Are e-readers suitable tools for scholarly work?
Siegfried Schomisch, Maria Zens, Philipp Mayr

TL;DR
This study evaluates the usability and limitations of e-readers for scholarly work, revealing that current devices and formats do not fully support the complex needs of academic reading and annotation.
Contribution
It provides empirical insights into how e-readers perform in scholarly contexts, highlighting deficiencies and suggesting areas for improvement in file formats and device features.
Findings
E-readers lack seamless support for non-linear reading and annotation.
Performance varies across devices and formats, with notable deficiencies.
Small sample size limits generalizability, requiring further research.
Abstract
This paper aims to offer insights into the usability, acceptance and limitations of e-readers with regard to the specific requirements of scholarly text work. To fit into the academic workflow non-linear reading, bookmarking, commenting, extracting text or the integration of non-textual elements must be supported. A group of social science students were questioned about their experiences with electronic publications for study purposes. This same group executed several text-related tasks with the digitized material presented to them in two different file formats on four different e-readers. Their performances were subsequently evaluated by means of frequency analyses in detail. Findings - e-Publications have made advances in the academic world; however e-readers do not yet fit seamlessly into the established chain of scholarly text-processing focusing on how readers use material during…
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