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RLG Programs
Measuring Uniqueness in
System-wide Book Holdings:
Implications for Collection
Management
Constance Malpas
Program Officer
RLG Programs
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
2
This presentation
 Summarizes recent data-mining efforts by OCLC
Programs and Research
 System-wide sample (Summer 2007 – Spring 2008)
 ARL unique print books (Autumn 2007)
 Suggests implications for collection managers
 Outlines next steps for RLG Programs
 An opportunity to discuss what additional
evidence and analysis is needed
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
3
What we mean by ‘last copy’
 Monographic title uniquely-held by a single
WorldCat contributor
 Cf. „single copy‟ repositories, where „last copy‟ is relative
to local/group holdings
 May represent a last manifestation, expression or
work
 Bibliographic records describe manifestations, not
copies; unique manifestations are the point of departure
for analysis
 Some are intrinsically unique; others are
rendered unique by erosion of system-wide
holdings
 Historical data may help document increased copy or
work-level availability, but weren‟t included in the
studies presented here
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
4
Distribution of uniquely-held print books
in ARL member institutions
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
700,000
LC
YaleAlberta
C
olum
bia
U
C
hicago
U
CLA
M
cG
ill
Penn
U
vaH
aw
aii
U
M
d
San
Diego
SU
NY
BuffaloR
utgers
D
artm
outh
N
otre
Dam
eO
regonG
A
Tech
D
elaware
Florida
State
So
IllinoisAlabam
a
Irvine
G
W
U
W
ayne
State
York
Virginia
TechW
A
State
C
ase
W
esternM
anitobaH
ow
ard
ARL member institution
Uniquetitles
Distribution of wealth: ARL unique books
A classic Pareto distribution
20% of the population holds >75% of unique titles
Median institutional
holdings = 19K titles
institutional excellence?
(or) a “network effect?”
N = 6.95 M titles
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
5
Why focus on uniquely-held titles?
 “Scarcity is common”
 limited redundancy in holdings = limited preservation
guarantee, limited opportunity to create economies of scale by
aggregating supply
 Research institutions bear the brunt of responsibility for
long-term preservation and access of unique titles
 Academic and independent research libraries hold up to 70%
of aggregate unique print book collection
 Continuing costs of managing (storing, providing access to)
print collections are high; use is generally declining
 Space pressure on physical plant (on-campus, remote) is high;
understanding distribution and characteristics of unique
holdings can inform decisions about disposition of physical
collection
 Increased attention to stewardship of special collections
 ARL SCWG, CLIR, LC Task Force on Bibliographic Control –
new attention to what constitutes „special‟ collections,
appropriate standards of care, modes and metrics of use
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
6
Challenges
 Identification requires group / network view of holdings
 WorldCat provides a reasonably proxy for system-wide
collection
 Some materials (MSS, theses and dissertations, etc.) are
intrinsically unique; not all can be algorithmically identified
in MARC records
 hybrid approach combines computational and manual
analysis of bibliographic data
 Sparse bibliographic records impede efficient work/title
matching, may introduce spurious measure of uniqueness
 external sources (including Google) sometimes helpful in
filling gaps
 Non-English titles (especially transliterated non-roman
scripts) are especially difficult to match
 we resisted the temptation to exclude these
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
7
Study I: System-wide Sampling
 250 randomly selected, uniquely-held titles
 Limited to printed books (including theses) published
before 2005
 English-language cataloging only
 Iterative re-sampling required to fill gaps
 Independently reviewed by three project staff
 Level of uniqueness
 Material type
 Results periodically collated for group analysis
 Compare results of individual analysis for consistency
 Seek consensus on difficult cases – relatively few of
these
 Re-sample as necessary to fill gaps
 White paper anticipated March 2008
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
8
Study II: ARL uniquely-held books
 Ad hoc analysis by RLG Programs, prompted by IMLS
Connecting to Collections grant announcement
 How might the existing evidence base be used to focus
regional preservation investments?
