Posts Tagged ‘SCONUL’

Find it @ Lincoln: looking forward to a new EBSCO discovery service in the Library

Posted on May 11th, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp

Following long, looong discussions, we have finally chosen a next-generation library discovery service for the University of Lincoln Library.

After reviewing the four major commercially-available discovery products (from EBSCO, Ex Libris, OCLC and Serials Solutions), and after making several reference visits to see the various products in action in UK university libraries…

(…drum roll…)

EDS logo…we decided upon, and have now bought access to, the EBSCO Discovery Service. Over the summer we’ll be configuring and testing the new system, and in September 2012 it’ll be launched as the new front-end search and discovery platform for the Library at the University of Lincoln.

This new service will provide a single point of search and discovery across nearly all of the Library’s collections, including our ‘traditional’ library catalogue, e-books & e-journals, the Lincoln Repository, archives & special collections, reading lists, and a wide range of specialist and general electronic databases. (N.B. it might not search all of these collections right from day one!) We hope that—along with some of the other new and improved services that are being introduced as part of the Library’s review of ICT systems—it will make it significantly easier and more straightforward to find and use the University’s library resources.

According to the SCONUL HE Library Technology wiki, the EBSCO Discovery Service is also used by:

We decided that EBSCO Discovery Service provided us with a familiar (yet flexible, powerful and ‘serious’) research interface, as well as a good fit with our existing and planned electronic database collections. We were also influenced by EBSCO’s plans to develop and integrate the A-to-Z e-journals knowledgebase and link resolver into the discovery environment.

We’ll be spending the next month or so configuring the system to search all of our collections, designing/branding the interface, training library staff, and working with other University departments on getting the most out of the new tools. We anticipate that early access to the system will be possible from the end of July onwards (though this is subject to change), with a ‘soft’ launch in time for student induction in September, and a formal launch/discovery party with free coffee for all, later in the year.

We have also decided that the service will be branded under the title “Find it @ Lincoln“. (Eagle-eyed readers will spot that this is the name we’ve been using for a while for our EBSCO LinkSource OpenURL link resolver.) Information about the new Find it @ Lincoln service, and about the project to develop and launch it at the University of Lincoln, will soon be available at: http://findit.library.lincoln.ac.uk/

I’d like to thank the staff of all four discovery software companies, for all the presentations, demonstrations & visits, for the information they made available to the University of Lincoln over the past few months about their products, and for the demonstrations and supporting materials they provided which were of such use in informing this first selection phase of our discovery project.

Many thanks also, to the several universities who received staff from Library for discovery-themed visits, and who patiently described their use of their own search tools and answered our many questions profound and otherwise.

Now watch this space :-)

Clunky business: making an institutional case for library discovery

Posted on March 23rd, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp

I’m in London today for a workshop bringing together people from the JISC/SCONUL Discovery initiative and the JISC/SCONUL shared services programme, on this topic:

‘Better Resource Discovery – Is there a business case?’

An exploratory workshop to identify business cases for new modes of resource discovery based on real service drivers

David Kay from SERO asked me to talk for 10 minutes on Lincoln’s approach to open bibliographic data and open discovery; what our ‘business case’ might be; what we’re doing to put it into practice; and how the institution might become aware of and judge our success.

‘Business case’ isn’t a phase that falls from my lips naturally… however: I am uneasy about our getting too comfortable under a protective ‘shield’ of (mainly JISC-funded) project-based development: it may protect us from a large amount of flak, and provides us with an enviable amount of freedom, but by definition it’s only there temporarily.

We need to build ourselves some new shields – perhaps ones less impregnable, but ones that are more persistent and less easily dissipated once projects ends. And to do that, we need to create more useful, disruptive institutional services like this one. Our business case is ‘being a university‘; how do we create convincing applications from open tools and data that further that business?

My slides are on Google Docs.

A pain in the midlands: JISC/SCONUL future of library systems workshop

Posted on January 31st, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp

London Midland 153, very smart

In January I made the long train journey over to the University of Warwick, to attend and speak at the first day of a two-day JISC/SCONUL workshop exploring the future of library systems, under the banner of the “Squeezed Middle” – that is the LMS & other library systems, the bits of library infrastructure often overshadowed/squeezed out of the limelight by the twin heavyweights of Discovery & ERM.

Carrying on from the work done as part of the JISC/SCONUL Shared Services ‘LMS horizon scan‘ in 2008, this workshop points the way toward a new JISC call for ‘path finder’ projects addressing the future of LMSes, under the Information and Library Infrastructure: Emerging Opportunities programme: “you can’t do nothing any more”.

