The Data Deluge: Can Libraries Cope with E-Science?

The Data Deluge: Can Libraries Cope with E-Science?

Our Price:  £15.99

Availability:  

  

In stock

Condition:  New
Format:  Paperback
Pages:  142
Publisher:  ABC-CLIO
Year:  2009
ISBN:  9781591588870

An essential collection of essays for librarians looking to support E-science programs and capabilities to their institutions.

From the frontiers of contemporary information science research comes this helpful and timely volume for libraries preparing for the deluge of data that E-science can deliver to their patrons and institutions. The Data Deluge: Can Libraries Cope with E-Science? brings together nine of the world's foremost authorities on the capabilities and requirements of E-science, offering their perspectives to librarians hoping to develop similar programs for their own institutions.

The essays contained in The Data Deluge were adapted from papers first delivered at the prestigious annual Library Round Table at the Kanazawa Institute of Technology, where E-science has been the theme from the past two annual conferences. Now this groundbreaking work is available in convenient printed format for the first time. The essays are divided into three parts: an overview of E-science challenges for libraries; perspectives on E-science; and perspectives from individual research libraries.


  • Comprises essays from nine expert contributors-each an innovator who has successfully integrated E-science programs at their institutions
  • Includes bibliographies to additional readings and resources about E-science
You may also like
30-Second Data Science: The 50 Key Principles and Innovations in the Field of Data-Gathering, Each Explained in Half a Minute
Liberty Vittert
Condition: Used, Like New
£15.99   £8.99

30-Second Data Science covers 50 key elements in the field of data-gathering from basic to ethics, explained clearly and concisely.


Summoned by Science: Reporting Climate Change at Copenhagen and Beyond
James Painter
Condition: New
£7.99

In Summoned by Science: Reporting Climate Change at Copenhagen and Beyond, researchers analysed more than 400 articles published in the print media in 12 countries from the developed and developing world. They found that the media in all the countries tended to 'under-report' climate science during the ...


Economists Can Be Bad for Your Health: Second Thoughts on the Dismal Science
George P. Brockway
Condition: New
£12.99   £2.99

Impersonal forces do not make economic decisions: we do. And what we decide not only determines our society's material well-being but also reflects ethical choices.