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Category Archives: Academic search

A sea of CSEs

12 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, How to improve academic search

≈ 2 Comments

I had a quick look around for other Google Custom Search Engines, via a simple search for:

keyword site:www.google.com/coop/

Living-dead CSEs from circa-2006 litter the results, of course. Probably made in 30 minutes during the first flush of public interest in Google’s new toy, usually indexing less than 30 items, and then seemingly forgotten about within 30 days.

I guess that’s one of the main reasons why people don’t seem to hold specialist Google CSEs in high regard. Which probably helps to explain why a search for 2009 site:www.google.com/coop/ seems to show that only a mere 39 public CSE have either been built or updated in the last six months. It seems a shame that the academic community is fiddling with often-unlovable and quickly-stale niche wikis, while such a powerful tool is all-but unused except for an occasional private one-site index. It’s not as if CSEs don’t have tools for collaborative index-building and weeding.

With a few months of careful work by a professional or subject-specialist, there’s no reason why a CSE can’t hold its head up alongside funded/commercial services — as I hope I’ve shown with JURN. And if a developer plans ahead and uses some common tools, basic maintainance of a large curated engine — once complete — shouldn’t take more than a couple of days of work per year.

I did find a few CSEs in the humanities still showing some stamina…

Theological journal search (340+ titles inc. findarticles.com, last updated Jan 2009).

Online Biblical Studies journals (123 titles, the titles freely listed, last updated 2008).

Judaic Studies in English (278 sites, last updated Sept 2007).

Alcuin Society (139 sites on bibliophilia and book arts, last updated Oct 2008).

AuseSearch (All open access academic repositories in Australia that are listed in Kennan & Kingsley at Feb 2009).

Film Blogs (139 titles, the titles freely listed, last updated June 2009. Looks like a strong tool for quickly finding genuine reviews from film-buffs, as opposed to marketing psuedo-reviews).

Busador Cultural (a large academic-cultural-arts search-engine for Spanish-language material).

So where might there be scope for a strong new curated CSE, with a nice balance of focus and scope? It might be useful to have an engine for “books still of scholarly worth, and other useful non-fiction” which selects from the ebooks that are flooding out from the out-of-copyright book digitisation projects, indexing the full-text. Books such as Tom Wedgwood, the first photographer and Kitecraft and Kite Tournaments. There has to be a more enticing way to access this stuff than getting your keywords tangled in creaky Victorian potboilers and agricultural pamphlets from 1932, or ploughing through a daily list seemingly endlessly populated by thousands of 1920s pulp novels and Victorian romances. But I’m willing to bet that there’s no flag in the metadata which says “non-fiction / just the cool stuff”, so it might take a lot of work.

Blind Search

11 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, How to improve academic search, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

The academic blog Walt at Random tries out a new search tool, Blind Search…

“You type in a search. You get back the first 10 results for each of three search engines, displayed in three parallel columns. You click on one of three “vote for this search engine” buttons, based on the column of results that seem to match your query best. Then, and only then, Blind Search shows you the engine used for each column.

Sure to be a fun ice-breaker in the hotel lobby at the First Conference on Open Access Scholarly Publishing, 14th – 16th Sept 09, Sweden.

An academic search group-test

11 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, JURN metrics

≈ 4 Comments

I decided to do a quick group-test of search-engines, based on an unsophisticated casual academic search for the keywords:

Mongolian folk song

I was trying to mimic what might be a typical student search. This is what I found that was free:

The main Google index:

Top result is a dubious spammy-looking link that actually leads to a clean webpage for the commercial album Mongolian Folk Songs, with embedded audio clips for each track. Nice. The next two links are YouTube videos. At the foot of the first page is a link of some use, a short English-language 2005 Xinhua press-agency story carried by the Chinese People’s Daily newspaper talking of “1100 Mongolian folk songs rescued”.

Microsoft Bing:

Not bad, not bad at all. Better than Google by far. The Wikipedia page “Music of Mongolia” is result number one, but result number 4 gets top marks – a direct link into the Mongolian-run UNESCO-accredited International Institute for the Study of Nomadic Civilizations website, detailing (in good English) a major fieldwork song-gathering project now underway, “Heritage of the Mongolian Long Folk Song” (2008-2010). Result number six is also strong – a link into the new Smithsonian Folkways magazine, recommending two albums.

Google Scholar:

Oh dear. The top result is free. But it’s a PDF of the vintage book The Souls of Black Folk (1903) by W.E.B. Du Bois, and this only seems to mention the word ‘Mongolian’ in passing. Misleadingly, the date of the book is labelled in the results as “2007”. There’s only one other free result on the page, a Google Books link to Mongolian music, dance, & oral narrative: performing diverse identities (University of Washington Press, 2001). Tucked away at the bottom of page three of the results is some free and useful full-text, the 1997 article “Mongolian Oral Epic Poetry: An Overview” from the scholarly journal Oral Tradition. Everything else on the first few pages is trapped behind a paywall.