 Based on January 2007 snapshot of WorldCat database:
13M records for titles (6.95M print books) uniquely held by
ARL institutions; 300+ OCLC symbols; 123 institutions
 Iterative analysis examined relative impact of
theses/dissertations and recent imprints on system-wide
uniqueness; regional and institutional distribution of holdings
 Findings shared with ARL Special Collections Working Group
(October 2007) and selected RLG partner institutions (UC;
CIC; ReCAP; Harvard; ASU; NYU)
 Heritage Preservation willing to share Heritage Health survey
data for cross-tabulation on as-needed basis
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
9
Limitations
 Current studies limited to printed books –
excludes serials, special collections; only a partial
measure of uniqueness in system-wide collection
 Incomplete representation of world book
collection; for non-English titles especially,
uniqueness of North American holdings is only
relative
 Cataloging backlogs of up to 5 years mean that
holdings for recent acquisitions are imperfectly
reflected
 Incomplete coverage of rare books and special
collections prior to (ongoing) integration of RLG
Union Catalog
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
10
Our findings – distribution of unique titles
 Research and academic libraries hold >70% of
aggregate unique print book collection
 while value and utility of these holdings may be widely
distributed across the library community, holdings are
concentrated at institutions with a research / teaching /
learning mandate
 limited data on aggregate use, sources of demand
 Institutional distribution of unique holdings is
highly skewed, with a handful of libraries holding
a majority share of collective assets
 ARL unique print book holdings range from 400 – 600K
titles per institution; median holdings = 19K titles
 generally, institutions with large collections hold more
unique materials – but absolute size of collection is not
an indicator of relative uniqueness
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
11
Based on a randomly selected sample of 250 uniquely-held print
book titles in WorldCat (Jan. 2007)
Unique titles by library type
50%
27%
6%
6%
4%
4% 2% 1%
ARL
Academic (non-ARL)
Gov't
State and National
Special
Public
Unknown
Networks
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
12
Distribution of Unique Print Books in ARL Member Institutions
0
100000
200000
300000
400000
500000
600000
700000
LCM
ichigan
N
ALU
W
iscU
rbanaU
W
ash
Em
ory
Pitt
N
ew
M
exicoO
klahom
a
U
tah
KentState
D
avis
Florida
State
VanderbiltW
U
S
TLC
oloradoU
m
ass
Texas
TechM
cM
asterQ
ueen's
P
E
P
National libraries and institutions with deep
collections and an aggressive approach to
collecting and cataloging new monographs –
LC, Harvard, Libraries & Archives Canada –
have an exceptional range of unique holdings
Unique Print Books in ARL Institutions
CRL’s focus on theses and dissertations is
evident – most uniqueness is attributable
to these holdings
Institutions with
younger collections,
actively seeking to
increase scope of
coverage - NCSU,
Temple – are building
uniqueness in new
titles
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
13
Content-type Distributions: CRL and ARL
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Center for
Research Libraries
ARL aggregate
collection
Unique theses
Unique print books pub'd
2000 and after
Unique print books pub'd
before 2000
Intrinsically unique
content, “only copies”
May include “first copies”
in cataloging queue;
uniqueness subject to
rapid erosion
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
14
Our findings – levels of uniqueness
 ~60% of titles represent unique works
 Ex: Report and recommendation … on a proposed loan … equivalent
to US$70 million to the … Islamic Republic of Pakistan for a power
plant efficiency improvement project (1987) – World Bank report held
by George Washington University
 ~15% of titles represent unique manifestations
 Ex. Gallipolis … an account of the French five hundred and of the town
they established … compiled by Workers of the Writers' program of the
Work projects administration (1940) – microform pamphlet held by
Yale University; related manifestations at 40 libraries
 ~5% of titles represent unique expressions
 Ex: E.J. Luck. A pedigree of the families Luck, Lock and Lee (1908) –
book held by Masssanutten Regional Library, VA; similar title (Luck,
Lock) by same author, pub‟d in 1900, held at LC
 ~20% of titles not unambiguously unique: duplicate or near-
duplicate records can be found in WorldCat
 Ex: K. Kimura. Edo no akebono (1956) – book held by Harvard
Yenching; apparent duplicate (cataloged with original scripts) held by
Waseda, Yale
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
15
Our findings – content characterization
Material types
 ~35% are books (>50pp)
 most appear to be non-fiction titles, less likely to have
additional manifestations
 ~20% theses and dissertations
 many at Master‟s level – unlikely to be held beyond issuing
institution
 ~15% government documents
 mostly federal and state, may be duplicated in depositories
 ~10% pamphlets
 unique content, but rarely useful in isolation
 ~10% analytics; single articles or issues bound as a
separate volume
 non-unique content
 <5% early imprints
 lost treasures?
 Small numbers of by-laws, scripts, legal briefs,
minutes, etc.
