The Basic Access Model (BAM) provides a reasonable and practical framework of business terms for libraries and vendors to agree on how to facilitate user access to digital content for content mining purposes, as well as a principled and agreed upon industry foundation for future cooperation. BAM has already opened up significant content for mining access. The sooner we can open up our collections—both as libraries and as vendors—to the new and emerging tools and methods of content mining researchers, the more relevant we and our collections will be
In January 2013, the University System of Georgia Board of Regents consolidated a health sciences un...
Google and like search engines have changed the way library users search and retrieve information. T...
In the fall of 2012 East Carolina University’s Joyner Library was looking to create a new fund alloc...
Joyner Library recently had to make space for a new campus partner. To do so we focused our activity...
In a time of increasing physical collection space pressures and rapidly evolving higher education in...
Libraries’ market share of discovery has been declining rapidly, and in some cases this is directly ...
In the summer of 2007, the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) received 48 million dollars ...
Outsourcing the management of electronic journals has significantly reduced the autonomy academic li...
31st IATUL conference opening comments by Arden Bement, Director of the Global Policy Research Insti...
Open access to scholarly resources is a growing dimension in the universe of scholarly communication...
The Global Open Knowledgebase (GOKb) project is developing a repository of freely available data tha...
Our computerized world churns out data and their analysis is a challenge. Data mining and data fusio...
There will be a time when your library will need to evaluate all of your electronic resources. How w...
Cost per use has long been a staple of collection development decision‐making for electronic resourc...
Discovery service indexing content can be highly customizable, which makes traditional title overlap...
In January 2013, the University System of Georgia Board of Regents consolidated a health sciences un...
Google and like search engines have changed the way library users search and retrieve information. T...
In the fall of 2012 East Carolina University’s Joyner Library was looking to create a new fund alloc...
Joyner Library recently had to make space for a new campus partner. To do so we focused our activity...
In a time of increasing physical collection space pressures and rapidly evolving higher education in...
Libraries’ market share of discovery has been declining rapidly, and in some cases this is directly ...
In the summer of 2007, the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) received 48 million dollars ...
Outsourcing the management of electronic journals has significantly reduced the autonomy academic li...
31st IATUL conference opening comments by Arden Bement, Director of the Global Policy Research Insti...
Open access to scholarly resources is a growing dimension in the universe of scholarly communication...
The Global Open Knowledgebase (GOKb) project is developing a repository of freely available data tha...
Our computerized world churns out data and their analysis is a challenge. Data mining and data fusio...
There will be a time when your library will need to evaluate all of your electronic resources. How w...
Cost per use has long been a staple of collection development decision‐making for electronic resourc...
Discovery service indexing content can be highly customizable, which makes traditional title overlap...
In January 2013, the University System of Georgia Board of Regents consolidated a health sciences un...
Google and like search engines have changed the way library users search and retrieve information. T...
In the fall of 2012 East Carolina University’s Joyner Library was looking to create a new fund alloc...