Google Book Search:

Mongolian music, dance, & oral narrative: performing diverse identities‎ appears again, and is number one. The link for it gives a “limited preview” link that leads to a deep interior page discussing the “overhaul” of classification of different types of song under communist rule. There’s only one other “limited-preview” result on the first page, linking to the book The Horse-head Fiddle and the Cosmopolitan Reimagination of Mongolia. On page two there’s another “limited-preview” book, and it’s the 2008 Lonely Planet guide-book to Mongolia.

Google news:

A surprise. Not bad, if you’re looking for contemporary performance. Number two is a Financial Times arts report “Steppes of Dreamers, Ukrainian Pavillion, Venice [biennale]” and talks of… ‘a Mongolian folk song, deconstructed into three elements of wind instrument, voice and whistle’. Then there are various journalistic puffs for folk performances. Halfway down the page is a PSFK trend-spotting agency report on a free 50-minute “Podcast Documentary on Chinagrass – Contemporary Chinese Folk Music, performed by Hanggai … a Beijing-based Mongolian folk band composed of 5 members who feature the distinctive Morin Khuur and throat-singing.” Sounds great! The article is Creative Commons, too. Near the bottom of the results is a link to China Central Television proclaiming “Xinjiang preserves ethnic folk arts”.

Bing news search:

“We did not find any results for Mongolian folk song.” Some way to go, I think.

Findarticles.com (free):

The first four results are duplicates of a short 2005 press story “China, Mongolia to protect endangered ethnic song”, then the results default to articles on other unrelated types of folk song.

Intute Arts and Humanities:

Zero results. If the search terms are changed to Mongolia + song then I get a record for the “Music of Tuva” website. Tuva being near to Mongolia, and now in Russia.

Archive.org texts:

Zero results. If the search is limited to just ‘Mongolian’ then I get a wide range of books including an avalanche of dusty pre-1920s linguistic studies, and er… “Racial Origins of the Jews – Eugen Fischer. An article from the defunct neo-nazi magazine”. Oh dear. In amongst the avalanche there are several scanned editions of Sagas from the Far East: Or, Kalmouk and Mongolian Traditionary Tales (1873).

OAIster:

Zero results.

Intute UK repository search:

Zero results.

DOAJ search:

Zero results.

Open J-Gate:

Zero results.

IngentaConnect:

Zero results.

JISC ticTOCs: (search tables of contents from major journal publishers)

Zero results for a search in titles or subject. Even the word ‘Mongolian’ on its own found no results.

CiteSeer:

Mostly science, but I thought there might be some linguistic or ethnographic materials indexed. I used the search: Mongolian AND folk AND song, and included citations in the search. Two results, neither relevant. Using Mongolian AND song obtained more, but not better, results.

Sweet Search

Supposedly an academic search engine, the top results were from www.emusic.com (trying to sell me MP3s), the state-owned www.chinadaily.com.cn, www.npr.org, and bbc.co.uk. To be fair, it does a good job of clearing the web of spam, but the lack of academic articles in the results shows that it’s aimed at school children rather than those at university.

Scientific Commons:

One result, to what is now a dead ‘404’ link.

EBSCO Open Science Directory

Zero results.

China Academic Journals full-text:

Just three results from a 1915-2009 search, one in English (“Mongolian Folk Song and Dance Troupe Visits China”, which was a short news report from the state-run Voice of Friendship magazine).

Scirius:

The first two results are useful, but both lead to “404 not found” messages. The first page of results show that Scirius search is confused by Chinese science authors whose surname is “Song”, and by references to the Song dynasty.

The British Library: (“search 9 million articles from 20,000 journals”)

Zero results. Did someone forget to plug the database cable in?

HathiTrust 0.2 beta

15 results for full-text items when the search was limited to: “mongolian folk” song. No result was relevant, and the results included eight instances of hits from ‘Library of Congress subject headings’ lists.

Journal TOCs

One result, an article in the commercial paywall journal Acta Orientalia, “Dsakhchin (West-Mongolian) folksongs with Buddhist content”.

BASE:

Seven results. Number one was in Hungarian, and was a description and track-list of a Hungarian world music CD. Number two was (oh dear!) our old friend Du Bois, W.E.B., The Souls of Black Folk (1903). Number three was a full-text PDF Thesis titled “What is Throat Singing?”, which is the result of fieldwork in southern Siberia. Number four was an English description of the Czech book Kazakh folksongs : from the two ends of the steppe (2001). The rest of the results were junk from Encyclopedia of World History (a spurious result, which anyway bounced to the Bartleby.com front-page), and another spurious result from an atrociously bad OCR copy of the Deseret News newspaper from 1878.

