Journal: Journal of Documentation

Volume 79, Issue 7

1 -- 11Nina Jamar. The readability of abstracts in library and information science journals
12 -- 29Amber L. Cushing, Giulia Osti. "So how do we balance all of these needs?": how the concept of AI technology impacts digital archival expertise
30 -- 50Reijo Savolainen. Assessing the credibility of information sources in times of uncertainty: online debate about Finland's NATO membership
51 -- 71Bianca Gualandi, Luca Pareschi, Silvio Peroni. What do we mean by "data"? A proposed classification of data types in the arts and humanities
72 -- 94Zala Metelko, Jasna Maver. Exploring arXiv usage habits among Slovenian scientists
95 -- 114Alejandro Morales-Vargas, Rafael Pedraza-Jimenez, Lluís Codina. Website quality evaluation: a model for developing comprehensive assessment instruments based on key quality factors
115 -- 136Sofia Baroncini, Bruno Sartini, Marieke van Erp, Francesca Tomasi, Aldo Gangemi. Is dc:subject enough? A landscape on iconography and iconology statements of knowledge graphs in the semantic web
137 -- 156Kimmo Kettunen 0001, Heikki Keskustalo, Sanna Kumpulainen, Tuula Pääkkönen, Juha Rautiainen. Optical character recognition quality affects subjective user perception of historical newspaper clippings
157 -- 177Mikael Laakso. Open access books through open data sources: assessing prevalence, providers, and preservation
178 -- 195Hanna Carlsson, Fredrik Hanell, Lisa Engström. Revisiting the notion of the public library as a meeting place: challenges to the mission of promoting democracy in times of political turmoil
196 -- 224Erika Alves dos Santos, Silvio Peroni, Marcos Luiz Mucheroni. An analysis of citing and referencing habits across all scholarly disciplines: approaches and trends in bibliographic referencing and citing practices
225 -- 239Sara Lafia, David A. Bleckley, J. Trent Alexander. Digitizing and parsing semi-structured historical administrative documents from the G.I. Bill mortgage guarantee program
240 -- 260Jin Gao, Julianne Nyhan, Oliver Duke-Williams, Simon Mahony. Exploring international collaboration and language dynamics in Digital Humanities: insights from co-authorship networks in canonical journals
261 -- 279Koraljka Golub, Jenny Bergenmar, Siska Humelsjö. Searching for Swedish LGBTQI fiction: the librarians' perspective
280 -- 307Claes Dahlqvist, Christel Persson. Cognitive appraisals and information-seeking achievement emotions: a qualitative study of Swedish primary teacher students
308 -- 329Koraljka Golub, Xu Tan, Ying-Hsang Liu, Jukka Tyrkkö. Online subject searching of humanities PhD students at a Swedish university

Volume 79, Issue 6

1309 -- 1324Annemaree Lloyd, Alison Hicks. Fractured academic space: digital literacy and the COVID-19 pandemic
1325 -- 1345Werner Scheltjens. Upcycling historical data collections. A paradigm for digital history?
1346 -- 1368Emily Vardell. "I think sometimes the whole process is just a little bit intimidating": modeling the health insurance decision-making process
1369 -- 1379Margaret Gross. "How didst thou come beneath the murky darkness?": sense-making in light of the ancient Greeks and in the spirit of Hegel
1380 -- 1392James A. Hodges, Ciaran B. Trace. Preserving algorithmic systems: a synthesis of overlapping approaches, materialities and contexts
1393 -- 1412Antonella Foderaro. On impersonal justice: libraries' neutrality as an act of change
1413 -- 1439Yi-Yun Cheng, Yilin Xia. A systematic review of methods for aligning, mapping, merging taxonomies in information sciences
1440 -- 1458Giovanna Aracri, Antonietta Folino, Stefano Silvestri. Integrated use of KOS and deep learning for data set annotation in tourism domain
1459 -- 1484Weinan Zheng, Peng Xiao, Andrew D. Madden. A Chinese academic tradition examined in the context of international academic communication: exploratory research into Shang Que articles
1485 -- 1501Luke Tredinnick. The intricate web: network and rhizome metaphors in hypertext and the web and the epistemic challenge of fake news
1502 -- 1513Margaret Sullivan, George Shaw. The health information behaviors of people who inject drugs: a scoping review of the literature
1514 -- 1531Mike Thelwall, Kayvan Kousha, Emma Stuart, Meiko Makita, Mahshid Abdoli, Paul Wilson 0001, Jonathan M. Levitt. Does the perceived quality of interdisciplinary research vary between fields?

