Studies documenting the usage patterns of electronic journals have compared print and e-journal characteristics, surveyed faculty for their perceptions and expectations, and analyzed the impact on library practices. This study, a qualitative exploration of a wide array of issues related to the research and teaching habits of early adopters of e-journals in a research setting, was conducted in the spring of 2001 with faculty in the basic and health sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Open-ended questionnaires provided a framework to wide-ranging discussions of perceptions, expectations, and changing practices pertaining to e-journals and other electronic resources. The results were analyzed with a specific focus on shared beha...
From 1977 through 2001 the authors have conducted a series of studies that examine reading and publi...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This study is an attempt to analyze the level of understanding and the perception of scholarly commu...
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...
The files attached are the final draft of the manuscript. Permission to deposit this work was grante...
Abstract The main aim of the study is to know the use of e-journals among the faculty members and st...
E-journal, printed journal, and database usage data from campus polls conducted annually, 1998-2000,...
Research from three decades shows that scientists read widely from scholarly journals, with the read...
This paper reports on the results of a pilot study conducted as part of a larger project aimed at un...
The advancement in information technology has changed the reading habits and the publication format ...
The phrase electronic journal or "e-journal " is used to denote a broader category of elec...
The paper reports on initial findings from user studies of electronic journals in which users from s...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This article examines disciplinary differences in the use of electronic journals by academic staff a...
From 1977 through 2001 the authors have conducted a series of studies that examine reading and publi...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This study is an attempt to analyze the level of understanding and the perception of scholarly commu...
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...
The files attached are the final draft of the manuscript. Permission to deposit this work was grante...
Abstract The main aim of the study is to know the use of e-journals among the faculty members and st...
E-journal, printed journal, and database usage data from campus polls conducted annually, 1998-2000,...
Research from three decades shows that scientists read widely from scholarly journals, with the read...
This paper reports on the results of a pilot study conducted as part of a larger project aimed at un...
The advancement in information technology has changed the reading habits and the publication format ...
The phrase electronic journal or "e-journal " is used to denote a broader category of elec...
The paper reports on initial findings from user studies of electronic journals in which users from s...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This article examines disciplinary differences in the use of electronic journals by academic staff a...
From 1977 through 2001 the authors have conducted a series of studies that examine reading and publi...
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Chemistry Library, an early adopter of electro...
This study is an attempt to analyze the level of understanding and the perception of scholarly commu...