JURN:

On the first page, the full-text of:—

1. IIAS Newsletter. A long review of a 2005 CHIME Foundation conference which asked “Do performers of ritual music in East Asia address their performances primarily to the gods or to mortals?” starstarstar

2. Asian Folklore Studies. A review of two books from the late 1980s (On Huaer and Selections of Traditional Qinghai Folk Songs), which only mentions Mongolian songs in passing. star

3. Oral Tradition. “A Comparative Study of the Singing Styles of Mongolian and Tibetan Geser/Gesar Artists”. starstarstar

4. Asian Folklore Studies. English reviews of two German books on Mongol epics and epic songs. starstar

5. Ethnomusicology OnLine. A review of the commercial CD Mongolia, Living Music of the Steppes: Instrumental Music and Song of Mongolia, with three sample tracks as embedded audio. starstarstar

6 and 7. China Heritage Quarterly. Two articles, the somewhat-tangental “Cultural Heritage Properties of Qinghai, Gansu and Ningxia: Performance Items” and more usefully “A Tale of Two Lists: An Examination of the New Lists of Intangible Cultural Properties” (a very long account of the history of Chinese attempts to preserve folk cultures and later UNESCO involvement). starstarstar

8. Echo. (A tangental result in a long article about Nepali pop music, due to the titling of an album as Mongolian Heart). star

9. Oral Tradition. “Mongolian Oral Epic Poetry: An Overview.” starstarstarstar

10. Asian Folklore Studies. A fair but critical scholarly book review of Mongolian Music, Dance, and Oral Narrative: Performing Diverse Identities (2001). starstarstar

Highlights on further results pages include: “The Mechanisms of Epic Plot and the Mongolian Geseriad”; “Mongol creation stories”; “Teaching of the Silk-Road Epics: a workshop in Turku”; “Folk Ecology and Rural Epics in China” — and all found without focussing the search-terms or using any Google search modifiers.

And if the Graduate Journal of Asia-Pacific Studies didn’t use stupidly-huge dynamic scripted URLs (all hanging directly off the main university URL, durh) I daresay that the excellent full-text article “Blue Heaven, Parched Land: Mongolian Folk Song and the Chinese State” would also show up in JURN. A researcher could get to it at the hosting university via a specific Google article-title search.

My library catalogue (inc. the Birmingham Conservatoire music library):

No results on a keyword search. However, a direct title search finds one copy of the book Mongolian music, dance, & oral narrative : performing diverse identities (2001). But it would be cheaper for me to buy it on Amazon, than to pay for a train ticket to specially go and get it.

Project MUSE:

The first four results are strong (although not free full-text to the public), but then the results turn to mush — and by the bottom of the page we’re back to… W.E.B. Du Bois and his The Souls of Black Folk (1903). Very worthy, a seminal thinker, and all that… but not relevant to the search.

JSTOR:

JSTOR coverage is strong (340 results, inc. articles from the back-issues of Asian Music, Journal of the International Folk Music Council, British Journal of Ethnomusicology/Ethnomusicology Forum, Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Journal of Asian Studies, and Far Eastern Quarterly) — but you’ll only obtain them if you or your organisation have access to JSTOR.

And if you’re lucky enough to have a university that subscribes to RILM Abstracts of Music Literature and Music Index Online, you should be assured of a decent starting bibliography — even if accessing the full-text might still prove tricky.

Digital Research Tools wiki

11 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search

≈ Leave a comment

A new Digital Research Tools wiki, seemingly aimed at and written by grad students. The layout of the site navigation elements, as with most wikis, is very poor and needs a complete overhaul. But if you’re prepared to dig, there are some up-to-date link-lists of digital humanities tools in here.

Indie scholars

07 Sunday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search

≈ Leave a comment

Full Text, an independent scholars group on Twine. It’s run by Daniel Lipson, periodical librarian at Achva Academic College…

Most of the world’s research resides in [commercial] online academic databases … To use these databases and find full text peer reviewed articles, you must have access to an academic library. This twine is for those who don’t.

There are free databases and scholarly search tools on the web that may not be as comprehensive as the above examples, but are a good start for “academics without access” and “researchers without resources”.

Those interested in this post may also be interested in the ebook The Independent Scholar’s Handbook (PDF, 17Mb) (Ten Speed Press, 1993 – second edition), now freely offered online by the Canadian Academy of Independent Scholars and Simon Fraser University.

The mark of Zotero

06 Saturday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, How to improve academic search, JURN tips and tricks

≈ 1 Comment

Some good news, just in. The U.S. courts have struck down a legal challenge to the popular open source journal citation software Zotero.

