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Books in Library and information science

101-110 of 410 results in All results

How Libraries Should Manage Data

  • 1st Edition
  • September 4, 2015
  • Brian Cox
  • English
  • Paperback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 6 6 3 - 4
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 6 7 1 - 9
Have you ever looked at your Library’s key performance indicators and said to yourself "so what!"? Have you found yourself making decisions in a void due to the lack of useful and easily accessible operational data? Have you ever worried that you are being left behind with the emergence of data analytics? Do you feel there are important stories in your operational data that need to be told, but you have no idea how to find these stories? If you answered yes to any of these questions, then this book is for you. How Libraries Should Manage Data provides detailed instructions on how to transform your operational data from a fog of disconnected, unreliable, and inaccessible information - into an exemplar of best practice data management. Like the human brain, most people are only using a very small fraction of the true potential of Excel. Learn how to tap into a greater proportion of Excel’s hidden power, and in the process transform your operational data into actionable business intelligence.

Altmetrics for Information Professionals

  • 1st Edition
  • September 3, 2015
  • Kim Johan Holmberg
  • English
  • Paperback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 2 7 3 - 5
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 2 7 7 - 3
The goal of any research assessment is to evaluate the value or quality of the research in comparison to other research. As quality is highly subjective and difficult to measure, citations are used as a proxy. Citations are an important part of scholarly communication and a significant component of research evaluation, with the assumption being that highly cited work has influenced the work of many other researchers and hence it is more valuable. Recently we have seen new online data sources being researched for this purpose and disruptive ideas with the power to change research assessment, and perhaps even science as a whole, have been born. Altmetrics is the new research area that investigates the potential of these new data source as indicators of the impact that research has made on the scientific community and beyond, and thus possibly also as indicators of the societal impact of research. This book will present some of these new data sources, findings from earlier altmetrics research, and the disruptive ideas that may radically change scholarly communication.

Supporting Research in Area Studies

  • 1st Edition
  • August 19, 2015
  • Lesley Pitman
  • English
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 1 - 7 8 0 6 3 - 4 7 1 - 5
Supporting Research in Area Studies: A Guide for Academic Libraries focuses on the study of other countries or regions of the world, crossing traditional disciplinary boundaries in the humanities and social sciences. The book provides a comprehensive guide for academic libraries supporting communities of researchers, exploring the specialist requirements of these researchers in information resources, resource discovery tools, information skills, and the challenges of working with materials in multiple languages. The book makes the case that adapting systems and procedures to meet these needs will help academic libraries be better placed to support their institutions’ international agenda. Early chapters cover the academic landscape, its history, area studies, librarianship, and acquisitions. Subsequent chapters discuss collections management, digital products, and the digital humanities, and their role in academic projects, with final sections exploring information skills and the various disciplinary skills that facilitate the needs of researchers during their careers.

An Emergent Theory of Digital Library Metadata

  • 1st Edition
  • August 8, 2015
  • Getaneh Alemu + 1 more
  • English
  • Paperback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 3 8 5 - 5
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 4 0 1 - 2
An Emergent Theory of Digital Library Metadata is a reaction to the current digital library landscape that is being challenged with growing online collections and changing user expectations. The theory provides the conceptual underpinnings for a new approach which moves away from expert defined standardised metadata to a user driven approach with users as metadata co-creators. Moving away from definitive, authoritative, metadata to a system that reflects the diversity of users’ terminologies, it changes the current focus on metadata simplicity and efficiency to one of metadata enriching, which is a continuous and evolving process of data linking. From predefined description to information conceptualised, contextualised and filtered at the point of delivery. By presenting this shift, this book provides a coherent structure in which future technological developments can be considered.

Meeting Health Information Needs Outside Of Healthcare

  • 1st Edition
  • August 4, 2015
  • Catherine Arnott Smith + 1 more
  • English
  • Paperback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 2 4 8 - 3
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 2 5 9 - 9
Meeting Health Information Needs Outside of Healthcare addresses the challenges and ethical dilemmas concerning the delivery of health information to the general public in a variety of non-clinical settings, both in-person and via information technology, in settings from public and academic libraries to online communities and traditional and social media channels. Professionals working in a range of fields, including librarianship, computer science and health information technology, journalism, and health communication can be involved in providing consumer health information, or health information targeting laypeople. This volume clearly examines the properties of health information that make it particularly challenging information to provide in diverse settings.