Volume 79, Issue 5

1049 -- 1070Marianne Lykke, Louise Amstrup, Rolf Hvidtfeldt, David Budtz Pedersen. Mapping research activities and societal impact by taxonomy of indicators: uniformity and diversity across academic fields
1071 -- 1087Neville Vakharia, Alex H. Poole. Knowledge management in museums: enhancing organizational performance and public value
1088 -- 1109Marcos Fragomeni Padron, Fernando William Cruz, Juliana Rocha de Faria Silva, Richard P. Smiraglia. A proposal of conceptual model for Brazilian popular music
1110 -- 1123Mike Thelwall, Kayvan Kousha, Mahshid Abdoli, Emma Stuart, Meiko Makita, Paul Wilson 0001, Jonathan M. Levitt. Terms in journal articles associating with high quality: can qualitative research be world-leading?
1124 -- 1146Katharine Smales, Annemaree Lloyd, Samantha Rayner. Perry Starlight, Ali Orbit and Kim Cosmos' alien encounter: creating a picturebook as information for children and parents participating in research
1147 -- 1163Alison Hicks. Risky (information) business: an informational risk research agenda
1164 -- 1181Marianne Paimre, Sirje Virkus, Kairi Osula. Health information behavior and related factors among Estonians aged ≥ 50 years during the COVID-19 pandemic
1182 -- 1208Rachel A. Fleming-May. Scholarly communication: a concept analysis
1209 -- 1219Jack Andersen 0001. Centered and decentered: toward a knowledge organization perspective on social reality
1220 -- 1235Cheryl Klimaszewski. Towards a vernacular aesthetics of liking for information studies
1236 -- 1264Qiao Li, Chunfeng Liu, Jingrui Hou, Ping Wang. Affective memories and perceived value: motivators and inhibitors of the data search-access process
1265 -- 1284Jonathan Furner, Birger Hjørland. The coverage of information science and knowledge organization in the Library of Congress Subject Headings
1285 -- 1305Iris Brun Galili, Mette Skov. A conceptual framework for motivation factors influencing researchers' use of academic web profiles

Volume 79, Issue 4

813 -- 829Saqib Sheikh, Anne J. Gilliland, Philipp Kothe, James Lowry. Distributed records in the Rohingya refugee diaspora: Arweave and the R-Archive
830 -- 846Keith Munro, Ian Ruthven, Perla Innocenti. Can you feel it? The information behaviour of creative DJs
847 -- 863Iulian Vamanu. Documents as weapons: secret police files in Communist and post-Communist Romania
864 -- 879Urs A. Fichtner, Lukas Maximilian Horstmeier, Boris Alexander Brühmann, Manuel Watter, Harald Binder, Jochen Knaus. The role of data sharing in survey dropout: a study among scientists as respondents
880 -- 897Rebecca D. Frank, Laura Rothfritz. Designated Community: uncertainty and risk
898 -- 921Franklin Gyamfi Agyemang, Nicoline Wessels, Madely du Preez. Becoming a competent weaver: information literacy practice of the weavers of the Bonwire Kente Centre in Ghana
922 -- 936Pranay Nangia, Ian Ruthven. Contemporary spiritual seeking: understanding information interactions in contemplation and spirituality
937 -- 954Vikki C. Terrile. Gigging it in the shire: information practices of Renaissance faire performers and artisans
955 -- 972Sergio Evangelista Silva, André Luis Silva. Expanding the current tacit/explicit knowledge dichotomy encompassing situated and theoretical/normative knowledge: a phenomenological perspective
973 -- 987Jane Garner. Taking Chatman back to prison: rethinking the theory of life in the round
988 -- 1005Viviane Frings-Hessami. The use of notebooks by Bangladeshi rural women to preserve information
1006 -- 1026Betsy Van der Veer Martens. On thresholds: signs, symbols and significance
1027 -- 1047Boris Bosancic. Broadening the field of information

Volume 79, Issue 3

529 -- 545Sara Schumacher, Hillary B. Veeder. The case for print: architecture trade journals as pedagogical tools for disciplinary knowledge
546 -- 566Amy Duxfield, Chern Li Liew. Libraries in contemporary science fiction novels: uncertain futures or embedded in the fabric of society?
567 -- 588Hyerim Cho, Wan-Chen Lee, Li-Min Huang, Joseph Kohlburn. User-centered categorization of mood in fiction
589 -- 607Annelien Smets. Designing for serendipity: a means or an end?
608 -- 634Yaming Fu, Elizabeth Lomas, Charles Inskip, Jenny Bunn. Understanding international users' library experience in the Digital Age - joining the behavioral and experiential aspects
635 -- 640Tim Gorichanaz. On the two conceptualizations of information experience as an object of study: a response to Yu and Liu
641 -- 669Sylvain K. Cibangu. The origins and informed uses of the terms phenomenography and phenomenology
670 -- 682Ziming Liu, Rui Hu, Xiaojun Bi. The effects of social media addiction on reading practice: a survey of undergraduate students in China
683 -- 702Liangzhi Yu. Information and the understanding of objective knowledge: a phenomenological study
703 -- 717Rhiannon Stephanie Bettivia, Elizabeth Stainforth. Negotiating digital public spaces: context, purpose and audiences
718 -- 742Xinlin Yao, Yuxiang (Chris) Zhao, Shijie Song, Xiaolun Wang. Beyond disclosure: the role of self-identity and context collapse in privacy management on identified social media for LGBTQ+ people
743 -- 756Carly C. Dearborn, Michael Flierl. A diplomatic-informed archival pedagogy: fostering student-centered learning environments for novice archival researchers
757 -- 783Hazel Hall, Bruce Martin Ryan, Rachel Salzano, Katherine Stephen. From a network model to a model network: strategies for network development to narrow the LIS research-practice gap
784 -- 810Danielle A. Morris-O'Connor, Andreas Strotmann, Dangzhi Zhao. The colonization of Wikipedia: evidence from characteristic editing behaviors of warring camps

