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Reading behaviour and electronic journals
Authors:Carol Tenopir  Donald W King
Institution:1. University of Tennessee

Carol Tenopir

Professor, School of Information Sciences

University of Tennessee

1345 Circle Park Drive, Room 451

Knoxville, TN 37996-0341

USA

Email:ctenopir@utk.edu;2. University of Pittsburgh

Abstract:Studies from 1977 through 2001 demonstrate that scientists continue to read widely from scholarly journals. Reading of scholarly articles has increased to approximately 120–130 articles per person per year, with engineers reading fewer journal articles on the average and medical faculty reading more. A growing proportion of these readings come from e-prints and other separate copies. Most scientists in a discipline now use electronic journals at least part of the time, with considerable variations among disciplines. Evidence suggests that scientists are reading from a broader range of journals than in the past, influenced by timely electronic publishing and by growth in bibliographic searching and interpersonal communication as means of identifying and locating articles. Although the scholarly journals system has changed dramatically in the past few decades, it is evident that the value scientists place on the information found in scholarly journal articles, whether electronic or print, remains high.
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