Quantifying Interdisciplinarity: Subject Librarians as Research Collaborators
MSU Affiliations
University Libraries; Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library; College of Arts and Sciences; Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures
Item Type
Article
Abstract
Interdisciplinary research presents unique challenges and unique opportunities for collaboration, but measuring the impact of interdisciplinary research creates particular opportunities for subject librarians. Researchers working in the field of applied zooarchaeology collect data about ancient animal populations by examining animal remains found at archaeological sites. These data provide historic insights that would be of use to scholars working in a variety of disciplines, but the question has lingered among applied zooarchaeologists as to whether their colleagues in other disciplines have been discovering and citing the published data. The authors of the current study designed a citation analysis to measure the impact of applied zooarchaeological publications beyond the traditional disciplinary boundaries of anthropology/archaeology. The authors then reflect on the implications of the findings for not just applied zooarchaeology, but for interdisciplinarity, for discovery and collection management, and for collaboration and demonstrating value.
Publication Date
7-2-2021
Publication Title
The Journal of Academic Librarianship
Publisher
Elsevier
First Page
1
Last Page
7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2021.102419
Recommended Citation
Nolen, David S.; Kathuria, Sheeji; and Peacock, Evan, "Quantifying Interdisciplinarity: Subject Librarians as Research Collaborators" (2021). Publications. 35.
https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/works_publications/35