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The UK electronic information Group is pleased to announce the publication
of Volume 15 (1-2) 2018 of our online journal eLucidate. PDF and HTML
versions available here:


https://tinyurl.com/ycrrzlv3


or go to: http://www.ukeig.org.uk


and choose 'eLucidate' from the Group Pages drop down menu.



A vote of thanks to the expert contributors who have made this special
double issue so thought-provoking and informative. Many of the articles
celebrate the ongoing success of UKeiG's continuing professional
development programme and highlight our upcoming courses for the remainder
of 2018.



Karen Blakeman laments the dumbing down of the search functionality of
Google. Are its days as a research tool over? She identifies the “useless
and irrelevant” pursuit of revenue generating mobile personalisation
options as the culprit and rally cries that now is the time to consider
alternative search tools.



Andrew Cox reflects on the growing importance of data in the work of
academic librarians and information professionals. He articulates a “data
role spectrum” that embraces familiar skills sets like information/data
literacy, training, collection management and metadata, but throws many
unfamiliar competencies into the mix: data curation, integrity, analysis
and visualisation.  Data management offers huge opportunities to extend and
enhance the skills and knowledge academic librarians have had for years.
New wine in old bottles perhaps.



David Ball builds on this theme with an exposition of the emergence of Open
Science and Open Data. Notably he emphasises that this developing paradigm
goes way beyond STEM subjects and impacts on social science, arts and
humanities. Research data can be qualitative and well as quantitative and
embrace statistics, digital images, archives, sound recordings and survey
data, for example. He provides an extensive overview of Open Science and
Open Data, their rationale and potential. This article is a taster of his
successful UKeiG CPD course – “Open Access, Open Data, Open Science:
Anatomy of a disruptive technology” - which we hope to repeat early next
year.



Martin White emphasises the relevance of academic research on the success
of enterprise search projects. “Academic research may not provide
definitive answers to very difficult issues but it can provide a
vendor-independent framework for discussion and inspiration.” He emphasises
valuable research that has significant implications for enterprise search
success, introducing us to concepts like “information scent” along the way.
If you have responsibility for search management in your organisation,
Martin’s article is a must read.


Marlize Palmer O.B.E, UKeiG’s Information Manager of the Year (2016) and
James Dawes-Hughes explore the role a Library Management System can play in
the archiving and preservation of tweets. Twitter has a huge role to play
in research, linking information from a variety of sources including emails
and Word documents.


We also have our regular online resources update and an insight into the
rationale behind Internet Librarian International’s upcoming twentieth
birthday conference.



This issue concludes with a celebration of our prestigious Strix Award as
we prepare for the 2018 Annual Memorial Lecture in London on Friday
23 November 2018. We hope to see you there. Until then, enjoy this issue
and please give us your feedback and join us in discussions on our Twitter,
LinkedIn and Facebook accounts.



An archive of previous issues of eLucidate is available on the UKeiG website.
We endeavour to feature contributions from experts in the field, keeping
members up to date with developments and innovations in the digital
information industry, considering the impact on information professionals
and consumers of e-information. Core topics for consideration include:
digital literacy, effective information retrieval and search technologies,
intranets, social media, open access, e-publishing and e-industry research
and development. UKeiG encourages the submission of articles and reports
about any of the topics covered by the journal, and contributions and
suggestions for content can be emailed to: [log in to unmask]


*********************************************************************************************
 UKeiG is a Special Interest Group of CILIP: the library and information
association
 7 Ridgmount Street, London, WC1E 7AE. Registered Charity No. 313014
 *********************************************************************************************


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