TY - JOUR TI - Factors promoting coral-algal transition in coral transplantation experiments AU - Yap, H.T. AU - Alvarez-Molina, R. AU - Benjamin, C.S. T2 - Philippine Science Letters DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 4 IS - 1 SP - 60–69 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Beyond Library Software: New Tools for Electronic Resources Management AU - Wilson, Kristen T2 - Serials Review AB - The boom in easy-to-use Web-based software has inspired some libraries to adapt tools that were not designed for the library market to meet their needs in new and creative ways. This column will explore three examples of academic libraries that have used mainstream technologies to create new approaches to managing electronic resources acquisitions, workflows, and metadata. Each case study highlights a particular software platform, describes the decision to adopt the software, details the implementation process, and explores strengths and weaknesses of each tool. DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// DO - 10.1080/00987913.2011.10765404 VL - 37 IS - 4 SP - 294-304 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Beyond Library Software: New Tools for Electronic Resources Management AU - Wilson, Kristen T2 - Serials Review AB - The boom in easy-to-use Web-based software has inspired some libraries to adapt tools that were not designed for the library market to meet their needs in new and creative ways. This column will explore three examples of academic libraries that have used mainstream technologies to create new approaches to managing electronic resources acquisitions, workflows, and metadata. Each case study highlights a particular software platform, describes the decision to adopt the software, details the implementation process, and explores strengths and weaknesses of each tool. DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// DO - 10.1016/j.serrev.2011.09.010 VL - 37 IS - 4 SP - 294-304 UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-82955162513&partnerID=MN8TOARS ER - TY - JOUR TI - Reconsidering Facebook AU - Davis, Hilary DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// UR - http://www.inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2011/reconsidering-facebook/ ER - TY - CONF TI - Put it Simply: Tools and Tips for Communicating Library Collections Data AU - Davis, Hilary AB - In communicating library collections data to our stakeholders and administrators, our main goals are to be impactful, to make our points clearly and concisely, and to provide data that can move decisions forward. Accomplishing these goals requires time and creativity to experiment and refine—assets that can be hard to come by for busy librarians. This presentation will provide an introduction to a few easy-to-use data visualization tools and how they can be applied for communicating data about library collections. The main tools included in the overview will be Google Spreadsheets and Tableau Public (including the pros and cons of each) as well as guidance on how to tame Microsoft Excel’s graph design biases. We will also review basic tips to take into account when graphically communicating data on the use and value of library collections to stakeholders. Real world library data such as usage statistics and collection expenditures will be included in the demonstrations of these tools and tips. No programming skills will be needed! By the end of this session, attendees will be equipped with some practical strategies and tools that make it easier to share and make sense of library collections data. C2 - 2011/11// C3 - Charleston Conference Proceedings DA - 2011/11// DO - 10.5703/1288284314932 UR - http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/charleston/2011/Budget/9/ ER - TY - CONF TI - Making Sense of Breast and Ovarian Cancer in Minority Populations: Online Information Seeking by First-Degree Relatives. AU - Gross, M. C2 - 2011/5// C3 - Medical Library Association Annual Meeting Contributed Paper DA - 2011/5// ER - TY - JOUR TI - Saving Second Life: Issues in Archiving a Complex, Multi-User Virtual World AU - McDonough, Jerome AU - Olendorf, Robert T2 - International Journal of Digital Curation AB - Virtual environments, such as Second Life, have assumed an increasingly important role in popular culture, education and research. Unfortunately, we have almost no practical experience in how to preserve these highly dynamic, interactive information resources. This article reports on research by the National Digital Information Infrastructure for Preservation Program (NDIIPP)-funded Preserving Virtual Worlds project, which examines the issues that arise when attempting