Finding and Recommending Scholarly Articles
Michael J. Kurtz, Edwin A. Henneken

TL;DR
This paper discusses the evolving landscape of scholarly literature discovery, emphasizing the importance of recommender systems as integral components of modern scholarly information systems that enhance human-machine collaboration.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive perspective on scholarly article recommendation systems as part of larger information systems, highlighting their role in managing information overload.
Findings
Scholarly literature production increases by 3.5% annually.
Traditional discovery methods are now supplemented by online systems.
Recommender systems are crucial in modern scholarly information retrieval.
Abstract
The rate at which scholarly literature is being produced has been increasing at approximately 3.5 percent per year for decades. This means that during a typical 40 year career the amount of new literature produced each year increases by a factor of four. The methods scholars use to discover relevant literature must change. Just like everybody else involved in information discovery, scholars are confronted with information overload. Two decades ago, this discovery process essentially consisted of paging through abstract books, talking to colleagues and librarians, and browsing journals. A time-consuming process, which could even be longer if material had to be shipped from elsewhere. Now much of this discovery process is mediated by online scholarly information systems. All these systems are relatively new, and all are still changing. They all share a common goal: to provide their users…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInformation Retrieval and Search Behavior · Data Quality and Management · Web Data Mining and Analysis