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
16
Implications
 Institutions with significant unique holdings may benefit
from „splitting the difference‟ between unique works and
manifestations
unique manifestations and analytics should be judged with an
eye to provenance history; unless they contribute to local
distinctiveness, immediate action may not be warranted
 A preliminary sort by material type may help guide local
decision-making regarding the physical disposition of
unique holdings
pamphlets and technical reports may be candidates for
cataloging enhancement and storage transfer; books may be
short-listed for digitization and/or transfer to special
collections
 Institutions with smaller unique print book collections may
benefit from collective action to aggregate supply
(through effective disclosure) and demand (through
special resource-sharing and digitization initiatives) around
specific topical and disciplinary interests
local collections gain in significance when presented in context
with related holdings
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
17
Recommendations
Adopt a nuanced understanding of „relative uniqueness‟ when
assessing local holdings
 Unique manifestations may not represent unique
intellectual content, but may have other value
 As artifacts  special collections
 As a networked resource  increased availability
 Unique works may gain relevance and value when
presented as part of a larger disciplinary or topical
collection
 Theses and dissertations may benefit from special discovery
tools, integration in local scholarly communications initiatives
 Pamphlets and technical reports may be virtually aggregated
for specific communities of use
 Maximize disclosure of unique holdings to increase their
impact and value
 Focus on use and utility of unique holdings to ensure
long-term preservation, enduring value to parent institution
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
18
What’s Next . . .
 Holdings validation study will examine a sample
of scarcely-held (<5 copies) US imprints in
North-American research libraries
 Compare current WorldCat holdings to historical holdings
– looking for signs of collection erosion; elimination of
local backlogs (diminishing uniqueness)
 Compare local holdings to current WorldCat holdings –
location changes/storage transfers, withdrawals
 Assess impact of local preservation actions on system-
wide holdings (availability, condition) and potential
value of „full disclosure‟
 Collaborative effort with RLG partner institutions
anticipated Spring/Summer 2008
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
19
Some closing observations
Opportunities
 Large research libraries hold a wealth of unique materials –
long tail resources with broad potential audience
 Aggregated bibliographic data supports programmatic
analysis and enrichment – work-level clustering,
identification of duplicates
 Largest institutions, with enduring commitments to
retention and access, hold majority of potential „at risk‟
titles
Challenges
 Libraries ill-equipped to measure potential demand for
unique holdings
 Technical and social infrastructure for aggregating supply is
lacking
 University presses are potential distribution partners, but
alliances are weak
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
20
Questions, Comments?
 „Managing the Collective Collection‟ work agenda
 Data-mining for management intelligence
 Shared print collections
http://www.oclc.org/programs/ourwork/collectivecoll
 Midwinter RLG Update Session
1:30-3:30
Marriott 302-304
 Contact:
Constance Malpas
Program Officer
malpasc@oclc.org
RLG Programs Managing Last Copies
CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008
21
N=5.9M titles
Median institutional holdings =96k unique titles

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Measuring Uniqueness in System-wide Book Holdings: Implications for Collection Management

  • 1. RLG Programs Measuring Uniqueness in System-wide Book Holdings: Implications for Collection Management Constance Malpas Program Officer RLG Programs
  • 2. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 2 This presentation  Summarizes recent data-mining efforts by OCLC Programs and Research  System-wide sample (Summer 2007 – Spring 2008)  ARL unique print books (Autumn 2007)  Suggests implications for collection managers  Outlines next steps for RLG Programs  An opportunity to discuss what additional evidence and analysis is needed
  • 3. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 3 What we mean by ‘last copy’  Monographic title uniquely-held by a single WorldCat contributor  Cf. „single copy‟ repositories, where „last copy‟ is relative to local/group holdings  May represent a last manifestation, expression or work  Bibliographic records describe manifestations, not copies; unique manifestations are the point of departure for analysis  Some are intrinsically unique; others are rendered unique by erosion of system-wide holdings  Historical data may help document increased copy or work-level availability, but weren‟t included in the studies presented here
  • 4. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 4 Distribution of uniquely-held print books in ARL member institutions 0 100,000 200,000 300,000 400,000 500,000 600,000 700,000 LC YaleAlberta C olum bia U C hicago U CLA M cG ill Penn U vaH aw aii U M d San Diego SU NY BuffaloR utgers D artm outh N otre Dam eO regonG A Tech D elaware Florida State So IllinoisAlabam a Irvine G W U W ayne State York Virginia TechW A State C ase W esternM anitobaH ow ard ARL member institution Uniquetitles Distribution of wealth: ARL unique books A classic Pareto distribution 20% of the population holds >75% of unique titles Median institutional holdings = 19K titles institutional excellence? (or) a “network effect?” N = 6.95 M titles