to archive regions from Second Life. Intellectual property and contractual issues can raise significant impediments to the creation of an archival information package for these environments, as can the technical design of the worlds themselves. We discuss the implication of these impediments for distributed models of preservation, such as NDIIPP. DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// DO - 10.2218/ijdc.v6i2.192 VL - 6 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Readings on "The Future of Librarianship: IT and DH PhDs" AU - Vandegrift, Micah T2 - THATCamp CHNM 2011 DA - 2011/5// PY - 2011/5// UR - http://chnm2011.thatcamp.org/05/19/futurelibrarianship/ ER - TY - RPRT TI - Faculty Senate Library Committee-Task Force on Scholarly Communications: Final Report AU - Vandegrift, Micah DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// UR - http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/library_faculty_publications/2/ ER - TY - CONF TI - Routing Rules for Selective Document Delivery AU - Thompson, Sydney C2 - 2011/3// CY - Virginia Beach, VA DA - 2011/3// ER - TY - SOUND TI - Delivery Services to the Global Network University AU - Thompson, Sydney DA - 2011/6// PY - 2011/6// ER - TY - JOUR TI - Together under one roof: Combining collection and item level description through multiple metadata schemas AU - Sheffield, Carolyn AU - Nakasone, Sonoe T2 - Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology AB - The Smithsonian's Field Book Project presents a “fusion” of metadata standards to meet the access needs of a diverse user base and to set the framework for establishing best practices for managing field book collections. The key access challenges around field books stem from a lack of best practices when it comes to collection management and description. Field books are unique materials that sometimes fall under the auspices of departmental libraries or laboratories (item level description), sometimes archives (collection level description) and just as often can be found intermingled and uncataloged in museum collections and curators' offices (little to no description). These varying forms of custodianship result in collection management and descriptive practices that are not consistent across or even within institutions. The Field Book Project draws on existing standards and community input to develop a structured online resource for contributing and locating field book content. This poster provides examples of user needs related to field books; illustrates the use of different metadata schemas within the system and how they have been linked together to bridge collection and item level descriptions; and invites discussion on the potential impacts in terms of establishing best practices, improving access, and leveraging the technological capabilities of XML to expand content and features in the future. DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// DO - 10.1002/meet.2011.14504801312 VL - 48 IS - 1 SP - 1-4 ER - TY - SOUND TI - Digital Storymakers: Social Digital Archiving. AU - Zasowski, Peter AU - Nutt, Mike DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// ER - TY - SOUND TI - Community Collecting: Building a Social Archive Site AU - Nutt, Mike DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// N1 - Invited presentation RN - Invited presentation ER - TY - CONF TI - Using Data To Improve a Technology Lending Service AU - Chapman, J. AU - Woodbury, D. C2 - 2011/5// CY - New Orleans, LA DA - 2011/5// ER - TY - SOUND TI - Lending iPads: 10 Months In AU - Rogers, A. AU - Woodbury, D. DA - 2011/2// PY - 2011/2// ER - TY - SOUND TI - Designing a Specialty Commons AU - Woodbury, D. DA - 2011/5// PY - 2011/5// N1 - Invited panelist RN - Invited panelist ER - TY - JOUR TI - Preservice Legal Education for Academic Librarians within ALA-Accredited Degree Programs AU - Cross, W. AU - Edwards, P. T2 - portal: Libraries and the Academy DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 11 IS - 1 SP - 533–550 ER - TY - RPRT TI - Mathematics Journals: What is valued and what may change DA - 2011/3/29/ PY - 2011/3/29/ RP - Released March 29, 2011, SP - – 16, UR - http://www.msri.org/attachments/workshops/587/MSRIfinalreport.pdf N1 - Released March 29, 2011, RN - Released March 29, 2011, ER - TY - JOUR TI - Lessons in public touchscreen development AU - Orphanides, Andreas K T2 - Code4lib Journal DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 15 UR - https://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5832 ER - TY - JOUR TI - The new media environment: an introduction T2 - Choice Reviews Online AB - Acknowledgements. 