Institutions

Aggregate intentions

Lorcan Dempsey 1 min read

I was interested to see the announcement about Ebsco and web services for bringing together Counter data.

The wide acceptance of the Project COUNTER Code of Practice has assisted greatly in the standardization of how usage data is counted and presented. Libraries are now looking to consolidate this normalized data as input for collection development decisions. A new and sometimes significant challenge is the actual collection of reports for analysis. SUSHI was specifically introduced to solve the problem of harvesting this data. With SUSHI, the library’s usage consolidation application (often tied to a library’s e-resource management software) will be able to use the Web service to automatically retrieve data whenever desired. [Library Technology Guides: Display Article]

In libraries, we have several clear sources of such ‘intentional’ data – data that records choices made by libraries and by users.
We have holdings data (a record of choices made by librarians), ILL data (a record of choices made by users and librarians), we have circulation data (a record of choices made by users), and we have database usage data (a record of choices made by users). Over time, the standardization, consolidation and syndication of this data is potentially valuable in several library service scenarious. For recommendation services, for collection analysis, and so on.
Related entry:

Share
More from LorcanDempsey.net
Libraries and library studies
Institutions

Libraries and library studies

I wrote this piece on libraries and possible educational responses as part of a longer contribution on the informational disciplines and the iSchool. A principal goal was to suggest that libraries present interesting and challenging research and educational questions, which cross disciplines.
Lorcan Dempsey 14 min read
Information: a brief schematic history
Meta

Information: a brief schematic history

In a piece on the informational disciplines and the iSchool, I sketched this very schematic and informal overview of information, broadly construed. My focus is pragmatic, related to library interests. I consider several current issues, including the 'apotheosis of the document' in an AI context.
Lorcan Dempsey 20 min read
So-called soft skills are hard
Institutions

So-called soft skills are hard

So-called soft skills are important across a range of library activities. Existing trends will further amplify this importance. Describing these skills as soft may be misleading, or even damaging. They should be recognized as learnable and teachable, and should be explicitly supported and rewarded.
Lorcan Dempsey 12 min read
icon

lorcan dempsey dot net

Deep dives and quick takes: libraries, society, culture and technology

Great! You’ve successfully signed up.

Welcome back! You've successfully signed in.

You've successfully subscribed to LorcanDempsey.net.

Success! Check your email for magic link to sign-in.

Success! Your billing info has been updated.

Your billing was not updated.