Mountbatten offers a vivid description of the current‐awareness function using the analogy of a very wide conveyor‐belt, representing the information publishers, on which books, periodicals and reports appear at random: ‘The searcher is on a platform just above the belt and as the information material passes underneath he can pick up and read anything that he thinks might be of interest to him. You can imagine his frustration as he realises that for every item he takes time to examine, hundreds of others of possible interest to him have passed by’. Personality and environment will determine whether the individual can find an intelligent compromise between the extremes of neurosis induced by worrying about the material he is missing, or complacency with any system which produces one or two interesting items.
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1 February 1975
Review Article|
February 01 1975
COMPUTER‐BASED CURRENT AWARENESS SERVICES Available to Purchase
P. LEGGATE
P. LEGGATE
Experimental Information Unit, University of Oxford
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7379
Print ISSN: 0022-0418
© MCB UP Limited
1975
Journal of Documentation (1975) 31 (2): 93–115.
Citation
LEGGATE P (1975), "COMPUTER‐BASED CURRENT AWARENESS SERVICES". Journal of Documentation, Vol. 31 No. 2 pp. 93–115, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb026596
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