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Digital libraries in the context of social systems: the roles of academic support function.
Apantree Kandet*
Librarian Practitioner
Academic Resource Center
The world of media, news and online information is growing continuously, playing
significant roles in the lifestyles of people today. Many people are bypassing traditional
media such as newspapers, magazines or books, and entering the world of online media and
news media, most of which are in the form of electronic media that are convenient and easy
to use. The boundaries of knowledge are open worldwide, so that people can access
information everywhere and at any time. Online information is a part of everyday life that
people will interact with, either for individual purposes or to communicate with each other.
People, as members of a community, have to communicate with other people in knowledge
societies. Their activities must engage with information-seeking to support their needs in
terms of learning, understanding, making decisions or solving their problems - the necessities
of their life (Case, 2012). Nowadays, the regular method of people to search for everyday
information is to involve themselves with information systems in the form of information
technologies, in order to find useful information. The way for people to find information in
the age of social media and the web is affecting institutions such as libraries by changing
their roles to support user needs, creating innovations to disseminate and share information
between users and libraries in the context of social communication. Creating digital libraries
for collecting, disseminating, preserving and contributing digital documents, by integrating
many important social and public information systems so that they work together, means that
the role of the library occupies a vital part of society, as a learning centre that concentrates on
interaction with users and building collaboration in the research community. This essay will
focus on digital libraries as social systems that are places for the providing, collecting and
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sharing of knowledge in the form of digital resources. This essay will also refer to digital
libraries in the context of them being the centre of social communication as information
repositories and user communities, making them a socio-technical system, which is an
organizational design regarding interaction between people and society by using technology.
Information-seeking behaviour in the social system in the digital age
In social systems, people have to communicate with each other; every person is part of social
groups, whether at home, at school or the workplace, which are the places where knowledge
will be shared, created and organized between people. The traditional way of information-
seeking to gather information or knowledge when people need to know something is to ask
friends or colleagues or find information in the library. People in the digital, web-based age
have changed their behavior in regard to seeking information, the way in which people search
for information to find answers is more complex than in the past. Search engines are popular
tools for people to access information via digital devices; through them, it is easy to get
information by typing their question in a search box such as Google, from which the answer
will be shown in a few minutes. However, people still have questions: how do they know that
the answers they get from search engines are reliable or accurate, and where do they find
specific knowledge to make decisions or solve their problems?
A wide range of information in the new forms of multimedia, which are mostly in digital
form, affect libraries as information services by creating technologies to support the large
amount of digital information in terms of social information retrieval and social networking
technologies. Digital libraries are the new model of library, which use new technologies to
manage digital resources and operate digital information systems available to their users.
The definition of a digital library, from the Digital Library Federation (2004), is: „Digital
Libraries are organizations that provide the resources, including the specialized staff, to
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select, structure, offer intellectual access to, interpret, distribute, preserve the integrity of, and
ensure the persistence over time of collections of digital works so that they are readily and
economically available for use by a defined community or set of communities.‟ In the
information landscape, digital materials are increasing; people can access information by
using the internet network anytime and anywhere. In terms of „libraries without walls‟, the
significant point seems to be that all libraries are beginning to realize and try to create a
strategy to reach the target groups under a communication framework which focuses on the
new form of materials or new formats of information, combined with new technology.
Among digital content, digital libraries are created and managed systems to access digital
information in the role of information providers in the learning community that are suitable
for people to access information easily and take them to the right information at the right time
(Chowdhury and Chowdhury, 2011).
Figure 1. Definition of a digital library, based on a practice community
(Choi and Rasmussen, 2006)
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In Figure 1, Choi and Rasmussen (2006) described the transformative model which focuses
on a user-centred design that shows how digital libraries connect with their users and this
model presents the system framework of digital libraries‟ characteristics as host systems for
gathering collections for communities and organizations.