“Zotero […] operates as a browser plug-in, which allows it to cross platforms easily and integrate well with online searches; it is also able to import EndNote reference databases. But the key feature that got it into legal trouble was the fact that it was able to import and use EndNote reference style files.”

Tasty serials

06 Saturday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Economics of Open Access, Official and think-tank reports

≈ Leave a comment

“Journal spend, use and research outcomes: a UK perspective on value for money” (PDF link), by Ian Rowlands at the UK Serials Group Conference, 31st March 2009. In amongst the inevitable science journals (yawn), his group also made a case-study of History ejournals. One interesting factoid…

“86.5 per cent of titles in the arts, humanities and social sciences are now available online”

Only 86.5%?

From the same conference: “Electronic journals, continuing access and long-term preservation: roles, responsibilities and emerging solutions” (Powerpoint link, 2Mb). It seems a useful overview of the problems, and the initiatives (LOCKSS, Portico, etc) currently underway.

Short-run open access titles in the arts and humanities are especially vulnerable to loss, judging from my experience of finding one too many “404 not found” and domain-squatted pages while building JURN. One solution that springs to mind might be to build into open access journal software an automatic “collect all the articles into a single POD-ready printable 8″ x 10″ PDF and upload it on publication to a print-on-demand book printer” (such as Lulu). National deposit libraries could then access a uniform printed (although probably not archival/acid-free) copy for their stacks. And so could anyone else who wanted a printed copy.

Another rather more humourous idea might be to have a Big Red Button integrated into the journal’s software control panel — especially useful for graduate Cultural Studies ejournals perhaps — marked:

“We can’t be bothered any more, upload everything to archive.org and then delete the website”

Of course, a ‘brute force’ approach would be to buy a fat new hard-drive and then run site-ripper software (free tools such as the British Library Web Curator Tool and the independent WinHTTrack spring to mind) on the JURN Directory. But there’s a problem — many independent ejournals keep their article files at a radically different URL than that of the home website. A third of the time you’d end up with a nice snapshot of the website, but no articles. Unless you could specifically tell the software to download all unique off-site files/pages that were being directly linked to by the targetted website (that’s if you’re lucky and the journal doesn’t use scripted “bouncing-bomb” URLs that dynamically bounce into repositories to get the PDF). But then, many journal entry-points are just a page on a larger departmental website — so you could end up hauling in terabytes of unwanted material either way.

Or for a more managed solution, one could spend £12,000 paying students at £12 an hour to spend an average of 40 minutes per title (across 1,700 titles), to go in and hand-archive all the articles and TOCs into named directories on a hard-drive. Even if management bloated the cost, I’d guess an initial archival capture could probably be done for less than £50k? Heck, I’ll do it myself if someone wants to offer me £50k.

Of course, if librarians had made and promoted just one simple little Google-friendly tagging/flagging standard for online open-access journal articles… then none of this would have been needed.

Lincoln pie

05 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search

≈ Leave a comment

Paul Stainthorp at Lincoln University (in the British Isles) has quantified the real-world electronic journal usage he’s seeing at the library…

“12% of all our usage — one eighth — derives from journals which we don’t pay for. Most of this is from journals listed in the EBSCO Open Access Journals package.”

He’s put together a handy pie chart…

ejourpie

According to EBSCO, this is a package of “nearly 2,000” open access titles, including science, medicine, politics, business, etc.

Mind your language

05 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Official and think-tank reports

≈ Leave a comment

A new June 2009 position paper from the British Academy, arising from a one year study to…

“investigate the hypothesis that UK humanities and social science research was becoming increasingly insular in outlook (and even in aims)”

… due to the way in which, it is claimed, a…

“lack of [ second ] language skills inflicts a real handicap on scholars”.

Inward-looking UK funding models may also be a strong factor, although this is not mentioned. And the incredible barriers raised by European universities against British academic job-seekers.

Equally worryingly, the report talks of…

“An over-reliance on imported talent” … [ humanities and social science ] “university departments are increasingly addressing this skills shortage by buying-in the skills they need from abroad, rather than by seeking to help UK researchers and academics to ‘upskill’.”

That sounds very familiar. A very accurate observation, I’d say.

In the absence of such UK language skills, perhaps we need a Google Translate specialist ‘Humanities Scholar version’. Along with serious up-skilling on search in other languages. In China you can’t become even a junior academic, unless you pass a rigorous state test on how to use Google ‘to the max’. The test includes…

“how to use Google for automatic translation from Chinese to English or the other way round”

Google Scholar and Its Competitors

04 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search

≈ Leave a comment

Due for publication in the Autumn of 2009, an interesting-sounding book called Google Scholar and Its Competitors : Accessing Scholarly Resources on the Web by Ingrid Hsieh-Yee.

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