The thoughts of a web 2.0 research fellow on all things in the technological sphere that capture his interest.

Thursday 5 February 2009

An Unimpressive EThOS from the British Library

One of the hundreds of posts in my feed-reader this morning was about the British Library electronic theses service (via SCIT blog). As my own thesis should be included I decided to indulge in a bit of vanity searching. Result: EThOS has a long way to go.

I would expect my thesis to turn up for the term 'webometrics', in fact it is about the only term for which someone might actually want to read it. Unfortunately the only webometric thesis belongs to Xuemei Li:

My thesis does however turn up for the wholly inappropriate 'bibliometrics':

Seemingly the reason for my appearance under 'bibliometrics' and not 'webometrics' is that 'bibliometrics' appears in my abstract whereas 'webometrics' does not. Whilst this may seem reasonable at first, theorectically the University of Wolverhampton are taking part in the project and their record includes a number of keywords carefully selected me, including 'webometrics'. The British Library also fails to provide a link to my thesis, despite it being scattered over the web like confetti: "Not yet available for download".

Young academics brought up on Google Scholar, with full text searching and links to the numerous copies on the web, are unlikely to see the value in EThOS and its traditional OPAC style. Whilst I'd like to see an electronic thesis online service that seperates the wheat from the chaff, with full text searching and links to the documents, and believe that librarians could aid in retrieval with classification of such documents, this is not what EThOS is currently offering. It's still in Beta, and likely to improve, but it has a frighteningly long way to go and you do wonder whether they should have buddied up with one of the big search engines to produce a more user friendly version.

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posted by David at

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi David

Yes I agree that it does have a long way to go and this launch is after many teething problems so I hope we see improvements. It’s an interesting point you make about freely available theses linked elsewhere on the web. Have you thought about contacting the EThOS project team and giving them some feedback? Contact email is info@ethos.ac.uk

Best wishes
Helen Curtis

5 February 2009 at 17:45

 
Blogger Owen said...

I'm involved in the project to get EThOS up and running, and feedback is really very welcome.

One of the things that EThOS will do is integrate with local systems, like the one at Wolverhampton. At the moment only two systems (Imperial College and Cranfield University) are integrated into EThOS - but all universities supplying theses to EThOS have supplied appropriate details of their local systems (where they exist), and the team at the British Library will be working on integrating these. Of course, this will immensely improve the ability of the system to deliver digital theses where they are already available.

Thanks again for the feedback

10 February 2009 at 16:39

 

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