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DISCOVERY INTERFACES: THE NEXT GENERATION
To boldly go where nOPAC has gone before…
Amy DonahueProject Leaders: Jennifer Marill & Debra Thangarajah
OUTLINE
Objective Motivations & Goals Introduction Methodology
Literature Interview Results Websites
Results Discussion & Recommendations
Features Interfaces Actions
Mock-up
This report is a requirement for the completion of the
Associate Fellowship Program at the National Library of Medicine. The
views and opinions of the report author do not
necessarily state or reflect those of the U.S.
Government, and they may not be used for
advertising or product endorsement purposes.
OBJECTIVE
To perform an environmental scan of next generation discovery interfaces.
MOTIVATIONS & GOALS
LO Strategic Plan on Collection, Preservation, and Access to Information
Update older systems Incorporate new features Provide a comprehensive interface to LO
collections
Determine what products and features are currently available
Explore NLM’s needs in order to make recommendations
AN INTRODUCTION TO CATALOG INTERFACES
Front end vs. Back end
Public interface / ”librarian” modules “We should no longer speak of the ‘ILS’ as a stand-
alone product (if, in fact it was ever a truly stand-alone product).” Mark Andrews
History & background Index-Catalogue CATLINE interfaces (CITE, Locator)
Current NLM interfaces LocatorPlus (Voyager) NLM Catalog NLM Gateway
METHODOLOGY•Literature•Interviews•Web
LITERATURE
Finding: Library database search:
Ovid – Wilson Library Literature EBSCOhost – Library, Information Science and
Technology Abstracts Article bibliographies
Collection: Endnote Web
INTERVIEWS Selection of candidates (in order of interview)
NLM: Wanda Whitney, Dee Clarkin, John Doyle, Dianne McCutcheon, Joyce Backus & Martha Fishel, Laurie Duquette
External: Kristin Antelman, Bess Sadler, Marshall Breeding
6 Interview questions, including How could a new NLM catalog/discovery interface
maximize its utility for the communities and users served by NLM? Please also describe the specific communities and users you are thinking about.
What specific features would you like to see included in a new interface?
Interview procedure
WEBSITES
Finding: Word of mouth Conferences “Berry-picking” (linking to different sites from
original) Listservs:
code4lib NGC4LIB ALCTS forum
Collection: Delicious.com
RESULTS
RESULTS
Collection of 105 resources Bibliography of 16 resources Recommended reading list of 99 items
6 internal interviews and 3 external interviews
~80 websites have been collected in Delicious
A comparison of features and which discovery platforms include them
DISCUSSION &RECOMMENDATIONS
DISCUSSION POINTS
The most pervasive theme found during the scan was the call to design library interfaces that are intuitive to users.
The National Library of Medicine should move towards improving its discovery interface in order to aid users in their quest for information and to expose NLM’s unique collections.
RECOMMENDED FEATURES
Advanced search Facets Visuals “Did you mean”/spell check Inclusion of multiple sources
Simple search/relevancy ranking
Browse Incorporation of SFX/Umlaut link resolving to
take users to outside resources
RECOMMENDED INTERFACESName Examples Provider Features
VUFind National Library of Australia: http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/
University of Michigan:http://mirlyn2-beta.lib.umich.edu/
Open source-Villanova Univ.:http://www.vufind.org/
•Advanced search – yes •Facets – yes •Visuals – yes •“Did you mean”/spell check – yes •Inclusion of multiple sources – yes •Browse – yes •Incorporation of SFX/Umlaut link resolving to take users to outside resources – yes
•Live status/availability (AJAX query of catalog)•Collections/lists•Author biographies•Various APIs to interact w/ data/search/etc.•Persistent URLs•User-generated content (tags, comments),•MARC view
Blacklight University of Virgina (beta):http://virgobeta.lib.virginia.edu/
Open Source - UVa:http://blacklightopac.org/
•Advanced search – no•Facets – yes •Visuals – yes •“Did you mean”/spell check – no•Inclusion of multiple sources – yes •Browse – facets•Incorporation of SFX/Umlaut link resolving to take users to outside resources – ?
•Custom interfaces for different populations
Primo University of Minnesota: http://www.lib.umn.edu/site/catalogs.phtml
Vanderbilt: http://discoverlibrary.vanderbilt.edu
ExLibris:http://www.exlibrisgroup.com/category/PrimoOverview
•Advanced search – yes•Facets – yes •Visuals – yes •“Did you mean”/spell check – yes•Inclusion of multiple sources – yes •Browse – no•Incorporation of SFX/Umlaut link resolving to take users to outside resources – yes
•Search through different repositories and information silos (including databases)•Item access information & get it feature•User content (tags, reviews)•Can view other editions/versions•Add to e-shelf
OTHER INTERFACE CONSIDERATIONS
Accessibility (508) Mobile interfaces Language Content visibility
APIs Brooklyn Museum An API “…provides a way for others to help you…
These APIs allow for various information aggregation and/or discovery services to be created on your behalf.” Roy Tennant, TechEssence.info
OTHER EXAMPLES
World Digital Library
National Library of Australia Prototype
Dartmouth: Summon
American University of Rome
RECOMMENDED ACTIONS
Evaluate Interface options (cost-benefit analysis) Users Chosen interface
Stay informed
Become involved
Utilize technological skills
REFERENCES Andrews M. Changing markets, changing relationships.
Library Hi Tech. 2007;25(4):562-78.
Antelman K, Lynema E, Pace AK. Toward a Twenty-First Century Library Catalog. Information Technology and Libraries. 2006;25:128-39.
Tennant R. TechEssence.info [blog on the Internet]. [Sonoma (CA)]: Roy Tennant. [2005 Nov] - . If it doesn't have an API, it's not worth having; 2006 Dec 13 [cited 2009 Jul 14]; [about 2 screens]. Available from: http://techessence.info/node/81
Picture credits: University of Australia, NguyenDai, HMD Images, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, NCSU, UNC-Chapel Hill
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many thanks to my project leaders, Jennifer and Debra, for providing excellent guidance and support through the project.
Also many thanks to those who allowed me to interview them: they provided so much more than their time. Wanda, Dee, John, Joyce, Martha, Dianne, Laurie, Kristin, Bess, & Marshall.
Joyce, again, for her role as my preceptor.
Thanks also go to Kathel Dunn, Jason Broadway, and Sally Sinn and my fellow Fellows.
Finally, I’d like to thank NLM, and especially Dr. Lindberg, Betsy Humphreys, Sheldon Kotzin, and Becky Lyon for their support of the AFP.
QUESTIONS?