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Academic libraries and open access strategies

Producción científica: Chapterrevisión exhaustiva

5 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

With the rise of alternate discovery services, such as Google Scholar, in conjunction with the increase in open access content, researchers have the option to bypass academic libraries when they search for and retrieve scholarly information. This state of affairs implies that academic libraries exist in competition with these alternate services and with the patrons who use them, and as a result, may be disintermediated from the scholarly information seeking and retrieval process. Drawing from decision and game theory, bounded rationality, information seeking theory, citation theory, and social computing theory, this study investigates how academic librarians are responding as competitors to changing scholarly information seeking and collecting practices. Bibliographic data was collected in 2010 from a systematic random sample of references on CiteULike.org and analyzed with three years of bibliometric data collected from Google Scholar. Findings suggest that although scholars may choose to bypass libraries when they seek scholarly information, academic libraries continue to provide a majority of scholarly documentation needs through open access and institutional repositories. Overall, the results indicate that academic librarians are playing the scholarly communication game competitively.

Idioma originalEnglish
Título de la publicación alojadaAdvances in Library Administration and Organization
Páginas147-211
Número de páginas65
DOI
EstadoPublished - 2014

Serie de la publicación

NombreAdvances in Library Administration and Organization
Volumen32
ISSN (versión impresa)0732-0671

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Public Administration
  • Library and Information Sciences

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