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Re: Project COUNTER Progress Update - 5 years on
At 05:46 PM 5/16/2007, Gillingham Emily wrote:
Since the launch of the first COUNTER Code of Practice in 2002,
libraries around the world have been able to compare and
contrast the usage for different journals and databases across
different subjects from different publishers.
As a former member of the Executive Board of Project COUNTER, and
as a former science librarian, I only have great respect and
admiration for this organization, its leadership, and its
dedicated board members. Yet the standardization of downloads
and reports has not resulted in panacea whereby librarians can
simply compare usage across different publishers. In a study of
six COUNTER-compliant publishers [see below], we report very
large differences in download patterns across publisher
interfaces -- even controlling for identical journal content.
As a result, there needs to be more work on this front before
librarians are persuaded that they can simply compare the usage
of journals and databases across publisher platforms. At the
least, Project COUNTER should be cautious in making
over-simplified statements that can result in erroneous beliefs
by those who are responsible for making sound collection
decisions. At worse, publishers may exploit this myth to
artificially inflate and manipulate the numbers they report.
eJournal interface can influence usage statistics: implications
for libraries, publishers, and Project COUNTER.
Philip M. Davis and Jason S. Price
JASIST (2006, vol 57, issue 9, p.1243-1248).
copy available: http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/pmd8/
The design of a publisher's electronic interface can have a
measurable effect on electronic journal usage statistics. A study
of journal usage from six COUNTER-compliant publishers at
thirty-two research institutions in the United States, the United
Kingdom and Sweden indicates that the ratio of PDF to HTML views
is not consistent across publisher interfaces, even after
controlling for differences in publisher content. The number of
fulltext downloads may be artificially inflated when publishers
require users to view HTML versions before accessing PDF versions
or when linking mechanisms, such as CrossRef, direct users to the
full text, rather than the abstract, of each article. These
results suggest that usage reports from COUNTER-compliant
publishers are not directly comparable in their current form.
One solution may be to modify publisher numbers with 'adjustment
factors' deemed to be representative of the benefit or
disadvantage due to its interface. Standardization of some
interface and linking protocols may obviate these differences and
allow for more accurate cross-publisher comparisons.
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Philip M. Davis
PhD Student (and former Science Librarian)
Department of Communication
336 Kennedy Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853
email: pmd8@cornell.edu
work phone: 607 255-0354
web: http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/pmd8/