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Early Career Researchers Demand Full-text and Rely on Google to Find Scholarly Sources

机译:早期职业研究人员要求全文并依靠Google来寻找学术资源

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A Review of: Nicholas, D., Boukacem-Zeghmouri, C., Rodríguez-Bravo, B., Xu, J., Watkinson, A., Abrizah, A., Herman, E., & ?wigoń, M. (2017). Where and how early career researchers find scholarly information. Learned Publishing, 30(1), 19-29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/leap.1087 Abstract Objective – To examine the attitudes and information behaviours of early career researchers (ECRs) when locating scholarly information. Design – Qualitative longitudinal study. Setting – Research participants from the United Kingdom, United States of America, China, France, Malaysia, Poland, and Spain. Subjects – A total 116 participants from various disciplines, aged 35 and younger, who were holding or had previously held a research position, but not in a tenured position. All participants held a doctorate or were in the process of earning one. Methods – Using structured interviews of 60-90 minutes, researchers asked 60 questions of each participant via face-to-face, Skype, or telephone interviews. The interview format and questions were formed via focus groups. Main Results – As part of a longitudinal project, results reported are limited to the first year of the study, and focused on three primary questions identified by the authors: where do ECRs find scholarly information, whether they use their smartphones to locate and read scholarly information, and what social media do they use to find scholarly information. Researchers describe how ECRs themselves interpreted the phrase scholarly information to primarily mean journal articles, while the researchers themselves had a much expanded definition to include professional and “scholarly contacts, ideas, and data” (p. 22). This research shows that Google and Google Scholar are widely used by ECRs for locating scholarly information regardless of discipline, language, or geography. Their analysis by country points to currency and the combined breadth-and-depth search experience that Google provides as prime reasons for the popularity of Google and Google Scholar. Of particular interest is the popularity and use of Google Scholar in China, where it is officially blocked but accessed by ECRs via proxy services. Other general indexes, such as Web of Science and Scopus, are also popular but not universally used by ECRs, and regional differences again point to pros and cons of these services. Some specialized services are emphasized, including regional tools such as the China National Knowledge Infrastructure, as well as certain broad disciplinary resources, such as PubMed for its coverage of sciences and biomedical information. Researchers report that ECRs participating in this study were less concerned about how they gained access to full-text scholarly information, only that they could access full-text sources. In particular, ECRs do not take much notice of libraries and their platforms, seemingly unaware of the steps libraries take to acquire and ensure access to scholarly information, while viewing physical libraries themselves primarily as study spaces for undergraduate students and not places for the ECR to visit or work. While ECRs occasionally acknowledge library portals and login interfaces, researchers found that these participants mostly ignored these, and that they found discovery services to be confusing or difficult. Concerning social media use, participants identified 11 different platforms used but only ResearchGate was mentioned and used by participants from all seven countries represented. Social media tends to be used directly for keeping track of research trends and opinions and also the work specific researchers are publishing, and indirectly when referred to sites such as ResearchGate to find full-text of a specific article. Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn are used occasionally or moderately, but not universally. Researchers highlight regional differences of social media use in China, where ECRs are more likely to connect with other researchers and receive notifications when those researchers publish. The study reports limited information ECRs’ use of smartphones for information seeking. About half of ECR participants reported use of their smartphone for discovering scholarly sources. The advantage smartphones provide includes near-ubiquitous Internet access and therefore the ability to access scholarly materials on the go, though ECRs are less likely to download or read full-text articles via their smartphones. The rate of adoption of smartphone use for scholarly materials varies by country. Conclusion – Early career researchers access scholarly information in a wide variety of ways, with Google and Google Scholar as the preferred starting location, and with social media also proving useful. Ease-of-use and full-text availability are paramount concerns; the spread of open access materials helps fuel the availability of materials, and Google makes these easy to find. Though physical libraries are perceived to be of limited use, the digital access they provide
机译:的评论:尼古拉斯·D,博卡塞姆·泽格莫里·C。,罗德里格斯·布拉沃·B。,许J.,沃特金森·A。,阿里扎赫·A。,赫尔曼·E·和弗格森·M。( 2017)。早期职业研究人员在何处以及如何找到学术信息。博学出版,30(1),19-29。 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/leap.1087摘要目的–在查找学术信息时研究早期职业研究人员(ECR)的态度和信息行为。设计–定性的纵向研究。地点-来自英国,美国,中国,法国,马来西亚,波兰和西班牙的研究参与者。受试者–共有116名来自不同学科的参与者,年龄在35岁以下,他们曾担任或曾担任研究职位,但未担任终身职位。所有参与者都拥有博士学位或正在获得博士学位。方法–使用60-90分钟的结构化访谈,研究人员通过面对面,Skype或电话访谈问了每个参与者60个问题。访谈形式和问题是通过焦点小组形成的。主要结果–作为纵向项目的一部分,报告的结果仅限于研究的第一年,并且侧重于作者确定的三个主要问题:ECR在哪里找到学术信息,是否使用智能手机定位和阅读学术论文?信息,以及他们使用什么社交媒体查找学术信息。研究人员描述了ECR本身如何解释“学术信息”一词主要是指期刊文章,而研究人员自身的定义已大大扩展,包括专业和“学者联系,思想和数据”(第22页)。这项研究表明,ECR广泛使用Google和Google Scholar来查找学术信息,而不管学科,语言或地理位置如何。他们按国家/地区进行的分析指出,货币以及Google提供的广度和深度搜索综合体验是Google和Google Scholar受欢迎的主要原因。特别令人感兴趣的是Google Scholar在中国的流行和使用,在中国它被正式禁止,但由ECR通过代理服务进行访问。其他一般索引,例如Web of Science和Scopus,也很受欢迎,但ECR并未普遍使用它们,而且地区差异再次表明了这些服务的优缺点。强调了一些专门服务,包括区域工具(例如,中国国家知识基础设施)以及某些广泛的学科资源,例如PubMed,涵盖了科学和生物医学信息。研究人员报告说,参加这项研究的ECR不太关心他们如何获得全文学术信息,只是他们可以访问全文资源。特别是,ECR对图书馆及其平台的关注不多,似乎没有意识到图书馆为获取和确保获取学术信息所采取的步骤,而将物理图书馆本身主要视为本科生的学习空间,而不是ECR的学习场所。参观或工作。尽管ECR偶尔会承认图书馆的门户网站和登录界面,但研究人员发现这些参与者大多忽略了这些内容,他们发现发现服务令人困惑或困难。关于社交媒体的使用,与会人员确定了所使用的11种不同平台,但来自所有七个国家的与会人员仅提及和使用了ResearchGate。社交媒体倾向于直接用于跟踪研究趋势和观点,以及特定研究人员正在发表的工作,而当涉及诸如ResearchGate之类的网站以查找特定文章的全文时,则可以间接使用社交媒体。 Facebook,Twitter和LinkedIn偶尔或适度使用,但不是普遍使用。研究人员强调了中国社交媒体使用的地区差异,在这些地区,ECR更有可能与其他研究人员建立联系并在其发表时收到通知。这项研究报告了有限的信息ECR使用智能手机进行信息搜索。约有一半的ECR参与者报告使用智能手机来发现学术资源。尽管ECR不太可能通过其智能手机下载或阅读全文,但智能手机提供的优势包括几乎无处不在的Internet访问,因此可以随时随地访问学术资料。智能手机用于学术材料的采用率因国家/地区而异。结论–早期职业研究人员可以通过多种方式访问​​学术信息,其中Google和Google Scholar是首选的出发地,而社交媒体也被证明是有用的。易用性和全文可用性是最重要的问题;开放获取资料的传播有助于增加资料的可用性,而Google使得这些资料易于查找。尽管人们认为物理图书馆的用途有限,但它们提供的数字访问

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