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Título de Acceso Abierto

Information Technology and Libraries

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

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Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

library and information science; library automation; information systems

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No requiere desde ene. 2011 / hasta oct. 2024 Directory of Open Access Journals acceso abierto
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Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0730-9295

Idiomas de la publicación

  • inglés

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre licencias CC

Tabla de contenidos

Bridging the Gap

Jason Boczar; Bonita Pollock; Xiying Mi; Amanda Yeslibas

<jats:p>The year of COVID-19, 2020, brought unique experiences to everyone in their daily as well as their professional life. Facing many challenges of division in all aspects (social distancing, political and social divisions, remote work environments), University of South Florida Libraries took the lead in exploring how to overcome these various separations by providing access to its high-quality information sources to its local community and beyond. This paper shares the insights of using Linked Data technology to provide easy access to digital cultural heritage collections not only for the scholarly communities but also for those underrepresented user groups. The authors present the challenges at this special time of the history, discuss the possible solutions, and propose future work to further the effort.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

Stateful Library Analysis and Migration System (SLAM)

Adrian-Tudor PanescuORCID; Teodora-Elena Grosu; Vasile Manta

<jats:p>Interoperability between research management systems, especially digital libraries or repositories, has been a central theme in the community for the past years, with the discussion focused on means of enriching, linking, and disseminating outputs. This paper considers a frequently overlooked aspect, namely the migration of records across systems, by introducing the Stateful Library Analysis and Migration system (SLAM) and presenting practical experiences with migrating records from DSpace and Digital Commons repositories to Figshare.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

A 21st Century Technical Infrastructure for Digital Preservation

Nathan Tallman

<jats:p>Digital preservation systems and practices are rooted in research and development efforts from the late 1990s and early 2000s when the cultural heritage sector started to tackle these challenges in isolation. Since then, the commercial sector has sought to solve similar challenges, using different technical strategies such as software defined storage and function-as-a-service. While commercial sector solutions are not necessarily created with long-term preservation in mind, they are well aligned with the digital preservation use case. The cultural heritage sector can benefit from adapting these modern approaches to increase sustainability and leverage technological advancements widely in use across Fortune 500 companies.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

Using Open Access Institutional Repositories to Save the Student Symposium during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Allison SymulevichORCID; Mark HamiltonORCID

<jats:p>In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, colleges and universities around the world were forced to close or move to online instruction. Many institutions host yearly student research symposiums. This article describes how two universities used their institutional repositories to adapt their student research symposiums to virtual events in a matter of weeks. Both universities use the bepress Digital Commons platform for their institutional repositories. Even though the two universities’ symposium strategies differed, some commonalities emerged, particularly with regard to learning the best practices to highlight student work and support their universities’ efforts to host research symposiums virtually.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

Local Hosting of Faculty-Created Open Education Resources

Joseph LetrizORCID

<jats:p>Rising costs of secondary education institutions, coupled with the inflated cost of textbooks, have forced students to make decisions on whether they can afford the primary materials for their classes. Publishers working to supply digital access codes, which limit the ability of students to copy, print, or share the materials, or resell the textbook after the course is over, have further pushed students into forgoing purchasing materials. In recent years, institutions have moved to support OER (Open Education Resources) initiatives to provide students a cost-free primary text or supplement to their materials. This allows students unfettered access to quality resources that help drive engagement in courses, from homework to discussions. While larger institutions or in-state partnerships with resource sharing consortiums, such as the MnPALS cooperation with the state of Minnesota, provide access to platforms like Pressbooks, smaller institutions and private colleges don’t always have the ability to negotiate these types of relationships. In this case study, I will cover the foundations necessary to start a low-cost, self-hosted solution to support faculty creation of OER material and the available resources that the University of Dubuque utilized in their development process. This overview will briefly cover the skills and knowledge needed to support the growth of this initiative with minimal complexity and as little jargon as possible.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

