Measuring researchers' use of scholarly information through social bookmarking data: A case study of BibSonomy

被引:24
作者
Borrego, Angel [1 ]
Fry, Jenny [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Barcelona, Fac Bibliotecon & Documentacio, Barcelona 08014, Spain
[2] Univ Loughborough, Loughborough, Leics, England
关键词
BibSonomy; information behaviour; scholarly communication; scientific information; social bookmarking; LOG ANALYSIS; SEEKING;
D O I
10.1177/0165551512438353
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
This paper explores the possibility of using data from social bookmarking services to measure the use of information by academic researchers. Social bookmarking data can be used to augment participative methods (e.g. interviews and surveys) and other, non-participative methods (e.g. citation analysis and transaction logs) to measure the use of scholarly information. We use BibSonomy, a free resource-sharing system, as a case study. Results show that published journal articles are by far the most popular type of source bookmarked, followed by conference proceedings and books. Commercial journal publisher platforms are the most popular type of information resource bookmarked, followed by websites, records in databases and digital repositories. Usage of open access information resources is low in comparison with toll access journals. In the case of open access repositories, there is a marked preference for the use of subject-based repositories over institutional repositories. The results are consistent with those observed in related studies based on surveys and citation analysis, confirming the possible use of bookmarking data in studies of information behaviour in academic settings. The main advantages of using social bookmarking data are that is an unobtrusive approach, it captures the reading habits of researchers who are not necessarily authors, and data are readily available. The main limitation is that a significant amount of human resources is required in cleaning and standardizing the data.
引用
收藏
页码:297 / 308
页数:12
相关论文
共 23 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], PLOS ONE
[2]   Towards an understanding of the use of an institutional repository with integrated social networking tools: A case study of PocketKnowledge [J].
Asunka, Stephen ;
Chae, Hui Soo ;
Natriello, Gary .
LIBRARY & INFORMATION SCIENCE RESEARCH, 2011, 33 (01) :80-88
[3]  
Benardou A., 2010, Int. J. Digit. Curation, V1, P18, DOI DOI 10.2218/IJDC.V5I1.141
[4]   The social bookmark and publication management system bibsonomy A platform for evaluating and demonstrating Web 2.0 research [J].
Benz, Dominik ;
Hotho, Andreas ;
Jaeschke, Robert ;
Krause, Beate ;
Mitzlaff, Folke ;
Schmitz, Christoph ;
Stumme, Gerd .
VLDB JOURNAL, 2010, 19 (06) :849-875
[5]  
CIBER, 2011, J US FACT EXPL DAT A
[6]   Information-seeking behavior of chemists: A transaction log analysis of referral URLs [J].
Davis, PM .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2004, 55 (04) :326-332
[7]  
Fry Jenny, 2011, PEER BEHAV RES AUTHO
[8]   Applying social bookmarking data to evaluate journal usage [J].
Haustein, Stefanie ;
Siebenlist, Tobias .
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS, 2011, 5 (03) :446-457
[9]  
Houghton J., 2009, Economics implications of alternative scholarly publishing models: Exploring the costs and benefit: A report to the Joint Information Systems Committee
[10]   Obtaining subject data from log files using deep log analysis: case study OhioLINK [J].
Huntington, Paul ;
Nicholas, David ;
Jamali, Hamid R. ;
Watkinson, Anthony .
JOURNAL OF INFORMATION SCIENCE, 2006, 32 (04) :299-308