Thank you to Ben Showers of JISC for the invitation to speak at this event!

First, we were treated to a bit of virtual Lorcan Dempsey. In a video talk, he spoke about the trends facing academic libraries (a background of budget constraints, networked decentralisation of content vs. our tradition of vertically integrating services into the one building), and how libraries are re-examining our priorities under pressure, building more flexible spaces, making our expertise more visible, engaging with the network, etc.. Lorcan’s video will be made available via OCLC’s YouTube channel shortly.

Then to the bit of the workshop in which I was involved: a series of ‘provocations‘: radical, challenging visions for the future of library systems (by, say, the year 2020), designed to get the attendees thinking. David Kay of SERO, Ken Chad, and Paul Walk provided the other three visions.

I found it a struggle knowing quite where to ‘pitch’ my vision: it can be difficult to be provocative/radical enough without sounding like you don’t know what talking about. For possibly only the second time in my career I was careful to prefix my statement with “…this isn’t my employer’s opinion!”. I took quite a broad, scattergun approach (figuring if I was broad enough, I’d be bound to hit something…); for that reason I was pleased that some of my themes were echoed in Paul Walk’s Marshall Smith-esque sf/dystopian view of libraries in 2020, which he delivered through the “medium of fiction and the genre of bonkers”.

You can read my own provocation statement, “A vision for library systems in 2020“, on Google Docs.

Links to other blog posts about this event are here, here and here.


USTLG meeting on research data management

Posted on November 29th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

Clare CollegeYesterday I was at Clare College, University of Cambridge for a meeting organised by USTLG, the University Science & Technology Librarians Group. The group—open to any librarians involved with engineering, science or technology in UK universities—has meetings once or twice a year. The theme of yesterday’s meeting (free to attend, thanks to sponsorship from the IEEE) was data management, with an implied focus on research data.

The meeting consisted of a series of presentations (plus a fantastic lunchtime diversion, below) with plenty of time for networking – there were about 40 people there, all with an interest in research data management – though interestingly, a show of hands suggested very few people were actively engaged in looking after their own institution’s researchers’ data.

As usual, this blog post has been partially reconstructed from the Twitter stream (hashtag #ustlg).

First up, Laura Molloy, substituting for Joy Davidson of the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), on a project called the Data Management Skills Support Initiative (DaMSSI), looking at the [shades of information literacy] skills needed by different people involved in the research data curation process. “DaMSSI aims to facilitate the use of tools like Vitae’s Researcher Development Framework (RDF) and the Seven Pillars of Information Literacy model” developed by SCONUL. Key question: how do you assess the effectiveness of research data management training?

Useful links:

Second, Yvonne Nobis of Cambridge’s Central Science Library talked about supporting researchers at Cambridge: data sharing and the role of librarians; including her project—funded through CUL’s Arcadia library staff research scheme—looking at the issues involved in curating not research data per se, but the software code and techniques used to analyse that source data. Key points: [1] there are disincentives (time, and lack of recognition within ones own field) to researchers’ spending time on code/software for research data manipulation. [2] But without that investment in code, the transparency–openness–replicability of computational-data science is at risk. [3] ”Librarians are missing a trick” by not engaging in research data software curation issues. Yvonne also talked about the work of the eScience Centre.

Links and articles…

Before lunch we also got a chance to inspect the USTLG’s brand new website (and smashing new logo), at ustlg.org

Then the highlight of the day… we were invited in groups over to go over to the adjacent University Library, where we were treated to a display and commentary on some of Cambridge University’s rare science manuscripts and early printed books. All laid out in a reading room were Isaac Newton’s notebooks containing his notes on the method of fluxions (i.e. early calculus), Darwin’s field notes from the Beagle, Ernest Rutherford’s lab diaries (still slightly radioactive! – “…not ever so, but Health & Safety made us do a risk-assessment…”), plus Prof. Stephen Hawking’s typed and ring-bound first draft of A brief history of time, along with several early printed herbals and a book containing the first known technical drawings (of machines of warfare). Inspiring stuff, and really quite brilliant of them to lay it out for us to see!

In the afternoon—not directly connected with research data, but certainly of interest to the engineers involved in the Orbital project—we heard from Rachel Berrington of the IEEE, about the work of the organisation and some of the planned developments to the IEEE Xplore platform: new journal titles in 2012, a mobile platform, the inclusion of CrossRef data, and new interactive HTML content.

