Library journal use and citation age in medical science

This study explores the in‐house use age distribution of journals in the library of Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan, their citation age distribution and the difference between them. The use study employed the sweep method and the study period lasted for six months. The citation age of each journal in this study was based on the data listed in the Science Citation Index, Journal Citation Reports, 1993. The results of this study illustrate that the use age distribution for the mean of all the journals is an exponentially decaying curve. On the other hand, the citation age distributions show a sharp initial rise from age one to three or four years and then fall off in a sort of exponential decay; and the age of maximum citation is typically three years. About 80 per cent of uses are attributed to journals less than ten years old, while these journals contribute about 70 per cent of total citations. The Kolmogorov‐Smirnov two‐sample test indicates that the use age distribution does not fit the citation age distribution.

[1]  M. Tsay Library journal use and citation half-line in medical science , 1998 .

[2]  Allen Kent,et al.  Use of Library Materials: The University of Pittsburgh Study. , 1979 .

[3]  B. C. Brookes Obsolescence of special library periodicals: Sampling errors and utility contours , 1970 .

[4]  A. J. Meadows THE CITATION CHARACTERISTICS OF ASTRONOMICAL RESEARCH LITERATURE , 1967 .

[5]  Ming-Yueh Tsay,et al.  Library Journal Use and Citation Half-Life in Medical Science , 1998, J. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci..

[6]  M. Carl Drott,et al.  The aging of Scientific literature: a citation Analysis , 1979, J. Documentation.

[7]  Michael V. Sullivan Obsolescence in Biomedical Journals: Not an Artifact of Literature Growth. , 1980 .

[8]  Dianne Rothenberg,et al.  Changing Values in the Published Literature with Time , 1993, Libr. Trends.

[9]  Allen Kent,et al.  Use of library materials in terms of age , 1976, J. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci..

[10]  M. Tsay The relationship between journal use in a medical library and citation use. , 1998, Bulletin of the Medical Library Association.

[11]  R. E. Burton,et al.  The “half‐life” of some scientific and technical literatures , 1960 .

[12]  Danny Paul Wallace The relationship between journal productivity and obsolescence in a subject literature , 1985 .

[13]  F. W. Lancaster,et al.  Synchronous versus diachronous methods in the measurement of obsolescence by citation studies , 1987, J. Inf. Sci..

[14]  Alexander Sandison,et al.  Densities of use, and absence of obsolescence, in physics journals at M I T , 1974, J. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci..

[15]  Ching-Chih Chen The use patterns of physics journals in a large academic research library , 1972, J. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci..

[16]  Maurice B. Line,et al.  PROGRESS IN DOCUMENTATION: ‘obsolescence’ and changes in the use of literature with time , 1974 .

[17]  A. Sandison,et al.  THE USE OF OLDER LITERATURE AND ITS OBSOLESCENCE , 1971 .