1. Introduction: Modern Life Is a Media Experience. A Tale of Two Hurricanes. What Is a Media Environment? The Importance of Changing Media Environments. The electronic media. Media in the Twenty-First Century: What Has Changed? The age of the Internet. Conclusion 2. Ownership and Control in the New Media Environment. Patterns of Media Ownership and Control. Ownership and Control of the Media: Assumptions andRealities. Alternative models of media ownership. Who owns the media? Ownership and control in a global context. Does It Matter? The Consequences of Concentration and Conglomeration. The argument for market-driven media. The argument against market-driven media. What this means today. Conclusion. 3. Media and Democracy. Introduction. Changing Media Environments and Changing DemocraticPolitics. Why nervous liberals are still with us: The enduring problem ofpropaganda. John Dewey and the reconstruction of media and democraticpolitics. Empirical research: How do media actually affect citizens? Television and the Age of Broadcast News . Politics in the New Media Environment. Conclusion. 4. Studying Popular Culture: Texts, Reception, and CulturalStudies. Introduction: Hollywood and Representations of Reality. Media Studies and the Study of Reception: A Brief History of ItsMethods and Findings. Conclusion. 5. Studying Inequalities: Class, Gender, Race, and Sexuality inMedia Studies. A Critical Perspective on Inequality in Media Studies. The Frankfurt School. Cultural studies Media studies research findings on class,gender, race, and sexuality. Gender in Media Studies Research: Are Gender Roles CulturallyReproduced? Film and gender: Issues of reception and representation. Television and gender: Issues of reception andrepresentation. Media and Race. Sexuality. Conclusion. 6. Studying Media Texts and Their Reception in the New MediaEnvironment. Transformative Images in the New Media Environment. Globalization and the new shape of media identities. Media Reception Research in the New Media Environment. Global reception in the new media environment. Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Social Class Inequality in NewMedia Reception: A New Study. New Studies: Gender and Social Class Identities in the New MediaEnvironment. Politics, Media Impact and Use, and the New MediaEnvironment Old and New Media in the Individualized Media Environment: TheNew Media Environment Is Never Just New Media Bias in old media and new. Civic engagement in the new media environment. Americans and Political Discussion: How the New MediaEnvironment Is Changing the Civic Landscape. Conclusion. 7. Conclusion. We Are Living in a Mediated Age. The Complexity of Our Relationship With the Media. Human Agency in Media Decisions and Directions. In Closing: The Case of the RFID. Index. DA - 2011/5/1/ PY - 2011/5/1/ DO - 10.5860/choice.48-5404 VL - 48 IS - 09 SP - 48-5404-48-5404 ER - TY - JOUR TI - The Wireless spectrum: the politics, practices, and poetics of mobile media T2 - Choice Reviews Online AB - As evidenced by the clientele in any urban coffee shop, devices such as cell phones, BlackBerries, and Wi-Fi-enabled laptops have proliferated, particularly during the past ten years. The Wireless Spectrum explores how wireless technologies have modified both individual and public life, transforming our experiences of space, time, and place, while reshaping our day-to-day interactions. Bringing together visual artists, designers, activists, and communication and humanities scholars to reflect on mobile media, this collection engages a new terrain of interdisciplinary research. Interrogating these new forms of community and communication practices as they are emerging in Canada and around the world, the essays in The Wireless Spectrum ask how these new technologies transfigure subjectivities, creating new forms of social behaviour and provocative aesthetic practices. DA - 2011/1/1/ PY - 2011/1/1/ DO - 10.5860/choice.48-2761 VL - 48 IS - 05 SP - 48-2761-48-2761 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Convergence Culture AU - Orcutt, Darby T2 - Choice DA - 2011/6// PY - 2011/6// VL - 48 IS - 10 SP - 1846 ER - TY - JOUR TI - New tricks for old data sources: Mashups, visualizations, & questions your ILS has been afraid to answer AU - Orcutt, Darby AU - Norberg, B. AU - Vickery, John T2 - Something's Gotta Give: Proceedings of the Charleston Conference 2011 DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// DO - 10.5703/1288284314899 VL - SP - 199–213 ER - TY - CONF TI - Mainstreaming media: Innovating media collections at the NCSU Libraries AU - Orcutt, D. AB - The Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) predicates its "Guidelines for Media Resources in Academic