The Comparative Importance of Books: Clinical Psychology in the Health Sciences Library

WSU CORE Repository

 

The Comparative Importance of Books: Clinical Psychology in the Health Sciences Library

Show full item record

Preview: Thumbnail
Title: The Comparative Importance of Books: Clinical Psychology in the Health Sciences Library
Author: Wehmeyer, Jeffrey M.; Wehmeyer, Susan
Abstract:

Clinical psychology has received little attention as a subject in health sciences library collections. This study seeks to demonstrate the relative importance of the monographic literature to clinical psychology through the examination of citations in graduate student theses and dissertations at the Fordham Health Sciences Library, Wright State University. Dissertations and theses were sampled randomly; citations were classified by format, counted, and subjected to statistical analysis. Books and book chapters together account for 35% of the citations in clinical psychology dissertations, 25% in nursing theses, and 8% in biomedical sciences theses and dissertations. Analysis of variance indicates that the citations in dissertations and theses in the three areas differ significantly (F = 162.2 with 2 and 253 degrees of freedom, P = 0.0001). Dissertations and theses in biomedical sciences and nursing theses both cite significantly more journals per book than the dissertations in clinical psychology. These results support the hypothesis that users of clinical psychology literature rely more heavily on books than many other users of a health sciences library. Problems with using citation analyses in a single subject to determine a serials to monographs ratio for a health sciences library are pointed out.

Bookmark: http://hdl.handle.net/2374.WSU/4803
Date: April 1999

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Wehmeyer_clincalpsych.pdf 935Kb application/pdf Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Search CORE


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

About

Links