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E-raamat: Discoverability in Digital Repositories: Systems, Perspectives, and User Studies [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (Head of Cataloging and Metadata Services at Utah State University.), Edited by (Professor, University of Alberta, Canada)
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While most discoverability evaluation studies in the Library and Information Science field discuss the intersection of discovery layers and library systems, this book looks specifically at digital repositories, examining discoverability from the lenses of system structure, user searches, and external discovery avenues.

Discoverability, the ease with which information can be found by a user, is the cornerstone of all successful digital information platforms. Yet, most digital repository practitioners and researchers lack a holistic and comprehensive understanding of how and where discoverability happens. This book brings together current understandings of user needs and behaviors and poses them alongside a deeper examination of digital repositories around the theme of discoverability. It examines discoverability in digital repositories from both user and system perspectives by exploring how users access content (including their search patterns and habits, need for digital content, effects of outreach, or integration with Wikipedia and other web-based tools) and how systems support or prevent discoverability through the structure or quality of metadata, system interfaces, exposure to search engines or lack thereof, and integration with library discovery tools.

Discoverability in Digital Repositories will be particularly useful to digital repository managers, practitioners, and researchers, metadata librarians, systems librarians, and user studies, usability and user experience librarians. Additionally, and perhaps most prominently, this book is composed with the emerging practitioner in mind. Instructors and students in Library and Information Science and Information Management programs will benefit from this book that specifically addresses discoverability in digital repository systems and services.



While most discoverability evaluation studies in the Library and Information Science field discuss the intersection of discovery layers and library systems, this book looks specifically at digital repositories, examining discoverability from the lenses of system structure, user searches, and external discovery avenues.

List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
xi
List of Contributors
xii
Acknowledgments or Credits List xv
Introduction 1(8)
PART 1 Digital Repository Functionality
9(106)
1 Digital Repositories and Discoverability: Definitions and Typology
11(21)
George Macgregor
2 Understanding Repository Functionality and Structure
32(17)
Sharon Farnel
3 Understanding the Role of Metadata in a Digital Repository
49(20)
Jenn Riley
4 Understanding Linked Data and the Potential for Enhanced Discoverability
69(19)
Anna Neatrour
Teresa K. Hebron
5 User Searching in Digital Repositories
88(27)
Oksana L. Zavalina
Mary Burke
PART 2 Case Studies in Visibility and Discoverability Outside the Digital Repository
115(61)
6 Discoverability Within the Library: Integrated Systems and Discovery Layers
117(20)
Jolinda Thompson
Sara Hoover
7 Discoverability Beyond the Library: Wikipedia
137(20)
Elizabeth Joan Kelly
8 Discoverability and Search Engine Visibility of Repository Platforms
157(19)
Danping Dong
Chee Hsien Aaron Tay
Conclusion 176(7)
Index 183
Liz Woolcott is the Head of Cataloging and Metadata Services at Utah State University Libraries in Logan, Utah, USA, and the co-founder of the Library Workflow Exchange.

Ali Shiri is a Professor in the School of Library and Information Studies at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He teaches courses in the areas of digital libraries and information organization and retrieval, and conducts research on digital libraries and repositories, search user interfaces, user interaction with digital information, learning and data analytics, and more recently Artificial intelligence and Ethics.