1 / 22

Dr. M. R. Rawtani

Emerging Technology in Usage Statistics: COUNTER and SUSHI. Dr. M. R. Rawtani. Library lives in the E-Environment E-Everything, slogan challenge to library for make most of the information resources in digital form.

zayit
Download Presentation

Dr. M. R. Rawtani

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Emerging Technology in Usage Statistics: COUNTER and SUSHI Dr. M. R. Rawtani

  2. Library lives in the E-Environment • E-Everything, slogan challenge to library for make most of the information resources in digital form. • Librarians have long experience on evaluating library resources through various methods traditionally, such as reshelving statistics and the circulation list. • Publisher evaluate resources based on their subscription data with advantage of electronic resources. Introduction

  3. Growing library services continue to change and diversify with expansion into the electronic environment; assessing usage of library resources has become more complex. In March 2002, Project COUNTER was launched “as an international initiative, librarian, publishers and intermediaries collaborated to setting standards for the recording and reporting of usage statistics in a consistent, credible and compatible way.” So Cost per article can be calculated which can given indication of the relative value of the journal and in the era of budget cutting the return on investment can be calculated. Cont…..

  4. The usage statistics generally refer to the indicators of the volume of user access to electronic resources and services available from content providers or vendors. [Shim & McClure (2002)] • Examples of indicators includes: • a count of sessions is a specific database, • the time per session in a specific database, • the count of searches performed, • the number of times full-text documents are downloaded Usage Statistics and its Development

  5. Use and usage of E-Journal is not visible like Print journals. E-Journals are needed to demonstrate to funding agencies what they are getting for their investments or the latest canopy of Return on investment policy. For collection development usage statistics are really needed for making decision to decide what to cancel, what to buy less of, and what kinds of E-Journals are needed. Librarians need the data to know what to promote, for which databases might patrons need more help in using. License negotiators need data to give them informed leverage for subsequent negotiations. Understanding some old rules of thumb like the 80/20 rule in the new digital environment. why we need to analyse use statistics

  6. Defining Terms Used in Usage Statistics Report • Data Processing and Auditing by approved 3rdParty • Only intended usage should be recorded and all requests that are not intended by the users should be removed. • All double clicks on an http link within 10 seconds of each other will be counted as only one request. • Where a PDF is involved, this filter is set at 30 seconds, due to the longer time it takes to render a PDF. objectives of COUNTER Code of Practice

  7. The first Standardized Usage Statistics Harvesting Initiative (SUSHI) was created as ANSI/NISO Z39.93-2007 standard protocol. • Recently on March 5, 2013 NISO at Baltimore, MD announced the publication of maintenance revisions of SUSHI protocol with standard number ANSI/NISO Z39.93-2013. • This Protocol defines “an automated request and response model for the harvesting of electronic resource usage data and is required for conformance with the COUNTER Code of Practice.” sushi

  8. http://www.projectcounter.org Apply for COUNTER membership

  9. SUSHI Web Site (http://www.niso.org/workrooms/sushi) Annotated diagrams Data value registry

  10. Why COUNTER and SUSHI are important • For libraries and publishers • Usage statistics are being used to inform decisions • They need to be consistent, credible and comparable = • And, easy to obtain = SUSHI

  11. Solve the problem of harvesting and managing usage data from a growing number of providers. Promote consistency in usage formatting (XML) Automate the process Symbiosis of COUNTER and SUSHI

  12. The SUSHI architecture

  13. web service application

  14. Who is asking for the report (requestor); Who is the report for (customer); Which dates do you want (report) SOAP-XML - Elements

  15. Single Code of Practice New Reports New Data Elements Gold Open Access New Metrics Types COUNTER Code of Practice Salient features- RELEASE 4

  16. Journal Report 3 Mobile: Number of Successful Item Requests by Month, Journal and Page Type for usage on a Mobile Device • Title Report 1 Mobile: Number of Successful Requests for Journal Full-text Articles and Book Sections by Month and Title (formatted for normal browsers/delivered to mobile devices AND formatted for mobile devices/delivered to mobile devices) • Title Report 3 Mobile: Number of Successful Requests by Month, Title and Page Type (formatted for normal browsers/delivered to mobile devices AND formatted for mobile devices/delivered to mobile devices) Recording and reporting usage on mobile devices

  17. Librarians are able to • compare usage statistics from different vendors; • derive useful metrics such as cost-per-use; • make better-informed purchasing decisions; • plan infrastructure more effectively. Publishers and intermediaries are able to: • provide data to customers in a format they want; • compare the relative usage of different delivery channels; • aggregate data for customers using multiple delivery channels; • learn more about genuine usage patterns. With the Project COUNTER Web site COUNTER

  18. Future of SUSHI: Beyond COUNTER reports • SUSHI was designed as a general protocol for retrieving XML “reports” • SUSHI can be used for other usage reports • SUSHI can also be used for other XML “messages”, for example, automate delivery of: • Holdings data with ONIX-SOH • License terms with ONIX PL

  19. Looking ahead • COUNTER • Consortium reports • Updated schema • New metrics and reports • SUSHI can be expanded to harvest other data • Holdings (ONIX SOH) • License terms (ONIX PL) • Financial terms • Tools and services to assist with data normalization • E.g. XISBN, XISSN projects from OCLC

  20. SUSHI allows to collect (and provide access to) audited COUNTER-compliant usage data on an unprecedented scale and to do so with accuracy and a high degree of reliability. Without it, require a lot of additional staff to handle the data processing alone and requires a significant time and cost saving It performs on the data and ensure the highest possible chance that the figures will be presented to the end-user without any problems or errors. It provides publishers with an additional level of quality assurance. Conclusion:

  21. CONCLUSION Cont……. With the Project COUNTER Librarians are able to compare usage statistics from different vendors; derive useful metrics such as cost-per-use; make better-informed purchasing decisions; plan infrastructure more effectively. Publishers and intermediaries are able to: provide data to customers in a format they want; compare the relative usage of different delivery channels; aggregate data for customers using multiple delivery channels; learn more about genuine usage patterns.”

  22. Thank You

More Related