Archival digital image collections are a relatively new phenomenon in college library archives. Digitizing archival image collections may make them accessible to users worldwide. There has been no study to explore whether collections on the Internet lead to users who are beyond the institution or a comparison of users to a national or international audience. This study of the Orang Asli Archive, a repository for anthropological, historical, journalistic, and other documentary sources relevant to Orang Asli peoples and cultures of Malaysia, examines the Web analytics of its digital archival image collections.
The official results of the 2015 ACRL elections Ann Campion Riley, associate director for access, collections, and technical services at the University of Missouri, is the 78th president of ACRL. "I am thrilled to be the next person on a long line of hard-working librarians to have the opportunity of leading ACRL. The inspiring experience of working with a future-oriented Board of Directors will be wonderful. Active ACRL members are all hard-workers, and bring a great spirit of inquiry to the organization. Furthering ACRL's current initiatives such as the Value of Libraries work and the study of the role of research data curation in libraries are continuing challenges. Looking for the next set of challenges won't take long as ACRL looks forward and works to engage and serve new and current members." As president, Campion Riley will preside over the ACRL Board of Directors and ACRL Executive Committee, and plan ACRL's major program at the 2016 ALA Annual Conference. She will work with the ALA president and other division presidents representing ACRL both within and outside of ALA. Riley's activities in ACRL include serving as a member of the ACRL Board of
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.