University libraries are rapidly moving toward electronic journal collections. Readership surveys at three universities with different levels of electronic journal implementation demonstrate how transition to electronic journal collections affects use patterns of faculty and staff. The University of Tennessee was in a transitional phase when the survey was done (2000), the University of Pittsburgh had acquired a large electronic journal collection, but with some duplication with print journals (2003), and Drexel University had migrated to nearly all electronic journals (2002). Although faculty use of personal print subscriptions remains significant, electronic personal subscriptions are used only infrequently by faculty even though this is ...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This article is available from the publisher at http://crl.acrl.org/content/70/1/26.full.pdf+htmlThi...
Studies documenting the usage patterns of electronic journals have compared print and e-journal char...
University libraries are rapidly moving toward electronic journal collections. Readership surveys at...
Research from three decades shows that scientists read widely from scholarly journals, with the read...
From 1977 through 2001 the authors have conducted a series of studies that examine reading and publi...
Studies conducted over the last three decades demonstrate that scientists read widely from scholarly...
This paper reports the results of a quantitative analysis examining factors affecting electronic jou...
This article examines disciplinary differences in the use of electronic journals by academic staff a...
Annual electronic journal usage data for the NorthEast Research Library (NERL) consortium was analyz...
The files attached are the final draft of the manuscript. Permission to deposit this work was grante...
has been working hard to make as much as possible of our journal collection available to our users e...
E-journal, printed journal, and database usage data from campus polls conducted annually, 1998-2000,...
Final printed version available at http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/publications/crljournal/20...
This paper summarized results of 13,591 readership survey responses of scientists and reviews of hun...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This article is available from the publisher at http://crl.acrl.org/content/70/1/26.full.pdf+htmlThi...
Studies documenting the usage patterns of electronic journals have compared print and e-journal char...
University libraries are rapidly moving toward electronic journal collections. Readership surveys at...
Research from three decades shows that scientists read widely from scholarly journals, with the read...
From 1977 through 2001 the authors have conducted a series of studies that examine reading and publi...
Studies conducted over the last three decades demonstrate that scientists read widely from scholarly...
This paper reports the results of a quantitative analysis examining factors affecting electronic jou...
This article examines disciplinary differences in the use of electronic journals by academic staff a...
Annual electronic journal usage data for the NorthEast Research Library (NERL) consortium was analyz...
The files attached are the final draft of the manuscript. Permission to deposit this work was grante...
has been working hard to make as much as possible of our journal collection available to our users e...
E-journal, printed journal, and database usage data from campus polls conducted annually, 1998-2000,...
Final printed version available at http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/publications/crljournal/20...
This paper summarized results of 13,591 readership survey responses of scientists and reviews of hun...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This article is available from the publisher at http://crl.acrl.org/content/70/1/26.full.pdf+htmlThi...
Studies documenting the usage patterns of electronic journals have compared print and e-journal char...