1st Edition

Electronic Information Systems in Sci-Tech Libraries

Edited By Cynthia Steinke Copyright 1990
    164 Pages
    by Routledge

    164 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, first published in 1990, analyses the variety of ways in which libraries extend their resources to users beyond the physical walls of their organization. Librarians discuss the concept of the library as more than just a place - since its holdings can now appear on the screen of users’ computers in the same city or in a city hundreds of miles away - but rather as a force that electronically links users directly with both local and remote sources of information. Six informative chapters examine electronic information systems and document delivery from the local collection to the workplace, between system libraries and from non-library sources. Readers can look first hand at some of the most sophisticated and widespread systems in the country, including four academic libraries that promote electronic services to remote users and two special libraries offering innovative services. The authoritative contributing authors also forecast new systems and services.

    1. Introduction Barbara A. Lockett  2. Electronic Delivery of Information Via a Campus-Wide Network Berry G. Richards and Jean M. Johnson  3. Using the Internet to Access CARL and Other Electronic Information Systems J. Natalia Stahl  4. Use of Microcomputer Workstations to Enhance Access to Library Collections William H. Mischo, David Stern and Timothy W. Cole  5. InfoTrax's Online Services Save Time: End-Users and Library Staff Irving E. Stephens  6. WE DELIVER: Libraries and Information Delivery at Texas Instruments Helen H. Manning  7. Re-Inventing the Library Tom Marsden and Roberta Maxwell Kaplan  Special Paper  8. Survey of Academic Branch Chemistry Libraries Regarding Their Key Holder Policies Susan Stewart  9. Specialized Databases in Molecular Biology and Genetics: The Nucleic Acid and Protein Sequence Databases Kathleen Kehoe

    Biography

    Cynthia A. Steinke