Information Professionals' Career Confidential

  • 1st Edition
  • July 14, 2015
  • Ulla de Stricker
  • English
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 2 3 6 - 0
Based in part on a selection of the author's past blog postings, Information Professionals' Career Confidential is a convenient, browsable, and illuminating pocket compendium of insights on topics relevant for information and knowledge professionals at any stage of their careers. This book collects comments on matters of interest to new and experienced information professionals alike in 1-2 minute “quick takes,” inviting further thought. Topics range from the value of knowledge management and effective communication in organizations to assessing employers’ perception of information professionals and how best to increase one’s value through professional organizations and volunteering. This unique resource will be illuminating for anyone in library and information science, career development, or knowledge and information management.

Informed Systems

  • 1st Edition
  • July 10, 2015
  • Mary M. Somerville
  • English
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 2 2 2 - 3
By fostering principles of systems thinking and informed learning though an inclusive, participatory design process that advances information exchange, reflective dialogue, and knowledge creation, the Informed Systems Approach promotes conceptual change in workplace organizations. Informed Systems explores theory-based participatory action research and provides examples of agile process models for activating sustainable design, dialogue, and reflection processes in today’s organizations. This book also examines forward thinking frameworks for academic libraries, and how they can be used in the context of dynamically changing scholarly communications. Chapters further the expression of collaborative information practices that enrich information experiences by simultaneously advancing both situated domain knowledge and transferable learning capacity. Design (and redesign) activities well integrated into the workplace culture are expressed through sustainable processes and practices that produce rich information experiences. Informed learning both promotes and sustains continuous learning, including collective reflection on information sources, collaborative practices, and systems functionalities. In these ways, transferable topical understandings and information resiliency manifest action oriented intention to ensure improvements of real world situations.

Digital Futures

  • 1st Edition
  • July 10, 2015
  • Martin Hall + 2 more
  • English
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 4 0 0 - 5
A co-branded book project with Jisc (formerly the Joint Information Systems Commitee), off the back of DigiFest 2014, a digital festival run by Jisc for the first time in 2014. The aim of the book is to bring cutting-edge discussion as heard at DigiFest to the information professional/academic librarian readership. Digital Futures will provide expert briefings to information professionals on the emerging trends in the digital technologies that are transforming teaching and research in higher education.

Managing Scientific Information and Research Data

  • 1st Edition
  • July 9, 2015
  • Svetla Baykoucheva
  • English
  • Paperback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 1 9 5 - 0
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 1 0 0 2 3 7 - 7
Innovative technologies are changing the way research is performed, preserved, and communicated. Managing Scientific Information and Research Data explores how these technologies are used and provides detailed analysis of the approaches and tools developed to manage scientific information and data. Following an introduction, the book is then divided into 15 chapters discussing the changes in scientific communication; new models of publishing and peer review; ethics in scientific communication; preservation of data; discovery tools; discipline-specific practices of researchers for gathering and using scientific information; academic social networks; bibliographic management tools; information literacy and the information needs of students and researchers; the involvement of academic libraries in eScience and the new opportunities it presents to librarians; and interviews with experts in scientific information and publishing.

A Librarian's Guide to Graphs, Data and the Semantic Web

  • 1st Edition
  • July 9, 2015
  • James Powell
  • English
  • Paperback
    9 7 8 - 1 - 8 4 3 3 4 - 7 5 3 - 8
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 1 - 7 8 0 6 3 - 4 3 4 - 0
Graphs are about connections, and are an important part of our connected and data-driven world. A Librarian's Guide to Graphs, Data and the Semantic Web is geared toward library and information science professionals, including librarians, software developers and information systems architects who want to understand the fundamentals of graph theory, how it is used to represent and explore data, and how it relates to the semantic web. This title provides a firm grounding in the field at a level suitable for a broad audience, with an emphasis on open source solutions and what problems these tools solve at a conceptual level, with minimal emphasis on algorithms or mathematics. The text will also be of special interest to data science librarians and data professionals, since it introduces many graph theory concepts by exploring data-driven networks from various scientific disciplines. The first two chapters consider graphs in theory and the science of networks, before the following chapters cover networks in various disciplines. Remaining chapters move on to library networks, graph tools, graph analysis libraries, information problems and network solutions, and semantic graphs and the semantic web.