Digital libraries: institutional repositories in research communities
Libraries are non-commercial organizations where people can access information for free;
this is the main reason why libraries are important for society, because libraries provide
powerful information collections to serve their patrons, which can be different types of user
group. The architecture of digital libraries is focused on integrating various kind of data
formats that are designed to interact with patrons in terms of social communities, where users
can communicate and participate with the system. Digital libraries, in the context of
institutional repositories, have a responsibility to manage repositories of digital materials,
such as online journals, e-books, images, etc. The roles of digital libraries in terms of
institutional repositories in social and research communities are to generate digital content via
online networks, by using standard tools which can support metadata formats and data
storage through a host of information and knowledge communities (John, Richard D. and
Theo, 2006).
Open Access (OA) is a new service of digital libraries, a kind of institutional repository that
is a system for disseminating information, data or research in the form of digital content,
where users can access any information free of charge. The definition of Open Access from
JISC (2010) is that „Open Access is not self-publishing, nor a way to bypass peer-review and
publication, nor is it a kind of second-class, cut-price publishing route. It is simply a means to
make research results freely available online to the whole research community.‟ The
significant role of open access in the form of database publications and digital content is to
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share and provide free access materials to anyone in a scholarly community. This content can
be created by authors on their personal websites in a specific subject area by using self-
archiving software such as Fedora, DSpace and EPrint (Bawden and Robinson, 2012).
Moreover, the reason for academic institutions to use open access as a broadcast community
for researchers to disseminate and publish their journal or articles is to promote and
accelerate multi-disciplinary research areas. Due to the fact that academic institutions will
face funding problems, which may cause some research results to go unpublished, open
access can be the alternative way for academic institutions to distribute their scholarly
information and create new opportunities for their researchers to broadcast their own works
to the public; this system allows any user to download, copy, or distribute material under
lawful access (SPARC, 2013).
The mission of digital libraries as institutional repositories is to provide information services
and the dissemination of digitized materials, which is stored in digital format as the wisdom
of academic institutions. The preservation of those contributions will be maintained in the
long term by archiving. Moreover, these are the places for peer reviews for researchers who
want to disseminate their works to the public or in a research community, where their works
will be validated by others who are experts or referees, and their credibility as scholars or
research experts in their field will be thus proven. This platform will thus be used as a
channel of communication between researchers, both inside and outside the country, on
issues or topics of common interest (John, Richard D. and Theo, 2006).
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Figure 2. The Computing Research Repository of Cornell University Library
(www.arXiv.org)
Figure 2 shows the contents of the Computing Research Repository, which is an open access
of digital content that provides the e-print of scholarly information collections in various
subjects that are available on the internet and free to access.
Figure 3. Social media applications for sharing information in the digital library repository of
Cornell University Library (www.arXiv.org)
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In Figure 3, the area circled in red on the right hand side of the picture shows mini icons of
social media applications such as Facebook, CiteUlike, Linkedln, etc. These services allow
patrons to share web resources as social bookmarks, which enable users to share links or
make their personal bookmarks. Users can use these sites for tagging, ranking, giving
feedback, or commentary outside the arXiv webpage. Integrating between social network
sites and digital libraries is helping users to participate with community information and it
also facilitates interaction between patrons and media devices to exchange knowledge and
share information, which is the way of adding value to digital library services (Chowdhury
and Foo, 2012).
Web 2.0 and social media: the tools of the digital library in the knowledge society
Nowadays, digital resources in libraries are increasing: the roles of libraries are about more
than sharing knowledge and information, due to the new types of information resources that
are increasing, leading to the development of information technology to support user needs
and user behavior, which makes the responsibility of libraries more complicated. According
to Bilandzic and Johnson (2013), the library has an important role in society; it is a place for
sharing, meeting, and community gathering between members of society, reflecting social
interaction in different ways. Digital libraries have to make efforts to encourage people to use
library space as a public space for socialization and creating an information community.
From this viewpoint, the concept of the knowledge community occurred, which is all about
the effective way to transform knowledge between people in communities that will focus on
social interaction in terms of collaboration among users and libraries or information
institutions.
