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Lend me some sugar: Borrowing rates of neighbouring books as evidence for browsing

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-13, 03:43 authored by Dana McKay, Wally Smith, Chanton Chang
There is more to choosing a book than simply keyword searching. Browsing is a fundamental part of the information seeking process, and one that information seekers profess to value, though it has attracted little study. This dearth of research is undoubtedly in part because browsing is nebulous and difficult to quantify. In this paper we use a large circulation dataset from an academic library consortium to examine whether books in the library stacks are loaned in clusters, with a view firstly to confirming the existence of book browsing that has been reported anecdotally, and secondly to quantifying its impact on loan patterns.

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Journal title

Digital Libraries 2014 (DL2014), the conjoined conference for both the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries and the Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries Conference series, City Universtiy London, United Kingdom, 08-12 September 2014

Conference name

Digital Libraries 2014 DL2014, the conjoined conference for both the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries and the Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries Conference series, City Universtiy London, United Kingdom, 08-12 September 2014

Publisher

City University London

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2014 The authors.

Language

eng

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