ResearchGate Metrics’ Behavior and Its Correlation with RG Score and Scopus Indicators

Saeideh Valizadeh-HaghiORCID; Hamed Nasibi-SisORCID; Maryam Shekofteh; Shahabedin RahmatizadehORCID

<jats:p>Objective: Social networking sites are appropriate tools for sharing and exposing scientific works to increase citations. The objectives of the present study are to investigate the activity of Iranian scholars in the medical sciences in ResearchGate and to explore the effect of each of the four ResearchGate metrics on the RG score. Moreover, the citation metrics of the faculty members in Scopus and the relationship between these metrics and the RG score were explored.&#x0D; Methods: The study population included all SBMU faculty members who have profiles in ResearchGate (N=950). The data were collected through ResearchGate and Scopus in January 2021. The Spearman correlation coefficient was applied to examine the relationship between ResearchGate metrics and Scopus indicators as well as to determine the effect of each ResearchGate metric on the RG score.&#x0D; Results: The findings revealed that the publication sharing metric had the highest correlation (0.918) with the RG score and had the greatest impact on it (p-value &lt;0.001), while the question asking metric showed the lowest correlation (0.11). Moreover, there was a significant relationship between the RG score and Scopus citation metrics (p-value &lt;0.05). Furthermore, all four RG metrics had a positive and significant relationship with Scopus indicators (p-value &lt;0.05), in which the number of shared publications had the highest correlation compared to other RG metrics.&#x0D; Conclusion: Researchers’ participation in the ResearchGate social network is effective in increasing citation indicators. Therefore, more activity in the ResearchGate social network may have favorable results in improving universities’ ranking.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

Migration of a Research Library's ICT-Based Services to a Cloud Platform

Francis JayakanthORCID; Ananda T Byrappa; Filbert Minj

<jats:p>Libraries have been at the forefront in adopting emerging technologies to manage the library’s operations and provide information services to the user community they serve. With the emergence of cloud computing (CC) technology, libraries are exploring and adopting CC service models to make their own services more efficient, reliable, secure, scalable, and cost-effective. In this article, the authors share their experience migrating some of the library’s locally hosted ICT-based services onto the Microsoft Azure cloud platform. The migration of services to a cloud platform has helped the library significantly reduce the downtime of its services due to power or network or system outages.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

Balancing Community and Local Needs

Daniel CoughlinORCID

<jats:p>This paper examines the decision points over the course of ten years for developing an Institutional Repository. Specifically, the focus is on the impact and influence from the open-source community, the needs of the local institution, the role that team dynamics plays, and the chosen platform. Frequently, the discussion revolves around the technology stack and its limitations and capabilities. Inherently, any technology will have several features and limitations, and these are important in determining a solution that will work for your institution. However, the people running the system and developing the software, and their enthusiasm to continue work within the existing software environment in order to provide features for your campus and the larger open-source community will play a bigger role than the technical platform. These lenses are analyzed through three points in time: the initial roll out of our Institutional Repository, our long-term running and maintenance, and eventual new development and why we made the decisions we made at each of those points in time.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

Letter from the Editors (March 2022)

Kenneth J. VarnumORCID; Marisha C. Kelly

<jats:p>Welcome to ITAL's Assistant Editor, call for volunteers to serve on the Editorial Board, and summary of the issue's contents.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible

Using DPLA and the Wikimedia Foundation to Increase Usage of Digitized Resources

Dominic Byrd-McDevittORCID; John DeweesORCID

<jats:p>The Digital Public Library of America has created a process by which rights-free or openly licensed resources that have already been harvested can be copied over into Wikimedia Commons, thus creating a simple path for including those digital collections materials into Wikipedia articles. By meeting internet users where they already are, rather than relying on them to navigate to individual digital libraries, the access and usage of digital assets is dramatically increased, in particular to user groups that might otherwise not have a reason to interact with such digitized resources.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Library and Information Sciences; Information Systems.

Pp. No disponible