The adoption of new technologies through social media is growing among digital library
services. To connect the users, Web 2.0 and social media applications can help libraries to
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reach their users‟ needs in the form of social media platforms, which are digital spaces on the
web that allow users to create and share information (Wang, 2011). Facebook, Twitter,
Weblogs, Wiki or Pinterest are the kind of social media applications that go together with
communication technologies; t people can use these social media applications to connect with
other users and allow people to share, tag or comment on the document or contents (in the
context of user-generated content), through which libraries can track users or gather feedback
immediately. Social media, as part of the digital libraries services, can be an effective tool to
create relationships between libraries and patrons in social communities, which also increases
the capacity of digital libraries to benefit researchers and users in terms of communication
processes in the knowledge society.
Digital library collaboration: communication in a social perspective
The common ways to make digital libraries be the centre of the information society are to
engage in user communities and understand the users. Libraries should study user behaviour
and user needs and know how digital libraries should design the system to support the users.
In recent years, the way in which information-seeking among users has changed, and the
wide spread of digital resources, has affected information spaces in that most libraries have
moved to creating a „visual space‟ for digital resources. Digital libraries, as new forms of
research communities, have to create strategies to support their patrons, who are from various
disciplines. The system will focus on being user-centred in the context of social interactions,
and a modified version of a library system that focuses on users‟ experience to create usable
systems. The collaboration between digital libraries and academic institutions to disseminate
and contribute digital content to share in research communities can support the growth of the
knowledge society. A collaborative partnership within digital libraries can facilitate
researchers or scholars in academic institutions such as museums, archives or educational
organisations, to transform information across institutions, which is the appropriate way to
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create an academic network for researchers and scholars to gain more knowledge
(MacMillan, 2012).
Edward (2012) (cited in MacMillan, 2012), was interviewed by Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation radio about the collaboration in academic social networks, that “there is no
conflict between data-sharing and getting high profile publications, because the more you
share the more people contact you, the more ideas you have together, the larger academic
network you have, the more knowledge you gain and the faster you can publish high quality
science”. From this point, it shows that digital library collaboration and users‟ interaction,
whether they are researchers or not, can increase the value of digital libraries in the context of
research communities, and digital libraries can also brand and market digital materials to their
patrons via online social network applications and make them the centre of the information
society. Digital libraries will thus play an organisational role of integrating innovative digital
services to meet the needs of user communities.
Digital libraries: management role in social systems
In the era of information technologies, the new services of digital libraries tend to be social,
that libraries‟ infrastructure will integrate with other systems to provide services to support
users in communities. Understanding users is the first priority for libraries to create effective
systems in the form of user-centred design, by observing what users‟ information needs are,
and finding what they want. This focuses on the real tasks, enabling libraries to design a
system that matches users‟ needs. Digital libraries can help researchers in the information
community to design innovative mechanisms to connect with other researchers across
different domains and they have abilities to manage unique materials or complicated media.
They are also a gateway to interface with new types of materials and make them visible to
their users by using social media application tools for helping the users to retrieve resources
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more easily (Fieldhouse and Marshall, 2012; Chowdhury and Foo, 2012). To support the
communities that they serve, digital libraries should enable technology to be community-
empowered by creating various services and developing a system performance that facilitates
accessibility to digital resources.
Conclusion
Digital libraries in the context of social systems seem to be more widely popular in terms of
collaborative activities, by using technology implementation to empower social communities
which highlight new technology design as social media applications, open access or online
database applications that are significant to support the users in communities and make them
available to the public at no charge. To think about the future, the next steps of digital
libraries in social communities will focus on how to share and disseminate digital information
at an international level in terms of international collaboration, which allows users to access
information in different languages and in a wide range of disciplines. Moreover, digital
libraries and academic institutions should work together to promote and encourage the other
information institutions participating in worldwide digital libraries communities.
Furthermore, digital libraries should create some standards to control their users to respect
intellectual property in terms of digital licenses and the copyright framework, in order to
create a societal framework according to the same norms.
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References
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