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What we talk about when we talk about medical librarianship: an analysis of Medical Library Association annual meeting abstracts, 2001–2019
- Source :
- Journal of the Medical Library Association, Vol 108, Iss 3 (2020), Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA, vol 108, iss 3, Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- University Library System, University of Pittsburgh, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Objective: This study seeks to gain initial insight into what is talked about and whose voices are heard at Medical Library Association (MLA) annual meetings.Methods: Meeting abstracts were downloaded from the MLA website and converted to comma-separated values (CSV) format. Descriptive analysis in Python identified the number of presentations, disambiguated authors, author collaboration, institutional affiliation type, and geographic affiliation. Topics were generated using Mallet’s Latent Dirichlet Allocation algorithm for topic modeling.Results: There were 5,781 presentations at MLA annual meetings from 2001–2019. Author disambiguation resulted in approximately 5,680 unique authors. One thousand ninety-three records included a hospital-related keyword in the author field, and 4,517 records included an academic-related keyword. There were 438 presentations with at least 1 international author. The topic model identified 16 topics in the MLA abstract corpus: events, electronic resources, publications, evidence-based practice, collections, academic instruction, librarian roles and relationships, technical systems, special collections, general instruction, literature searching, surveys, research support, community outreach, patient education, and library services.Conclusions: Academic librarians presented more frequently than hospital librarians, though more research should be done to determine if this discrepancy was disproportionate to hospital librarians’ representation in MLA. Geographic affiliation was concentrated in the United States and appeared to be related to population density. Health sciences librarians in the early twenty-first century are spending more time at MLA annual meetings talking about communities, relationships, and visible services, and less time talking about library collections and operations. Further research will be needed to boost the participation of underrepresented members.
- Subjects :
- Topic model
Abstracting and Indexing
topic modeling
MEDLINE
Library science
Special collections
Information & Library Sciences
lcsh:Medicine
Health Informatics
Medical library
Library and Information Sciences
professional organizations
conferences
Library and Information Studies
Librarians
Humans
Sociology
Meeting Abstracts
mla
topic model
Mallet
Original Investigation
medical library association
annual meetings
Library Science
lcsh:R
Congresses as Topic
United States
lcsh:Z
lcsh:Bibliography. Library science. Information resources
Outreach
Library Services
Library Associations
Professional association
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15589439 and 15365050
- Volume :
- 108
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of the Medical Library Association
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....edef1541999d31536af1b86718c1b663