Implementation of Web 2.0 services in academic, medical and research libraries: a scoping review

Health Info Libr J. 2012 Jun;29(2):90-109. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-1842.2012.00984.x. Epub 2012 Mar 29.

Abstract

Background: Academic, medical and research libraries frequently implement Web 2.0 services for users. Several reports notwithstanding, characteristics and effectiveness of services are unclear.

Objectives: To find out: the Web 2.0 services implemented by medical, academic and research libraries; study designs, measures and types of data used in included articles to evaluate effectiveness; whether the identified body of literature is amenable to a systematic review of results.

Methods: Scoping review mapping the literature on the topic. Searches were performed in 19 databases.

Inclusion criteria: research articles in English, Italian, German, French and Spanish (publication date ≥ 2006) about Web 2.0 services for final users implemented by academic, medical and research libraries. Reviewers' agreement was measured by Cohen's kappa. From a data set of 6461 articles, 255 (4%) were coded and analysed.

Results: Conferencing/chat/instant messaging, blogging, podcasts, social networking, wikis and aggregators were frequently examined. Services were mainly targeted at general academic users of English-speaking countries.

Conclusions: Data prohibit a reliable estimate of the relative frequency of implemented Web 2.0 services. Case studies were the prevalent design. Most articles evaluated different outcomes using diverse assessment methodologies. A systematic review is recommended to assess the effectiveness of such services.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Systematic Review

MeSH terms

  • Evidence-Based Practice / methods*
  • Humans
  • Information Dissemination / methods*
  • Libraries, Digital / organization & administration*
  • Libraries, Digital / trends
  • Libraries, Medical / organization & administration*
  • Libraries, Medical / trends
  • Social Media / organization & administration*
  • Social Media / trends
  • United States