From rhill at asis.org Wed Aug 10 11:34:18 2016 From: rhill at asis.org (Richard Hill) Date: Wed, 10 Aug 2016 11:34:18 -0400 Subject: [Asist-announce] Pres. Message, JASIST and Bulletin TOCs Message-ID: <167e01d1f31c$a96ecda0$fc4c68e0$@asis.org> Since the last President?s Page, you have submitted your votes and new board members have been elected. Please join me in welcoming president-elect Lisa Given, Charles Sturt University, Australia; new treasurer June Abbas, University of Oklahoma; and new directors-at-large Dania Bilal, University of Tennessee, and Heather O?Brien, University of British Columbia, Canada. The Board looks forward to their leadership and ideas. Our thanks go to all those who ran for the various positions, as well as to those who have been contributing steadily and generously to ASIS&T for all these years, with a special note to Vicki Gregory who retires as our trusted treasurer after a long tenure. ASIS&T depends on the work of the many volunteer members who dedicate their time and energy to sit on, or chair, committees, jury the various awards, review conference submissions, design and implement new initiatives and generally keep the ASIS&T boat going. We are grateful for all the work you do. As I mentioned in my May column, the Board has been actively engaged on various fronts including the hiring of a communications officer as well as succession planning and the search for a new executive director to replace Dick Hill. Our call for applicants for the communications officer position has elicited some excellent applicants, and we are in the process of interviewing qualified candidates who can develop and sustain a robust and comprehensive communication strategy for ASIS&T. The search for Dick Hill?s successor will be a major item on the agenda of our upcoming Board retreat in July. As part of this process, I thought it would be helpful for ASIS&T members to be (re-)introduced to the good folks working at ASIS&T headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, and running the organization behind the scene. In addition to executive director Dick Hill, the two pillars of ASIS&T headquarters are Vanessa Foss and Jan Hatzakos. Vanessa, director, membership services and meetings, has been with ASIS&T since 1988, and Jan, director of finance and administration and webmaster, since 1990. Along with Dick Hill, they are the institutional memory and the ones that make things happen. They are assisted by Carline Haynes, accounting, and Stephan Addo, membership. Completing the team is Sandra Holder who serves as the first point of contact for members, visitors and vendors and provides office support. Together, they are the ASIS&T team. Make sure to introduce yourself to them at the next Annual Meeting, regional meeting or other event. We are grateful to them for their hard work, as ASIS&T continues on the path of renewal and change to meet the evolving needs of our members. In related news, ASIS&T continues its engagement with our members? world as well as the world around us. We have been receiving short videos from doctoral students from around the globe who speak passionately about their research. Look for these videos on our website, where they will be featured soon. A new Meet the Authors series has been inaugurated this month. Its purpose is to stretch the boundaries of the information field and get us to engage with one another as well as with folks in related fields. The first speaker to address the ASIS&T community was psychologist Dr. Robert Epstein, who spoke on July 21, about his idea of the search engine manipulation effect (SEME). The event was bound to send a shockwave of reactions within the information science community and did not fail to do so. Stay tuned for the next Meet the Author installment. ASIS&T publications are still defining the trends in our field. A new version of the Google Scholar metrics has just been released, and despite the usual reluctance toward relying solely on the H index, it was heartening to see that two of ASIS&T publications are in the top 20, with JASIST topping the list of LIS Journal Rankings and the ASIS&T Proceedings listed at number 20. (Source: https://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=top_venues&hl=en&vq=eng_library informationscience) Despite the world events plaguing our newsfeeds, this fall will be a busy time for intellectual engagement in Europe. If you are planning on coming to Copenhagen for the Annual Meeting, consider coming early to catch the Dublin Core and Metadata Applications (DCMA) meeting (also in Copenhagen, October 13-16). The European Conference on Information Literacy will be meeting in Prague around that time as well (October 10-13). The Association for Internet Researchers will also hold its annual