  • 5. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 5 Why focus on uniquely-held titles?  “Scarcity is common”  limited redundancy in holdings = limited preservation guarantee, limited opportunity to create economies of scale by aggregating supply  Research institutions bear the brunt of responsibility for long-term preservation and access of unique titles  Academic and independent research libraries hold up to 70% of aggregate unique print book collection  Continuing costs of managing (storing, providing access to) print collections are high; use is generally declining  Space pressure on physical plant (on-campus, remote) is high; understanding distribution and characteristics of unique holdings can inform decisions about disposition of physical collection  Increased attention to stewardship of special collections  ARL SCWG, CLIR, LC Task Force on Bibliographic Control – new attention to what constitutes „special‟ collections, appropriate standards of care, modes and metrics of use
  • 6. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 6 Challenges  Identification requires group / network view of holdings  WorldCat provides a reasonably proxy for system-wide collection  Some materials (MSS, theses and dissertations, etc.) are intrinsically unique; not all can be algorithmically identified in MARC records  hybrid approach combines computational and manual analysis of bibliographic data  Sparse bibliographic records impede efficient work/title matching, may introduce spurious measure of uniqueness  external sources (including Google) sometimes helpful in filling gaps  Non-English titles (especially transliterated non-roman scripts) are especially difficult to match  we resisted the temptation to exclude these
  • 7. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 7 Study I: System-wide Sampling  250 randomly selected, uniquely-held titles  Limited to printed books (including theses) published before 2005  English-language cataloging only  Iterative re-sampling required to fill gaps  Independently reviewed by three project staff  Level of uniqueness  Material type  Results periodically collated for group analysis  Compare results of individual analysis for consistency  Seek consensus on difficult cases – relatively few of these  Re-sample as necessary to fill gaps  White paper anticipated March 2008
  • 8. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 8 Study II: ARL uniquely-held books  Ad hoc analysis by RLG Programs, prompted by IMLS Connecting to Collections grant announcement  How might the existing evidence base be used to focus regional preservation investments?  Based on January 2007 snapshot of WorldCat database: 13M records for titles (6.95M print books) uniquely held by ARL institutions; 300+ OCLC symbols; 123 institutions  Iterative analysis examined relative impact of theses/dissertations and recent imprints on system-wide uniqueness; regional and institutional distribution of holdings  Findings shared with ARL Special Collections Working Group (October 2007) and selected RLG partner institutions (UC; CIC; ReCAP; Harvard; ASU; NYU)  Heritage Preservation willing to share Heritage Health survey data for cross-tabulation on as-needed basis
  • 9. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 9 Limitations  Current studies limited to printed books – excludes serials, special collections; only a partial measure of uniqueness in system-wide collection  Incomplete representation of world book collection; for non-English titles especially, uniqueness of North American holdings is only relative  Cataloging backlogs of up to 5 years mean that holdings for recent acquisitions are imperfectly reflected  Incomplete coverage of rare books and special collections prior to (ongoing) integration of RLG Union Catalog
  • 10. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 10 Our findings – distribution of unique titles  Research and academic libraries hold >70% of aggregate unique print book collection  while value and utility of these holdings may be widely distributed across the library community, holdings are concentrated at institutions with a research / teaching / learning mandate  limited data on aggregate use, sources of demand  Institutional distribution of unique holdings is highly skewed, with a handful of libraries holding a majority share of collective assets  ARL unique print book holdings range from 400 – 600K titles per institution; median holdings = 19K titles  generally, institutions with large collections hold more unique materials – but absolute size of collection is not an indicator of relative uniqueness
  • 11. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 11 Based on a randomly selected sample of 250 uniquely-held print book titles in WorldCat (Jan. 2007) Unique titles by library type 50% 27% 6% 6% 4% 4% 2% 1% ARL Academic (non-ARL) Gov't State and National Special Public Unknown Networks
  • 12. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 12 Distribution of Unique Print Books in ARL Member Institutions 0 100000 200000 300000 400000 500000 600000 700000 LCM ichigan N ALU W iscU rbanaU W ash Em ory Pitt N ew M exicoO klahom a U tah KentState D avis Florida State VanderbiltW U S TLC oloradoU m ass Texas TechM cM asterQ ueen's P E P National libraries and institutions with deep collections and an aggressive approach to collecting and cataloging new monographs – LC, Harvard, Libraries & Archives Canada – have an exceptional range of unique holdings Unique Print Books in ARL Institutions CRL’s focus on theses and dissertations is evident – most uniqueness is attributable to these holdings Institutions with younger collections, actively seeking to increase scope of coverage - NCSU, Temple – are building uniqueness in new titles