Libraries" on assumptions that general principles of collection management and library service apply equally to media formats (http://ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/standards/mediaresources.cfm). Yet, implicit in ACRL's Guidelines is the additional (and perhaps contradictory) assumption that, to be effective, academic library media collections and services must form a separately administered "program," headed by a single librarian. At The North Carolina State University (NCSU) Libraries, we have instead chosen to administer our many media collections and services using the same structures we use for those of other formats, interweaving media into the very fabric of the NCSU Libraries' collections and services. While they sometimes pose particular challenges, media are increasingly present and significant in our collections, and "mainstreaming" them – dealing with them as a holistic part of our already diverse portfolio of formats – has meant tremendous benefits for budget, workflow and user experience. As the unofficial "coordinator" of media collections for a decade (one of many hats!), I offer a quick review of our many collections and service points, including: a "media center" that is now integrated into the library's main circulation desk, an open-shelf circulating DVD collection, video game collections, and a vast and growing collection of online films (both vendor- and library-hosted, and many of which are not owned anywhere else in streaming format). Our media collections and approaches to providing them are equally forward-thinking. C2 - 2011/// C3 - DA - 2011/// DO - 10.5703/1288284314945 SP - 450-452 ER - TY - JOUR TI - The North Carolina State University Libraries search experience: Usability testing tabbed search interfaces for academic libraries AU - Teague-Rector, S. AU - Ballard, A. AU - Pauley, S. T2 - Journal of web librarianship (Online) DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 5 IS - 2 SP - 80-95 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Academic libraries in for-profit schools of higher education AU - Davis, J. Y. AU - Adams, M. AU - Hardesty, L. T2 - College & Research Libraries DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 72 IS - 6 SP - 568-582 ER - TY - JOUR TI - The dog trainer's complete guide to a happy, well-behaved pet AU - Alpi, K. T2 - Library Journal DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 136 IS - 17 SP - 97-97 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Review and Hypothesis: Does Graves' Disease Develop in Non-Human Great Apes? AU - McLachlan, Sandra M. AU - Alpi, Kristine AU - Rapoport, Basil T2 - THYROID AB - Background: Graves' disease, caused by stimulatory thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) autoantibodies, has not been observed in animals. In contrast, Hashimoto's thyroiditis develops in chickens, rats, mice, dogs, and marmosets. Attempts to induce an immune response in mice to the luteinizing-hormone receptor suggested that autoantigen glycosylation was one parameter involved in breaking self-tolerance. Over evolution, TSHR glycosylation increased from three asparagine-linked-glycans (N-glycans) in fish to six N-glycans in humans and great apes. All other placental mammals lack one N-glycan in the shed TSHR A-subunit, the primary Graves' disease autoantigen. We hypothesized that (a) lesser TSHR A-subunit glycosylation reduces immunogenicity, accounting for the absence of Graves' disease in most placental mammals; (b) due to human-like A-subunit glycosylation, Graves' disease might arise in great apes. Here, we review and analyze the literature on this subject and report the results of a survey of veterinarians at primate centers and zoos in North America. Summary: Previous experimental data from induced TSHR antibodies in mice support a role for A-subunit glycosylation in breaking self-tolerance. An extensive search of the great-ape literature revealed five reports of noncongenital thyroid dysfunction, four with hypothyroidism and one with hyperthyroidism. The latter was a gorilla who was treated with anti-thyroid drugs but is now deceased. Neither serum nor thyroid tissue from this gorilla were available for analysis. The survey of veterinarians revealed that none of the 979 chimpanzees in primate research centers had a diagnosis of noncongenital thyroid dysfunction and among ∼1100 great apes (gorillas, orangutans, and chimpanzees) in U.S. zoos, only three were hypothyroid, and none were hyperthyroid. Conclusions: Graves' disease appears to be either very rare or does not occur in great apes based on the literature and a survey of veterinarians. Although the available data do not advance