recognizing libraries as a \"big idea\" that has been implemented in many ways over thousands of years, author Andrew Weiss is not so gloomy. He explores the question of how libraries will adapt, applying and using massive digital libraries. Using the authors criteria for a massive digital libraries, you'll have a firm understanding of their characteristics. You'll track the path of Google Books and the early proponents of the Very Large Digital Library as it met the protests of the scholarly communication community. You'll learn about library practices of the massive digital libraries and how traditional libraries are developing applications, with coverage such as: comparing the collection development approaches of Google Books and Hathi Trust Appplications, such as MDL for research in digital humanities, catalog integration through the Google Book API, Culturenomics and the Google Ngram viewer. 4 case studies of library projects with Google Books
Delivering Research Data Management Services
by
Jones, Sarah
,
Pryor, Graham
,
Whyte, Angus
in
Case studies
,
Database management
,
Digital libraries
2014,2013
The research landscape is changing, with key global research funders now requiring institutions to demonstrate how they will preserve and share research data. However, the practice of structured research data management is very new, and the construction of services remains experimental and in need of models and standards of approach. This groundbreaking guide will lead researchers, institutions and policy makers through the processes needed to set up and run effective institutional research data management services. This ‘how to' guide provides a step-by-step explanation of the components for an institutional service. Case studies from the newly emerging service infrastructures in the UK, USA and Australia draw out the lessons learnt. Different approaches are highlighted and compared; for example, a researcher-focused strategy from Australia is contrasted with a national, top-down approach, and a national research data management service is discussed as an alternative to institutional services. The key topics covered are: research data provision; options and approaches to research data management (RDM) service provision; a spectrum of roles, responsibilities and competences; a pathway to sustainable research data services; the range and components of RDM infrastructure and services; case studies of Johns Hopkins University, University of Southampton, Monash University, the UK Data Service and Jisc Managing Research Data programmes. This book will be an invaluable guide to those entering a new and untried enterprise. It will be particularly relevant to heads of libraries, information technology managers, research support office staff and research directors planning for these types of services. It will also be of interest to researchers, funders and policy makers as a reference tool for understanding how shifts in policy will have a range of ramifications within institutions. Library and information science students will find it an informative window on an emerging area of practice.
The Digital Platform: A Research Agenda
by
de Reuver, Mark
,
Sørensen, Carsten
,
Basole, Rahul C.
in
Business and Management
,
Business Information Systems
,
Case studies
2018
As digital platforms are transforming almost every industry today, they are slowly finding their way into the mainstream information systems (ISs) literature. Digital platforms are a challenging research object because of their distributed nature and intertwinement with institutions, markets and technologies. New research challenges arise as a result of the exponentially growing scale of platform innovation, the increasing complexity of platform architectures and the spread of digital platforms to many different industries. This paper develops a research agenda for digital platforms research in IS. We recommend researchers seek to (1) advance conceptual clarity by providing clear definitions that specify the unit of analysis, degree of digitality and the sociotechnical nature of digital platforms; (2) define the proper scoping of digital platform concepts by studying platforms on different architectural levels and in different industry settings; and (3) advance methodological rigour by employing embedded case studies, longitudinal studies, design research, data-driven modelling and visualisation techniques. Considering current developments in the business domain, we suggest six questions for further research: (1) Are platforms here to stay? (2) How should platforms be designed? (3) How do digital platforms transform industries? (4) How can data-driven approaches inform digital platforms research? (5) How should researchers develop theory for digital platforms? and (6) How do digital platforms affect everyday life?
Journal Article
Data information literacy
by
Carlson, Jake
,
Johnston, Lisa (Lisa R.)
in
Academic librarians
,
Academic librarians -- Effect of technological innovations on
,
Academic libraries
2015,2014
The book lays out the history of diversity in the veterinary profession, in the context of historical changes and actions within US society. An overview of selected strategies from dental, pharmacy, and (human) medical schools is then offered. The impact of social constructs on career interest development is explored using the examples of race, gender, sexual orientation, and gender identity. Practical strategies for attracting preschool through undergraduate students to careers in the veterinary profession are presented, as well as metrics and tools to assess the impact of diversity and inclusiveness strategies. A systems approach to diversity and inclusiveness in the veterinary profession is called for in a manner that frames barriers as opportunities for improvement and progress. There is much that needs to happen to achieve professional inclusiveness and cultural competency, but the path to achieving this is clear. System-wide commitment, planning, execution, and continuous assessment will position the profession to better suit the population of the nation and the world that will be served. This book is a call to action for consistent championship and cohesive approaches, and it provides a road map to building a sustainably inclusive future.