Volume 79, Issue 2

269 -- 280Tibor Koltay. The width and depth of literacies for tackling the COVID-19 infodemic
281 -- 300Sarah Hargreaves, Laura Sbaffi, Nigel Ford. Information seeking amongst informal caregivers of people with dementia: a qualitative study
301 -- 319Peter H. Reid, Lyndsay Mesjar. "Bloody amazing really": voices from Scotland's public libraries in lockdown
320 -- 340Maayan Zhitomirsky-Geffet, Inna Kizhner, Sara Minster. What do they make us see: a comparative study of cultural bias in online databases of two large museums
341 -- 356Ryo Shiozaki. Existential dependence relations of documents in the context of preservation
357 -- 375Steven Buchanan, Cara Jardine. The information behaviours of disadvantaged young first-time mothers
376 -- 397Marika Kawamoto, Masanori Koizumi. Library as place: conceptual model for public libraries and their transition
398 -- 414Alex C. Urban. Mementos from digital worlds: video game photography as documentation
415 -- 430Amanda Hovious, Brian C. O'Connor. The reader as subjective entropy: a novel analysis of multimodal readability
431 -- 441Carli V. Lowe. Promoting transformative encounters in libraries and archives
442 -- 467Xuguang Li, Xiaoying Luo, Andrew Cox, Yao Zhang, Yingying Lu. The mental health information needs of Chinese university students and their use of online resources: a holistic model
468 -- 486Kahina Le Louvier, Perla Innocenti. A grounded theory of information exclusion and information inclusion: framing the information experience of people seeking asylum
487 -- 508Li Si, Yi He, Li Liu. Topics and changing characteristics of knowledge organization research in the 21st century: a content analysis
509 -- 526Ina-Maria Jansson. Challenging the problem of un-democratic participation: from destruction to re-construction of heritage

Volume 79, Issue 1

1 -- 20Dan Wu 0003, Shu Fan, Shengyi Yao, Shuang Xu. An exploration of ethnic minorities' needs for multilingual information access of public digital cultural services
21 -- 35Martin Muderspach Thellefsen. Domain analytical information and knowledge organization: investigating the externalist and internalist conception of information
36 -- 51Nanna Kann-Rasmussen. When librarians speak up: justifications for and legitimacy implications of librarians' engagement in social movements
52 -- 65Tomoya Igarashi, Masanori Koizumi, Michael M. Widdersheim. Overcoming social divisions with the public library
66 -- 85Romina Sharifpour, Mingfang Wu, Xiuzhen Zhang. Large-scale analysis of query logs to profile users for dataset search
86 -- 111Maja Krtalic, Kingsley T. Ihejirika. The things we carry: migrants' personal collection management and use
112 -- 126Leo Appleton, Hazel Hall. The public library as public sphere: a longitudinal analysis
127 -- 143Katerina Guba, Angelika Tsivinskaya. Expert judgments versus publication-based metrics: do the two methods produce identical results in measuring academic reputation?
144 -- 159Mohamed Amine Belabbes, Ian Ruthven, Yashar Moshfeghi, Diane Rasmussen Pennington. Information overload: a concept analysis
160 -- 182Michela Montesi. Everyday information behavior during the "new normal" of the Covid-19 pandemic: approaching the notions of experiential and local knowledge
183 -- 202Robertas Damasevicius, Ligita Zailskaite-Jakste. Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on researcher collaboration in business and economics areas on national level: a scientometric analysis
203 -- 223Millicent Mabi, Heather L. O'Brien, Lisa P. Nathan. Questioning the role of information poverty in immigrant employment acquisition: empirical evidence from African immigrants in Canada
224 -- 244Andrea Jimenez, Sara Vannini, Andrew Cox. A holistic decolonial lens for library and information studies
245 -- 267Huan Zhong, Zhengbiao Han, Preben Hansen. A systematic review of information practices research