our hypothesis, there is a paucity of information regarding thyroid function tests and thyroid autoantibodies in the great apes In addition, these primates may be protected against TSHR autoimmunity by the absence of genetic polymorphisms and putative environmental triggers. Finally, larger numbers of great apes need to be followed, and tests of thyroid function and thyroid autoantibodies be performed, to confirm that spontaneous Graves' disease is restricted to humans. DA - 2011/12// PY - 2011/12// DO - 10.1089/thy.2011.0209 VL - 21 IS - 12 SP - 1359-1366 SN - 1557-9077 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Digital library futures: User perspectives and institutional strategies AU - Norberg, B. T2 - Library Resources & Technical Services DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 55 IS - 4 SP - 237-238 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Dog sense: How the new science of dog behavior can make you a better friend to your pet AU - Alpi, K. T2 - Library Journal DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 136 IS - 8 SP - 96-96 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Connecting Knowledge Resources to the Veterinary Electronic Health Record: Opportunities for Learning at Point of Care AU - Alpi, Kristine M. AU - Burnett, Heidi A. AU - Bryant, Sheila J. AU - Anderson, Katherine M. T2 - JOURNAL OF VETERINARY MEDICAL EDUCATION AB - Electronic health records (EHRs) provide clinical learning opportunities through quick and contextual linkage of patient signalment, symptom, and diagnosis data with knowledge resources covering tests, drugs, conditions, procedures, and client instructions. This paper introduces the EHR standards for linkage and the partners—practitioners, content publishers, and software developers—necessary to leverage this possibility in veterinary medicine. The efforts of the American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) Electronic Health Records Task Force to partner with veterinary practice management systems to improve the use of controlled vocabulary is a first step in the development of standards for sharing knowledge at the point of care. The Veterinary Medical Libraries Section (VMLS) of the Medical Library Association's Task Force on Connecting the Veterinary Health Record to Information Resources compiled a list of resources of potential use at point of care. Resource details were drawn from product Web sites and organized by a metric used to evaluate medical point-of-care resources. Additional information was gathered from questions sent by e-mail and follow-up interviews with two practitioners, a hospital network, two software developers, and three publishers. Veterinarians with electronic records use a variety of information resources that are not linked to their software. Systems lack the infrastructure to use the Infobutton standard that has been gaining popularity in human EHRs. While some veterinary knowledge resources are digital, publisher sites and responses do not indicate a Web-based linkage of veterinary resources with EHRs. In order to facilitate lifelong learning and evidence-based practice, veterinarians and educators of future practitioners must demonstrate to veterinary practice software developers and publishers a clinically-based need to connect knowledge resources to veterinary EHRs. DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// DO - 10.3138/jvme.38.2.110 VL - 38 IS - 2 SP - 110-122 SN - 0748-321X KW - electronic health records KW - practice management systems KW - controlled vocabulary KW - veterinary informatics KW - electronic books KW - just-in-time learning KW - client education ER - TY - JOUR TI - Serials Literature Review 2008-9 Embracing a Culture of Openness AU - Collins, Maria T2 - LIBRARY RESOURCES & TECHNICAL SERVICES AB - The serials literature from 2008 and 2009 reveals the new identity of the serials professional—one who embraces openness. Many forces have pushed the serials profession into a state of flux; among these are the recent economic recession, the evolution of scholarly publishing, and the concept of open systems and data. Chaotic change for serialists has evolved into opportunities to revise collection strategies, approach Big Deal purchasing in new ways, devise creative user-access solutions, and become stakeholders in the debates over scholarly communication. The literature also reveals serials professionals developing a Web 2.0 sensibility. These themes are presented in the review through a discussion of six major topics: sustainability of serials pricing, the future of the Big Deal, management of electronic resources, access, blurring and decline of formats, and