Where and how early career researchers find scholarly information - Nicholas - 2017 - Learned Publishing - Wiley Online Library

lterrat's bookmarks 2017-03-19

Summary:

"This article presents findings from the first year of the Harbingers research project started in 2015. The project is a 3-year longitudinal study of early career researchers (ECRs) to ascertain their current and changing habits with regard to information searching, use, sharing, and publication. The study recruited 116 researchers from seven countries (UK, USA, China, France, Malaysia, Poland, and Spain) and performed in-depth interviews by telephone, Skype, or face-to-face to discover behaviours and opinions. This paper reports on findings regarding discovery and access to scholarly information. Findings confirm the universal popularity of Google/Google Scholar. Library platforms and web-scale discovery services are largely unmentioned and unnoticed by this user community, although many ECRs pass through them unknowingly on the way to authenticated use of their other preferred sources, such as Web of Science. ECRs are conscious of the benefits of open access in delivering free access to papers. Social media are widely used as a source of discovering scholarly information. ResearchGate is popular and on the rise in all countries surveyed. Smartphones have become a regularly used platform on which to perform quick and occasional searches for scholarly information but are only rarely used for reading full text.

Key points

  • Google and Google Scholar are hugely popular with early career researchers (ECRs), irrespective of discipline, country, or language.
  • Library platforms are used to obtain full-text documents, because often there is no other choice, but rarely mentioned by ECRs.
  • The evergreen discovery tools, Web of Science and Scopus, are well known, popular, and trusted.
  • Social media, online community platforms, and smartphones are used for finding scholarly information in all countries.
  • Studies of the topic need to be cognizant that discovery is ubiquitous, seamless and, often, unconscious."

Link:

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/leap.1087/full

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Date tagged:

03/19/2017, 20:44

Date published:

03/19/2017, 16:44