Blecic D D
University of Illinois at Chicago 60680, USA.
Bull Med Libr Assoc. 1999 Jan;87(1):20-5.
Rapid journal price increases have made essential that libraries have reliable and efficient measures of the importance of individual journals to local clientele. Three key measures are in-house use, circulation, and citation by faculty. This paper examines the correlations between these three measures at an academic health sciences library. Data were gathered from 1992 to 1994 using each of the three methods. Each set of data was compared with the other two, and for each pair of data sets both Spearman Rank Order and Pearson Product-Moment correlation coefficients were calculated to examine the degree of correlation between the two sets. All of the correlation coefficients were positive and statistically significant (P < 0.0001). This information suggests that if gathering many types of use data is impractical, one method may be used with the confidence that it correlates with other types of use. Visual inspection of the data confirms this with one exception: many clinical review titles tend to have a low local citation rate but high in-house use and circulation rates, suggesting that these are being used for educational and clinical purposes but not for research.
期刊价格的迅速上涨使得图书馆必须拥有可靠且高效的方法来衡量各期刊对本地读者的重要性。三个关键衡量指标是馆内使用量、流通量以及教师引用量。本文考察了一所学术健康科学图书馆中这三个指标之间的相关性。1992年至1994年期间,通过这三种方法中的每一种收集了数据。将每组数据与其他两组进行比较,并针对每两组数据集计算斯皮尔曼等级相关系数和皮尔逊积矩相关系数,以检验两组数据之间的相关程度。所有相关系数均为正值且具有统计学意义(P < 0.0001)。这一信息表明,如果收集多种类型的使用数据不切实际,那么可以放心使用一种方法,因为它与其他类型的使用情况相关。对数据的直观检查证实了这一点,但有一个例外:许多临床综述类期刊的本地引用率较低,但馆内使用量和流通量较高,这表明这些期刊被用于教育和临床目的,而非研究目的。