Web 2.0. DA - 2011/4// PY - 2011/4// DO - 10.5860/lrts.55n2.60 VL - 55 IS - 2 SP - 60-80 SN - 2159-9610 ER - TY - PCOMM TI - Previous research shows Medical Library Association award winner publication rate AU - Alpi, Kristine M. AU - Fenske, Ruth AB - In the July 2010 issue of the Journal of the Medical Library Association (JMLA), Harvey and Wandersee reported they found no publication rate studies for the Medical Library Association (MLA) or other library science organizations [1]. We write to share prior research on the publication rate of award-winning MLA research presentations and posters published in April 2009 in Hypothesis, the open access journal of the MLA Research Section, which is indexed by CINAHL [2]. DA - 2011/1// PY - 2011/1// DO - 10.3163/1536-5050.99.1.002 SP - 3-3 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Open Access Literature Review 2008-9 A Serials Perspective AU - Collins, Maria T2 - LIBRARY RESOURCES & TECHNICAL SERVICES AB - Stemming from a previously published serials literature review by Library Resources and Technical Services (LRTS), this paper provides a review of a subset of the serials literature published in 2008 and 2009 focusing on open access (OA). The broader scope of the serials literature sets the stage for a culture of openness receptive to the OA movement. Catalysts to this movement, such as the National Institutes of Health (NIH) mandate, university OA policies, and increased emphasis on self-archiving in institutional repositories (IRs), are of interest to serials and electronic resource professionals who steward academic research collections. This interest is exemplified by the significant number of open-access-related articles intertwined throughout the serials literature of 2008 and 2009. Topics covered in this article include the NIH mandate, universities’ responses to the NIH mandate, overviews of OA, the IR as a model of OA, strategies for supporting IRs, and evaluation of the effects of OA on scholarly communication. DA - 2011/7// PY - 2011/7// DO - 10.5860/lrts.55n3.138 VL - 55 IS - 3 SP - 138-147 SN - 2159-9610 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Movers & shakers 2011 AU - Fialkoff, F. AU - Newman, B. AU - Hammond, J. AU - Sanchez, J. AU - Renard, R. AU - Jones, G. A. AU - Haefele, C. AU - King, E. AU - Velasquez, J. AU - Sparzo, J. AU - Duncan, J. AU - Webb, P. AU - Sisson, B. AU - Deschamps, R. AU - Steiner, S. AU - Leeder, K. AU - Noggle, D. AU - Santangelo, M. AU - Trainor, C. T2 - Library Journal DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 136 IS - 5 SP - 23- ER - TY - JOUR TI - Bulding a better ERMS AU - Collins, M. AU - Grogg, J. E. T2 - Library Journal DA - 2011/// PY - 2011/// VL - 136 IS - 4 SP - 22- ER - TY - JOUR TI - Assessing the Cost and Value of Bibliographic Control AU - Stalberg, Erin AU - Cronin, Christopher T2 - LIBRARY RESOURCES & TECHNICAL SERVICES AB - In June 2009, the Association for Library Collections and Technical Services Heads of Technical Services in Large Research Libraries Interest Group established the Task Force on Cost/Value Assessment of Bibliographic Control to address recommendation 5.1.1.1 of On the Record: Report of the Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control, which focused on developing measures for costs, benefits, and value of bibliographic control. This paper outlines results of that task force's efforts to develop and articulate metrics for evaluating the cost and value of cataloging activities specifically, and offers some next steps that the community could take to further the profession's collective understanding of the costs and values associated with bibliographic control. DA - 2011/7// PY - 2011/7// DO - 10.5860/lrts.55n3.124 VL - 55 IS - 3 SP - 124-137 SN - 2159-9610 ER - TY - JOUR TI - Incorporating Open Access into Libraries AU - Cryer, Emma AU - Collins, Maria T2 - SERIALS REVIEW AB - The open access movement is poised to radically change scholarly communications. Librarians can play a dynamic role in the development of the open access landscape by familiarizing themselves with government funding initiatives, events promoting Open Access Week, open access publishing models, institutional open access funds and policies, and institutional repositories. Small changes in awareness and outreach can have far reaching implications for the future health of journal subscription budgets, archive access rights, and research funding opportunities. This article provides examples of how librarians can incorporate open access concepts into pre-existing librarian roles. DA - 2011/6// PY - 2011/6// DO - 10.1016/j.serrev.2011.03.002 VL - 37 IS - 2 SP - 103-107 SN - 1879-095X ER -