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22 - Usability evaluation of Ebrary and OverDrive e-book online systems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2018

Anne Morris
Affiliation:
Reader, Department of Information Science, Loughborough University, UK
Panos Balatsoukas
Affiliation:
Greek State Scholarship Foundation (IKY) Scholar, Loughborough University, UK
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Summary

Introduction

The publishing industry's largest growing sector is e-book sales (Macworld, 2004). For example, e-book sales for the first quarter of 2004 in the USA were up 46%, and e-book revenues were up 28% compared to the same quarter in 2003, according to the Open e-book Forum (2004). One sector likely to benefit from this growth is higher education, because the provision of e-books can be seen as a core feature of integrated e-learning strategies and synergies such as managed learning environments (MLEs) and virtual learning environments (JISC, 2003). Although many problems surround the provision of e-books, such as pricing and licensing ambiguity, budget constraints, and content bias towards the American market (Armstrong et al., 2002), e-books are making inroads into academia. Ebooks are being purchased from individual publishers, and aggregators of e-books, such as ebrary, OverDrive and NetLibrary, already established in the USA, are starting to penetrate the UK market. The latter provide integrated solutions for libraries based on remote-access servers that accumulate collections of e-books provided by different publishers. Although some research has been undertaken investigating the use of aggregators in public libraries (Dearnley et al., 2005) little has been done in the academic sector, particularly with respect to the usability of such services.

Some usability research has been undertaken on e-books in general, however. The Visual book experiment, for example, was one of the early attempts to define particular issues concerning the design of usable e-books (Landoni et al., 2000). The experiment revealed the positive implications of visual rhetoric and the book metaphor in e-book design. In addition, the Web project that followed the Visual experiment revealed that ‘scannability’ further improves the reading and overall usability of e-books (Landoni et al., 2000). The EBONI project followed. As part of this project a series of experiments was conducted, for example the Web Book II and the Psychology e-book projects, which confirmed the need for scannability and the book metaphor in the design and usability of e-books (Wilson et al., 2003), and a usability assessment of three online encyclopaedias that revealed the need to integrate web interaction features with the book metaphor (Wilson et al., 2004).

Type
Chapter
Information
Libraries Without Walls 6
Evaluating the Distributed Delivery of Library Services
, pp. 211 - 223
Publisher: Facet
Print publication year: 2006

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