Digital Natives and Specialised Digital Libraries: A Study of Europeana Users
Göster/ Aç
Tarih
2010Yazar
Dobreva, Milena
Mcculloch, Emma
Birrell, Duncan
Ünal, Yurdagül
Feliciati, Pierluigi
Üst veri
Tüm öğe kaydını gösterÖzet
The alignment of user needs with the technical capabilities of modern digital libraries is an area attracting
the interest of researchers and practitioners. Europeana, conceived with the intention of offering a single access
point to European cultural heritage, has been developed in recent years with a continuous effort to identify and
respond to the needs of a range of users. This paper presents a study of two user communities – young people and
the general public. The study, conducted between October 2009 and January 2010, comprised a series of focus
groups and media labs in Bulgaria, Italy, the Netherlands and the UK. A distinctive aspect of this study is that it
combines questionnaire-based and verbal feedback gathered from users with evidence of user actions whilst
undertaking a well-defined task. The paper presents the context and the methodology of the study, and some of the
data gathered within the study which helps to understand better the attitude of digital natives towards specialised
digital libraries. The data analysis supports several conclusions: specialised digital libraries require strong
advocacy to target the “digital natives”1
generation which tends to prefer general purpose search engines to
specialised resources; young users are confident that they know how to use advanced search yet there is little
evidence of their applying these skills in contrast to general public users; the perception of digital libraries differs in
groups from different countries. The study contributes to the better understanding of some behavioural
characteristics of users of digital libraries.