  • 13. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 13 Content-type Distributions: CRL and ARL 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Center for Research Libraries ARL aggregate collection Unique theses Unique print books pub'd 2000 and after Unique print books pub'd before 2000 Intrinsically unique content, “only copies” May include “first copies” in cataloging queue; uniqueness subject to rapid erosion
  • 14. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 14 Our findings – levels of uniqueness  ~60% of titles represent unique works  Ex: Report and recommendation … on a proposed loan … equivalent to US$70 million to the … Islamic Republic of Pakistan for a power plant efficiency improvement project (1987) – World Bank report held by George Washington University  ~15% of titles represent unique manifestations  Ex. Gallipolis … an account of the French five hundred and of the town they established … compiled by Workers of the Writers' program of the Work projects administration (1940) – microform pamphlet held by Yale University; related manifestations at 40 libraries  ~5% of titles represent unique expressions  Ex: E.J. Luck. A pedigree of the families Luck, Lock and Lee (1908) – book held by Masssanutten Regional Library, VA; similar title (Luck, Lock) by same author, pub‟d in 1900, held at LC  ~20% of titles not unambiguously unique: duplicate or near- duplicate records can be found in WorldCat  Ex: K. Kimura. Edo no akebono (1956) – book held by Harvard Yenching; apparent duplicate (cataloged with original scripts) held by Waseda, Yale
  • 15. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 15 Our findings – content characterization Material types  ~35% are books (>50pp)  most appear to be non-fiction titles, less likely to have additional manifestations  ~20% theses and dissertations  many at Master‟s level – unlikely to be held beyond issuing institution  ~15% government documents  mostly federal and state, may be duplicated in depositories  ~10% pamphlets  unique content, but rarely useful in isolation  ~10% analytics; single articles or issues bound as a separate volume  non-unique content  <5% early imprints  lost treasures?  Small numbers of by-laws, scripts, legal briefs, minutes, etc.
  • 16. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 16 Implications  Institutions with significant unique holdings may benefit from „splitting the difference‟ between unique works and manifestations unique manifestations and analytics should be judged with an eye to provenance history; unless they contribute to local distinctiveness, immediate action may not be warranted  A preliminary sort by material type may help guide local decision-making regarding the physical disposition of unique holdings pamphlets and technical reports may be candidates for cataloging enhancement and storage transfer; books may be short-listed for digitization and/or transfer to special collections  Institutions with smaller unique print book collections may benefit from collective action to aggregate supply (through effective disclosure) and demand (through special resource-sharing and digitization initiatives) around specific topical and disciplinary interests local collections gain in significance when presented in context with related holdings
  • 17. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 17 Recommendations Adopt a nuanced understanding of „relative uniqueness‟ when assessing local holdings  Unique manifestations may not represent unique intellectual content, but may have other value  As artifacts  special collections  As a networked resource  increased availability  Unique works may gain relevance and value when presented as part of a larger disciplinary or topical collection  Theses and dissertations may benefit from special discovery tools, integration in local scholarly communications initiatives  Pamphlets and technical reports may be virtually aggregated for specific communities of use  Maximize disclosure of unique holdings to increase their impact and value  Focus on use and utility of unique holdings to ensure long-term preservation, enduring value to parent institution
  • 18. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 18 What’s Next . . .  Holdings validation study will examine a sample of scarcely-held (<5 copies) US imprints in North-American research libraries  Compare current WorldCat holdings to historical holdings – looking for signs of collection erosion; elimination of local backlogs (diminishing uniqueness)  Compare local holdings to current WorldCat holdings – location changes/storage transfers, withdrawals  Assess impact of local preservation actions on system- wide holdings (availability, condition) and potential value of „full disclosure‟  Collaborative effort with RLG partner institutions anticipated Spring/Summer 2008
  • 19. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 19 Some closing observations Opportunities  Large research libraries hold a wealth of unique materials – long tail resources with broad potential audience  Aggregated bibliographic data supports programmatic analysis and enrichment – work-level clustering, identification of duplicates  Largest institutions, with enduring commitments to retention and access, hold majority of potential „at risk‟ titles Challenges  Libraries ill-equipped to measure potential demand for unique holdings  Technical and social infrastructure for aggregating supply is lacking  University presses are potential distribution partners, but alliances are weak
  • 20. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 20 Questions, Comments?  „Managing the Collective Collection‟ work agenda  Data-mining for management intelligence  Shared print collections http://www.oclc.org/programs/ourwork/collectivecoll  Midwinter RLG Update Session 1:30-3:30 Marriott 302-304  Contact: Constance Malpas Program Officer malpasc@oclc.org
  • 21. RLG Programs Managing Last Copies CCDO Meeting, ALA Midwinter – 12 January 2008 21 N=5.9M titles Median institutional holdings =96k unique titles