Identifying the future direction of legal deposit in the United Kingdom: The Digital Library Futures approach
by
Gooding, Paul
,
Berube, Linda
,
Terras, Melissa
in
Academic libraries
,
Case studies
,
Computer terminals
2021
PurposeTo date, there has been little research into users of the Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations 2013. This paper addresses that gap by presenting key findings from the AHRC-funded Digital Library Futures project. Its purpose is to present a “user-centric” perspective on the potential future impact of the digital collections that are being created under electronic legal deposit regulations.Design/methodology/approachThe study utilises a mixed methods case study of two academic legal deposit libraries in the United Kingdom: The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford; and Cambridge University Library. It combines surveys of users, web log analysis and expert interviews with librarians and cognate professionals.FindingsUser perspectives on NPLD were not fully considered in the planning and implementation of the 2013 regulations. The authors present findings from their user survey to show how contemporary tensions between user behaviour and access protocols risk limiting the instrumental value of NPLD collections, which have high perceived legacy value.Originality/valueThis is the first study to address the user context for UK Non-Print Legal Deposit. Its value lies in presenting a research-led user assessment of NPLD and in proposing “user-centric” analysis as an addition to the existing “four pillars” of legal deposit research.
Journal Article
Transforming scholarship in the archives through handwritten text recognition
by
Labahn, Roger
,
Stamatopoulos, Nikolaos
,
Bosch, Vicente
in
Access to information
,
Acknowledgment
,
Archives & records
2019
PurposeAn overview of the current use of handwritten text recognition (HTR) on archival manuscript material, as provided by the EU H2020 funded Transkribus platform. It explains HTR, demonstrates Transkribus, gives examples of use cases, highlights the affect HTR may have on scholarship, and evidences this turning point of the advanced use of digitised heritage content. The paper aims to discuss these issues.Design/methodology/approachThis paper adopts a case study approach, using the development and delivery of the one openly available HTR platform for manuscript material.FindingsTranskribus has demonstrated that HTR is now a useable technology that can be employed in conjunction with mass digitisation to generate accurate transcripts of archival material. Use cases are demonstrated, and a cooperative model is suggested as a way to ensure sustainability and scaling of the platform. However, funding and resourcing issues are identified.Research limitations/implicationsThe paper presents results from projects: further user studies could be undertaken involving interviews, surveys, etc.Practical implicationsOnly HTR provided via Transkribus is covered: however, this is the only publicly available platform for HTR on individual collections of historical documents at time of writing and it represents the current state-of-the-art in this field.Social implicationsThe increased access to information contained within historical texts has the potential to be transformational for both institutions and individuals.Originality/valueThis is the first published overview of how HTR is used by a wide archival studies community, reporting and showcasing current application of handwriting technology in the cultural heritage sector.
Journal Article
Growing on Steroids
by
Liu, Martin J.
,
Henfridsson, Ola
,
Huang, Jimmy
in
Special Issue: Information Technology and Innovation
2017
Digital ventures, start-ups growing by drawing on and adding to digital infrastructures, can scale their business at an unprecedented pace. We view such rapid scaling as a generative process by which a venture’s user base increases significantly between two points in time through digital innovation. We studied WeCash, a Chinese digital venture, nearly doubling its user base monthly, to learn more about this generative process. We trace three contingent mechanisms underpinning rapid scaling: data-driven operation, instant release, and swift transformation. We explain these mechanisms and how they interact in the rapid scaling of digital ventures. The research offers an agency perspective on scaling of digital ventures that speaks to the digital innovation literature.
Journal Article