Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Helal, Ahmed H., Ed., Weiss, Joachim W., Ed.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED381176
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181618408456192
author Helal, Ahmed H., Ed.
Weiss, Joachim W., Ed.
author_facet Helal, Ahmed H., Ed.
Weiss, Joachim W., Ed.
Helal, Ahmed H., Ed.
Weiss, Joachim W., Ed.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Information Superhighway: The Role of Librarians, Information Scientists, and Intermediaries. Proceedings of the International Essen Symposium (17th, Essen, Germany, October 24-27, 1994). Helal, Ahmed H., Ed. Weiss, Joachim W., Ed. Academic Libraries Access to Information Cooperation Developing Nations Electronic Publishing Foreign Countries Higher Education Information Technology Internet Librarians Library Role Library Services Professional Training Quality Control Users (Information) The emphasis of the symposium was the Internet, or information superhighway, and the provision of information services to end users. Many internationally recognized librarians shared their experiences and expressed their ideas on new developments and possibilities related to the information superhighway. The 34 papers presented at the symposium addressed the following issues: (1) definition, applications, cost, security, privacy, access, delivery, and ease of use; (2) strategies and tactics for accessing information on the superhighway, as well as concern for unauthorized use; (3) tremendous amounts of irrelevant information, and who will regulate the superhighway; (4) librarians and Internet developer cooperation in developing user-oriented services on the Internet; (5) electronic publishing of academic research; (6) provision of access to users in the third world; (7) cyberspace as a process of virtualization, and the resultant virtual electronic library; (8) librarians should not only give access to electronic information, but also adapt their organizations to achieve full functionality of new developments; (9) collaboration among research centers, administrative groups and operational, informational, and resource staff in libraries and information systems is vital; (10) the impact of technology on academic libraries has resulted in increased access to resources in electronic form, calling for additional staff training; (11) the development of electronic resources has been so rapid that many information professionals have been left behind; (12) lack of information quality control, and increased forms of access require librarians to enhance resource selection activities; (13) access to resources no longer needs to be intervened by trained professionals, and the future role of the librarian is uncertain; (14) making electronic resources Internet accessible is a concern; (15) a discussion of projects involving scanning tables of contents of scientific journals to be accessed online; (16) libraries have to adapt their organization and management to achieve full functionality of new developments; and (17) implications and possible impact of distributed client-server computing to potentially facilitate use of the Internet as a global information resource which may be searched in its own right. The symposium agenda, list of participants, and list of participating vendors is also provided. Many papers contain references. (MAS)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED381176
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1995
record_format eric
spellingShingle Information Superhighway: The Role of Librarians, Information Scientists, and Intermediaries. Proceedings of the International Essen Symposium (17th, Essen, Germany, October 24-27, 1994).
Helal, Ahmed H., Ed.
Weiss, Joachim W., Ed.
Academic Libraries
Access to Information
Cooperation
Developing Nations
Electronic Publishing
Foreign Countries
Higher Education
Information Technology
Internet
Librarians
Library Role
Library Services
Professional Training
Quality Control
Users (Information)
Information Superhighway: The Role of Librarians, Information Scientists, and Intermediaries. Proceedings of the International Essen Symposium (17th, Essen, Germany, October 24-27, 1994). Helal, Ahmed H., Ed. Weiss, Joachim W., Ed. Academic Libraries Access to Information Cooperation Developing Nations Electronic Publishing Foreign Countries Higher Education Information Technology Internet Librarians Library Role Library Services Professional Training Quality Control Users (Information) The emphasis of the symposium was the Internet, or information superhighway, and the provision of information services to end users. Many internationally recognized librarians shared their experiences and expressed their ideas on new developments and possibilities related to the information superhighway. The 34 papers presented at the symposium addressed the following issues: (1) definition, applications, cost, security, privacy, access, delivery, and ease of use; (2) strategies and tactics for accessing information on the superhighway, as well as concern for unauthorized use; (3) tremendous amounts of irrelevant information, and who will regulate the superhighway; (4) librarians and Internet developer cooperation in developing user-oriented services on the Internet; (5) electronic publishing of academic research; (6) provision of access to users in the third world; (7) cyberspace as a process of virtualization, and the resultant virtual electronic library; (8) librarians should not only give access to electronic information, but also adapt their organizations to achieve full functionality of new developments; (9) collaboration among research centers, administrative groups and operational, informational, and resource staff in libraries and information systems is vital; (10) the impact of technology on academic libraries has resulted in increased access to resources in electronic form, calling for additional staff training; (11) the development of electronic resources has been so rapid that many information professionals have been left behind; (12) lack of information quality control, and increased forms of access require librarians to enhance resource selection activities; (13) access to resources no longer needs to be intervened by trained professionals, and the future role of the librarian is uncertain; (14) making electronic resources Internet accessible is a concern; (15) a discussion of projects involving scanning tables of contents of scientific journals to be accessed online; (16) libraries have to adapt their organization and management to achieve full functionality of new developments; and (17) implications and possible impact of distributed client-server computing to potentially facilitate use of the Internet as a global information resource which may be searched in its own right. The symposium agenda, list of participants, and list of participating vendors is also provided. Many papers contain references. (MAS)
title Information Superhighway: The Role of Librarians, Information Scientists, and Intermediaries. Proceedings of the International Essen Symposium (17th, Essen, Germany, October 24-27, 1994).
topic Academic Libraries
Access to Information
Cooperation
Developing Nations
Electronic Publishing
Foreign Countries
Higher Education
Information Technology
Internet
Librarians
Library Role
Library Services
Professional Training
Quality Control
Users (Information)
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED381176