Handful of interesting links:

Finally, a useful presentation from Anna Collins, Research Data and Digital Curation Officer (good job title) for Cambridge’s DSpace repository. Anna spoke about the Incremental project, a joint exercise between Cambridge and the University of Glasgow, aimed at providing a best practice approach to supporting data management techniques amongst research communities. This is really good practical nuts & bolts stuff (e.g. when’s the right time to broach the subject of data curation with a PhD student? Too early, and they won’t care – too late, and the best you can do is help pick up the pieces!). I’ll be recommending my colleagues at Lincoln take a look at the materials on both institution’s websites. Top quote: ”be the boss of your hard drive”!

Links from Anna’s presentation:

(An aside: after the USTLG meeting had ended, I was lucky enough to get a quick tour of [about 1% of] the Cambridge University Library, along with a cup of tea in the staff room(!), thanks to a “badly-encoded” colleague. I won’t blog about it in any detail now—hopefully I should be back in Cambridge in January for another Orbital-related event—but it’s just a jaw-dropping library.)

The new USTLG website is at ustlg.org, and you can follow them on Twitter at @USTLG.

I’ve got to get to a library… fast!

Posted on October 11th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

Here’s a lovely little hack for displaying the contact details of our 5 libraries, neatly in a web page:

Map of the geo-lookup areas (approximate)

It uses Alex Bilbie‘s implementation of a geolocation/IP-lookup script to try and determine the nearest library to the person viewing the page, according to the following rules:

  1. If you’re on campus, then choose the library for that campus.
  2. If you’re within 20 miles of one of our three campus libraries (Riseholme, Hull, or Holbeach) then choose the nearest library.
  3. If you’re actually inside Chad Varah House, choose the Theology Reading Room.
  4. If none of these rules apply, choose the main GCW University Library.

We’ll be tweaking these ‘library lookup’ rules to get the best results. I’d also like to look at overriding the geo-lookup settings for logged-in users (displaying instead the library for their campus of study as derived from their profile). And what about displaying information about SCONUL Access libraries for distance learners, perhaps making use of Owen Stephens’ SCONUL libraries lookup script?

The page then uses the jQuery ‘accordion‘ widget to display the contact details for the chosen library, in a nice expandable format (i.e. you can click on the headings to display the details for a different library). It all degrades gracefully for browsers with less-than-impeccable support for JavaScript.

Neat, no? The code is on Github if you want to have a look.

Screenshot of the library contact page

Notes on: Ex Libris Primo

Posted on July 8th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

Primo is library software group Ex Libris‘s umbrella, “one-stop solution for the discovery and delivery of local and remote resources, such as books, journal articles, and digital objects.” It’s used by around 20 institutions in the UK, and ~800 worldwide.

Information about Primo is available at: http://www.exlibrisgroup.com/category/PrimoOverview

A couple of other useful links:

  • Slides – redacted for confidentiality
  • Discovery‘ on the SCONUL Higher Education Library Technology (HELibTech) wiki

The development of Primo marked a move away from the existing, Z39.50-intensive, metasearch model of unified resource discovery, to the use of a hosted, central metadata index of scholarly content (Ex Libris call this the Primo Central Index), characterised by unified discovery & delivery; faceted navigation; and usage-based recommendation.

Primo features include:

  • Import of local data data sources (catalogues; repositories) to a standardised XML format to allow cross-collection searching;
  • Ranking of printed, electronic and locally born-digital or digitised content, configurable by the subscribing library;
  • Integration with the OPAC – stronger integration for libraries that use one of Ex Libris’s own Library Management Systems; less-tight integration is possible for ‘foreign’ OPACs;
  • Integration with Ex Libris’s bX usage-based journal article recommendation service, which derives recommendations from the ‘user journey’ from article-to-article;
  • FRBRised grouping of similar titles in search results;
  • Facets derived from both the Primo Central Index and from locally-harvested data: for example, a facet could be configured to allow users to limit a search to only those items which are available in the OPAC;
  • Tools to embed the Primo search box in remote web sites (VLE, intranet, etc.);
  • An ‘open’ platform for development (including a suite of Primo APIs) – the EL Commons;
  • A mobile-friendly UI (e.g. this example from Germany).

Higher Education libraries in the UK using Primo include:

…and outside the UK:

Ex Libris are also developing Alma – which does for the ‘back end’ of library systems architecture what Primo does for the front end discovery UI – i.e. provides ‘umbrella’, unified management of print, electronic, and digitised/digital resources in the one system. In the UK, the University of York are ‘early adopters’ of Alma. Information about Alma is available at: http://www.exlibrisgroup.com/category/AlmaOverview