Lesley Tweddle <LTWEDDLE@ACS.AUC.EUN.EG> writes: > Interesting contribution from Mr Henderson, as usual, made me > think though: who _reads_ the print journals? Nobody. They all > end up as unbound sheets, printed on one side, too - and to the > great dilapidation of the originals. The cost of either repairing > or replacing photocopy-battered volumes is one of those hidden > expenses that nobody quite knows. Yes, but I would not agree that nobody reads print journals. Many studies have observed considerable reading and browsing before and without making copies. Library use of journals includes researchers looking for articles they had read in their personal subscription copies and then discarded before fully realizing their relevance and usefulness. Electronic formats so far tend to frustrate such browsing and reading. Databases are criticized for failure to provide comperhensive coverage. Full-text searching can also be unsatisfactory. Interviews with chemists indicated they prefer to browse the illustrations to locate items of interest. See "User acceptance of electronic journals," by Linda Stewart in COLLEGE & RESEARCH LIBRARIES 57,4 (July 1996):339-349. The article concludes that improvements must be made in the areas of portability, comfort, convenient access, permanence and serendipity. > I have never even _used_ an electronic journal, over here > in Cairo: our connect time is something awful; but people certainly > want them. My impression is that academic faculty, who seem to be > the main group we try to please, experience satisfaction with a > library in direct relation to how seldom they actually have to go > into it. This may very well be because they are overworked and > don't have time to leave their desks. Just like librarians really. > They want e-journals, probably, for that reason. The costing gets > more and more complicated! With adequate financial support, your library would have all the latest attractions. This would include remote access to public catalogs, online databases, and e-journals. Remote patrons could request photocopies or print them at their workstations. It won't happen without money. See the eloquent letter by Janet Webster, representing nearly 300 technical libraries, in LIBRARY JOURNAL 122,4 (March 1, 1997):8. She wonders how libraries can go electronic when they lack funds for essentials in print. The evidence supporting Webster's question is considerable. It indicates that more resources, not less, are needed to develop and maintain electronic solutions. It is also clear that technology can only provide conduits. With great respect for the power and usefulness of technology, I say it cannot make sense of scattered and chaotic research findings without a substantial investment of human resources. That is the job of librarians and publishers that is so poorly understood -- and perhaps envied -- by bureaucrats and others who compete with libraries for money. One new theory is that library research should become a separate task, done for its own sake. Task forces at McGill University have engaged in evaluating the "scientific evidence" on subjects such as "whiplash associated disorders." One example began by screening over 10,000 citations. Teams of specialists then read about 400 articles. Less than 70 were accepted as relevant and having scientific merit. The resulting monograph defined past and future research on this topic. (SPINE Supplement 20,8S April 15, 1995) Technology, once you have acquired it, is at risk, according to K.C. Green 1997 National Survey of Information Technology in Higher Education. "State officials may be tempted to reallocate technology dollars for other purposes, similar to the way campuses too often raid the library's book budget when money is tight." (Campus Computing Project, POB 261242, Encino CA 91426-1242) Danny Jones <jones@briscoent.uthscsa.edu> points out > In case you have not seen it, I suggest you also see the Red Sage > Project Final Report [http://www.springer-ny.com/press/redsage]. While > trying to put a positive spin on it, they have to mention that "After 3 > years of significant hardware and maintenance costs UCSF concluded that > storage at their institution was not practical." My recommendation is to reform the "research overhead" formulas for libraries. It would make sense to tie this "reimbursement" to the general productivity of research rather than university population and specific grants. Library collections at the top universities provide resources that support R&D unconnected with local campus research and grants. Certainly they also support proposals. Many library advocates feel libraries need a "protected share" of the total budget somewhere around six percent of total general and education expenditures as calculated in the United States. Research and education begin with information and well-informed scientists and scholars. If their information resources are outdated and impoverished, how good can their work-product be? When will the folks who give the grants and pay the tuitions wake up? Albert Henderson, Editor, PUBLISHING RESEARCH QUARTERLY 70244.1532@compuserve.com