Programs and research The network reconfigures discovery: the importance of disclosure Lorcan Dempsey Ohio State University Library 2.0 Conference 14 June 2007 Columbus, Oh.
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Programs and research The network reconfigures discovery: the importance of disclosure Lorcan Dempsey Ohio State University Library 2.0 Conference 14 June 2007 Columbus, Oh From home to here …. Network user environment institutional operating environment Part 1: Network use environment Part 2: Operational environment Part 3: Discovery and disclosure. The example of the catalog This is short because you have already heard a lot of this Part 1: The network use environment Getting things done Workflow Brand is the new real estate The rich get richer Libraries will need to plan for and build services that fit new researcher work habits, with an emphasis on the flexibility and remixing of their content and services. …. … In this study we paid some attention to the new world of informal peer-to-peer communication within the research community. The findings are that researchers are adopting social network technologies very fast and so far they have done so on their own: the library has effectively been bypassed. Researchers use of academic libraries and their services. Swan A and Brown S Starting an information search Respondents were asked to indicate, from a list of 16 electronic resources, which they typically use to begin an information search. Only 2% of college students start their search at a library Web site. Among total respondents, 84% of information searches begin with a search engine and 1% begin at a library Web site. College Students Trustworthiness of library sources vs. search engines Over half (53%) of college students indicate a similar trust of search engines as with library resources. Chris Beckett http://www.scholinfo.com/presentations/2006/8/10/the-new-world-order-in-collection-development-the-commercial-perspective.html The long tail Systemwide efficiences Aggregation of supply •Unified discovery •Low transaction costs Aggregation of demand •Mobilize users •Brand Impact? Database > Website > Flow Get in the flow Then: the user built their workflow around the library Now: the library must build its service around the user workflow Compete for attention Then: resources were scarce and attention was abundant Now: attention is scarce and resources are abundant Website > workflow Then: people consumed information resources Now: people construct digital identities online: gather, create, share This is shortish because I don’t have a lot of time Part 2: The library operational environment Personal Workflow RSS, toolbars, .. Network level workflow Google, … Institutional Workflow Portals, CMS, IR, … Consumer environments Management environment Bought Licensed Digitized Faculty& students Integrated local user environment? Library web presence Resource sharing, … library … Aggregations Resource sharing Let’s limit this to the catalog so that we can get away soon Part 3: From discovery to disclosure Local Discovery Environments Shared Discovery Environments Syndicated Discovery Environments Leveraged Discovery Environments Remember: focus on catalog Require disclosure Local Discovery environment Some (not necessarily aligned) motivations Make data work harder Integrate access to locally managed resources Escape from ILS limitations NCSU Rochester SOLR Worldcat 2.0 Primo Encore … Making data work harder: simple search followed by rich navigation and participation Glancability Some remarks How does MARC data play with other data Subjects, authors, .. Historic investment in structure? Duplicate cost? Relationship to Metasearch? Shared discovery environment Increase impact Create gravitational pull Aggregate demand and supply Reduce costs Some comments Integration of discovery to delivery becoming essential A move to shared environments seems more likely with increased ability to ‘view’ different levels Increased gravitational pull: greater use of collections Growing evidence Syndicated discovery experience Syndicate data or service or links They found that Google is responsible for referring 56% of the users of HighWire journals, and our own study shows that over 70% of researchers use it routinely to find scholarly content. Moreover, web search engine referrals also appear to account for the vast majority of accesses to institutional repositories. Van Orsdel L C and Born K Researchers use of academic libraries and their services. Swan A and Brown S Syndicating services RSS Portlets APIs, Protocol-based Projects Sakailibrary … Not as rapid as one might expect? Susan Hollar - Inside the Course at Michigan Sakaibrary: Michigan Indiana Diane Dallis - Inside the Course at Indiana Some remarks Syndication of data now common among data providers Routing issue for non-unique materials Resolution Worldcat Libraries exposing licensed content holdings interesting Google Scholar Service disclosure less common APIs Web services Portlets HTML fragments – ‘search boxes’ Toolbars Widgets, extensions, … The Leveraged discovery experience In some ways the most interesting Use another discovery service to connect back to your resources Compare to the situation with article databases and resolvers Some remarks Some of these are toy-like now, but indicate a direction Increased capacity to ‘sense’ structure (microformats) will improve ability. So …. The library website is not the front door We need to connect multiple discovery environments to library fulfilment options We need to put library resources in users’ workflow We need to place library resources in places which aggregate demand