2013 Awards for Excellence

Library Hi Tech

ISSN: 0737-8831

Article publication date: 11 March 2014

146

Keywords

Citation

(2014), "2013 Awards for Excellence", Library Hi Tech, Vol. 32 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/LHT-03-2014-002

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited


2013 Awards for Excellence

Article Type: 2013 Awards for Excellence From: Library Hi Tech, Volume 32, Issue 1

The following article was selected for this year's Outstanding Paper Award for Library Hi Tech

‘‘Invisible institutional repositories: addressing the low indexing ratios of IRs in Google Scholar’’

Kenning Arlitsch
J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

Patrick S. O’Brien
J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

Purpose – Google Scholar has difficulty indexing the contents of institutional repositories, and the authors hypothesize the reason is that most repositories use Dublin Core, which cannot express bibliographic citation information adequately for academic papers. Google Scholar makes specific recommendations for repositories, including the use of publishing industry metadata schemas over Dublin Core. This paper aims to test a theory that transforming metadata schemas in institutional repositories will lead to increased indexing by Google Scholar.
Design/methodology/approach – The authors conducted two surveys of institutional and disciplinary repositories across the USA, using different methodologies. They also conducted three pilot projects that transformed the metadata of a subset of papers from USpace, the University of Utah’s institutional repository, and examined the results of Google Scholar’s explicit harvests.
Findings – Repositories that use GS recommended metadata schemas and express them in HTML meta tags experienced significantly higher indexing ratios. The ease with which search engine crawlers can navigate a repository also seems to affect indexing ratio. The second and third metadata transformation pilot projects at Utah were successful, ultimately achieving an indexing ratio of greater than 90 percent.
Research limitations/implications – The second survey is limited to 40 titles from each of seven repositories, for a total of 280 titles. A larger survey that covers more repositories may be useful.
Practical implications – Institutional repositories are achieving significant mass, and the rate of author citations from those repositories may affect university rankings. Lack of visibility in Google Scholar, however, will limit the ability of IRs to play a more significant role in those citation rates.
Social implications – Transforming metadata can be a difficult and tedious process. The Institute of Museum and Library Services has recently awarded a National Leadership Grant to the University of Utah to continue SEO research with its partner, OCLC Inc., and to develop a toolkit that will include automated transformation mechanisms.
Originality/value – Little or no research has been published about improving the indexing ratio of institutional repositories in Google Scholar. The authors believe that they are the first to address the possibility of transforming IR metadata to improve indexing ratios in Google Scholar.

Keywords Digital libraries, Google Scholar, Institutional repositories, Metadata, Search engine optimization, Search engines

HTTP://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/07378831211213210

This article originally appeared in Volume 30 Number 1, 2012, Library Hi Tech

The following articles were selected for this year's Highly Commended Award

‘‘Libraries, languages of description, and linked data: a Dublin Core perspective’’

Thomas Baker

This article originally appeared in Volume 30 Number 1, 2012, Library Hi Tech

‘‘Towards an understanding of the participatory library’’

Linh Cuong Nguyen, Helen Partridge, Sylvia L. Edwards

This article originally appeared in Volume 30 Number 2, 2012, Library Hi Tech

‘‘The first 30 years of the internet through the lens of an academic library: The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982-2012’’

Beth Sandore Namachchivaya

This article originally appeared in Volume 30 Number 4, 2012, Library Hi Tech

Outstanding Reviewers

Joe Matthews
Steven Sowards

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