previous sub-section
Chapter 11— Analysis of JSTOR The Impact on Scholarly Practice of Access to On-line Journal Archives
next chapter

References

Broadbent, E. A. (1986). Study of humanities faculty library information seeking behavior. Cataloging and Classification Quarterly, 6, 23-37.

Carley, K., & Wendt, K. (1991). Electronic mail and scientific communication: A study of the SOAR extended research group. Knowledge: Creation, Diffusion, Utilization, 12, 406-440.

Finholt, T. A., & Olson, G. M. (1997). From laboratories to collaboratories: A new organizational form for scientific collaboration. Psychological Science, 8, 28-36.

Fox, E. A., Akscyn, R. M., Furuta, R. K., & Leggett, J. J. (Eds.). (1995). Digital libraries [Special issue]. Communications of the ACM, 38(4).

Garvey, W. D. (1979). Communication: The essence of science. Toronto: Pergamon Press.

Garvey, W. D., Lin, N., & Nelson, C. E. (1970). Communication in the physical social sciences. Science, 170, 1166-1173.

Hesse, Bradford W., Sproull, Lee S., & Kiesler, Sara B. (1993). Returns to science: Computer network in oceanography. Communications of the ACM, 26(8) (August), 90-101.

Kling, R., & Covi, L. (1996). Electronic journals and legitimate media. The Information Society, 11, 261-271.

Lougee, W. P., Sandler, M. S., & Parker, L.L. (1990). The Humanistic Scholars Project: A study of attitudes and behavior concerning collection storage and technology. College and Research Libraries, 51, 231-240.

Odlyzko, A. (1995). Tragic loss or good riddance? The impending demise of traditional scholarly journals. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 42, 71-122.

Olsen, J. (1994). Electronic journal literature: Implications for scholars. Westport, CT: Mecklermedia.

Sabine, G. A., & Sabine, P. L. (1986). How people use books and journals. Library Quarterly, 56, 399-408.


194

Schuegraf, E. J., & van Bommel, M. F. (1994). An analysis of personal journal subscriptions of university faculty. Part II: Arts and professional programs. Journal of the American Society of Information Science, 45, 477-482.

Simpson, A. (1988). Academic journal usage. British Journal of Academic Librarianship, 3, 25-36.

Stenstrom, P., & McBride, R. B. (1979). Serial use by social science faculty: A survey. College and Research Libraries, 40, 426-431.

Taubes, G. (1993). Publication by electronic mail takes physics by storm. Science, 259, 1246-1248.

Tobin, J. (1958). Estimation of relationship for limited dependent variables. Econometrica, 26, 24-36.

Walsh, J. P., & Bayma, T. (1997). Computer networks and scientific work. In S. B. Kiesler (Ed.), Culture of the Internet. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.


195

previous sub-section
Chapter 11— Analysis of JSTOR The Impact on Scholarly Practice of Access to On-line Journal Archives
next chapter