Digital Library Use: Social Practice in Design and Evaluation

Couverture
Ann P. Bishop, Nancy A. Van House, Barbara Pfeil Buttenfield
MIT Press, 2003 - 341 pages

The contributors to this volume view digital libraries (DLs) from a social as well as technological perspective. They see DLs as sociotechnical systems, networks of technology, information artifacts, and people and practices interacting with the larger world of work and society. As Bruce Schatz observes in his foreword, for a digital library to be useful, the users, the documents, and the information system must be in harmony.The contributors begin by asking how we evaluate DLs -- how we can understand them in order to build better DLs -- but they move beyond these basic concerns to explore how DLs make a difference in people's lives and their social worlds, and what studying DLs might tell us about information, knowledge, and social and cognitive processes. The chapters, using both empirical and analytical methods, examine the social impact of DLs and also the web of social and material relations in which DLs are embedded; these far-ranging social worlds include such disparate groups as community activists, environmental researchers, middle-school children, and computer system designers.Topics considered include documents and society; the real boundaries of a "library without walls"; the ecologies of digital libraries; usability and evaluation; information and institutional change; transparency as a product of the convergence of social practices and information artifacts; and collaborative knowledge construction in digital libraries.

 

Table des matières

Introduction Digital Libraries as Sociotechnical Systems
1
Documents and Libraries A Sociotechnical Perspective
25
Finding the Boundaries of the Library without Walls
43
An Ecological Perspective on Digital Libraries
65
Designing Digital Libraries for Usability
85
The People in Digital Libraries Multifaceted Approaches to Assessing Needs and Impact
119
Participatory Action Research and Digital Libraries Refraining Evaluation
161
Colliding with the Real World Heresies and Unexplored Questions about Audience Economics
191
Information and Institutional Change The Case of Digital Libraries
219
Transparency beyond the Individual Level of Scale Convergence between Information Artifacts and Communities of Practice
241
Digital Libraries and Collaborative Knowledge Construction
271
The Flora of North America Project Making the Case Study for Social Realist Theory
297
List of Contributors
329
Index
335
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (2003)

Ann Peterson Bishop is Associate Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Barbara P. Buttenfield is Professor, Department of Geography, University of Colorado, Boulder.

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