meeting in Berlin, Oct. 5-8. Regarding the Annual Meeting, the program should be up soon on our website. In addition to the paper sessions and panels, do not miss the workshop offerings and several special sessions. The first Diversity and Inclusion Luncheon is intended as a social engagement platform to celebrate diversity, discuss challenges and collaborate on strategies to bolster diversity and inclusion in ASIS&T. Attendees will also be able to meet several editors from different journals at the Meet the Editors session. Representatives from ALA, ALISE and the iCaucus will join us for a conversation on all matters accreditation at the Joint ALISE/ASIS&T Presidential Session on Accreditation. Finally, I look forward to keynote speaker Greg Walsh?s address dealing with the issue of technological human surrogates in his talk on Bridging the Telepresence Valley. Last but not least, remember that this will be Dick Hill?s (potentially) last Annual Meeting, so bring your best stories or photos and use this chance to say ?thank you? to Dick and his staff. I wish you all a wonderful summer! - - - - JASIST AUGUST?2016 Vol. 67, No. 8 RESEARCH ARTICLES Social media and problematic everyday life information-seeking outcomes: Differences across use frequency, gender, and problem-solving styles (pages 1793?1807) Sei-Ching Joanna Sin A content analysis of Twitter hyperlinks and their application in web resource indexing (pages 1808?1821) Kwan Yi, Namjoo Choi and Yung Soo Kim Reducing digital divide effects through student engagement in coordinated game design, online resource use, and social computing activities in school (pages 1822?1835) Rebecca Reynolds and Ming Ming Chiu Understanding scientific collaboration in the research life cycle: Bio- and nanoscientists? motivations, information-sharing and communication practices, and barriers to collaboration (pages 1836?1848) EunKyung Chung, Nahyun Kwon and Jungyeoun Lee Not all international collaboration is beneficial: The Mendeley readership and citation impact of biochemical research collaboration (pages 1849?1857) Pardeep Sud and Mike Thelwall Text representation strategies: An example with the State of the union addresses (pages 1858?1870) Jacques Savoy Why experience matters to privacy: How context-based experience moderates consumer privacy expectations for mobile applications (pages 1871?1882) Kirsten Martin and Katie Shilton Academics? responses to encountered information: Context matters (pages 1883?1903) Sheila Pontis, Genovefa Kefalidou, Ann Blandford, Jamie Forth, Stephann Makri, Sarah Sharples, Geraint Wiggins and Mel Woods Using the wayback machine to mine websites in the social sciences: A methodological resource (pages 1904?1915) Sanjay K. Arora, Yin Li, Jan Youtie and Philip Shapira Web mining for navigation problem detection and diagnosis in Discapnet: A website aimed at disabled people (pages 1916?1927) Olatz Arbelaitz, Aizea Lojo, Javier Muguerza and I?igo Perona Information flows as bases for archeology-specific geodata infrastructures: An exploratory study in flanders (pages 1928?1942) Berdien De Roo, Philippe De Maeyer and Jean Bourgeois Using path-based approaches to examine the dynamic structure of discipline-level citation networks: 1997?2011 (pages 1943?1955) Erjia Yan and Qi Yu Wikipedia, collective memory, and the Vietnam war (pages 1956?1961) Brendan Luyt Mendeley readership altmetrics for medical articles: An analysis of 45 fields (pages 1962?1972) Mike Thelwall and Paul Wilson Author credit-assignment schemas: A comparison and analysis (pages 1973?1989) Jian Xu, Ying Ding, Min Song and Tamy Chambers Research synthesis methods and library and information science: Shared problems, limited diffusion (pages 1990?2008) Laura Sheble Spamming in scholarly publishing: A case study (pages 2009?2015) Marcin Kozak, Olesia Iefremova and James Hartley Constructing conceptual trajectory maps to trace the development of research fields (pages 2016?2031) Yi-Ning Tu and Shu-Lan Hsu A mixture model of global internet capacity distributions (pages 2032?2044) Hyunjin Seo and Stuart Thorson - - - - BULLETIN August/September 2016 Volume 42, No. 6 (Size: 5.7mb) Features Herbert Haviland Field (1868-1921): Bibliographer of Zoology by Colin B. Burke and Michael K. Buckland Precise Zoological Information: The Concilium Bibliographicum, 1895-1940 by Michael K. Buckland and Colin B. Burke RDAP Review Data and Copyright by Cindy Kristof Departments Editor?s Desktop by Irene Travis President?s Page by Nadia Caidi Inside ASIS&T East Meets West ? Joint Meeting of European and Asian Pacific Chapters at LIDA Conference by Emil Levine and Maja Krtalic Richard B. Hill Executive Director ASIS&T 8555 16th Street, Suite 850 Silver Spring, MD 20910 v. (301) 495-0900 f. (301) 495-0810