---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Tue, 14 Mar 2000 11:54:18 -0400 From: David Goodman <dgoodman@Princeton.EDU> Subject: Re: Collection development policies for serials (Mary Ann Walker) The only important factor is use, real or prospective. Tyoically, a library buys the titles that receive or will receive the most use. This can be measured by physical counts, and by citations. Physical counts are not accurate exceopt in closed-shelf collections, but with immense work can give useful data. An excellent example of how it should be done is the recent work at the University of Wisconsin. As for citations, I reprint below a discussion of this I posted license-l this past August Citation indexing is one of the key tools, and can give potentially two types of data: First, for or the journal as a whole, it can tell how much it is cited (either total citations to all article in the journal, or citations per article published, known as the impact factor), and by what journals it is cited. This information is not exactly free, but is available as the CD or Web product Journal Citation Reports. This however is information about the content of the journal, not the content of the journal as it applies to any one University's interests. There are , for example, many theoretical ecology titles that are not that much used by the world in general, but are certainly key journals to my library; there are many hematology journals very highly cited by those in that subject, but only slightly used or cited here.) Second, Information about citations as it applies to any one institution can be obtained from Science citation Index. Unfortunately it can not be done with Web of Science, but only the versions on Dialog (& other such services). Basically, you search for a title as citation source, and your institution as citing location. This is quite inexpensive if one doesn't need to analyze further. To see what articles are being cited or the departments of those citing them is, because of the Dialog pricing structure, very expensive (unless one does this, there's a ambiguity about citing institution, as this is not a standardized field. ISI also can supply all this for an institution as a customized service, for a fee.) I have in fact done this for all Biology and Neuroscience journals that Princeton subscribes to, and the Rutgers chemistry Librarian, Howard Dess, published an article about this in "Science and Technology Libraries." (Note that this is not the same as just seeing where a University's faculty publish their papers, which is typically a much more restricted group of titles.) But this citation use is only part of the use: It only measures use that results in references in formally published papers. It doesn't reflect what is read as background but not cited. It doesn't reflect unpublished theses. It doesn't reflect publication as technical reports, or as books. It doesn't reflect student papers. It doesn't reflect class assignments. It doesn't reflect what was found not useful, but which had to be examined to make that determination. However, it is generally found to roughly correlate with usage as measured by reshelving studies, except that at least in biology review journals are typically even higher in the reshelving use than the citation use (data for my library are in preparation). One can certainly argue that in a scholarly institution citation data offers the best single measurement. And in the absence of data for a particular institution, the JCR data can be very useful indeed. In both cases, they can of course be validly used only with awareness of the limitations. Prospective use can only be an estimate, based on similar titles. All of the above assumes that all use and all citation is equal. In some cases, that is not politically expedient, and it will be necessary to give more weight to faculty use than undergraduate, or the opposite. In a teaching-oriented institution a very good source for citations is term papers. Ask faculty for copies of what they consider excellent ones. I never trust faculty opinion. I tell the faculty "You completely and totally determine what we buy. You do so by selecting what you work on and what sources you use, and by what you tell your students to work on and what sources they use. I will buy whatever you and your students actually use and need." I don't actually say, but I also also mean: "I am in a better position to judge this than you. It doesn't take subject knowledge; it takes knowing, talking to, and observing the users." Faculty, in my experience, usually tell librarians what titles they think they and their student _ought_ to use, not they do use. Sometimes they specify whatever they used when they were in graduate school many years ago. If you follow their selections you will get a collection composed of prestigeous but little used titles. If you can locate faculty whose advice you can really trust, that's ideal; in my 20+ years of experience serving a marvellously able group of talented researchers and teachers, I have had the unusual good fortune to actually know one. What journals to get in electronic versus print is a different question. I would in most situations and for most titles get whatever is available electronically as electronic-only. I will be giving a talk explaining this at National Online. -- Dr. David Goodman Biology Librarian, and Co-Chair, Electronic Journals Task Force Princeton University Library dgoodman@princeton.edu http://www.princeton.edu/~biolib/ phone: 609-258-3235 fax: 609-258-2627