Elina Late
University of Tampere
37 Papers
73 Citations
Elina Late is an academic researcher from University of Tampere. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reading (process) & Scholarly communication. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 21 publications. Previous affiliations of Elina Late include Tampere University of Technology.
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Papers
Research data services in European academic research libraries
Carol Tenopir,Sanna Talja,Wolfram Horstmann,Elina Late,Dane Hughes,Danielle Pollock,Birgit Schmidt,Lynn Baird,Robert J. Sandusky,Suzie Allard +9 more
TL;DR: A survey of the Association of European Research Libraries (LIBER) academic member libraries to discover what types of research data services (RDS) are being offered by European academic research libraries and what services are planned for the future is presented in this paper.
Research Data Services in European Academic Research Libraries (Submitted)
Carol Tenopir,Sanna Talja,Wolfram Horstmann,Elina Late,Dane Hughes,Birgit Schmidt,Lynn Baird,Robert J. Sandusky,Suzie Allard +8 more
- 01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: A survey of directors of the Association of European Research Libraries (LIBER) academic member libraries is presented to discover what types of research data services (RDS) are being offered by European academic research libraries and what services are planned for the future.
56
Reading practices in scholarly work : from articles and books to blogs
TL;DR: The role of reading in scholarly work among academics in Finland is examined to provide a more up-to-date and single-country contextualized overview of how researchers find and use scholarly information in their work.
19
Use and users of a social science research data archive.
Elina Late,Jaana Kekäläinen +1 more
TL;DR: It is likely that reusing research data will increase in the near future as more data will become available, scholars are more informed about research data management, and data citation practices are established.
Changes in Scholarly Reading in Finland Over a Decade: Influences of E-Journals and Social Media
TL;DR: The authors in this paper show that researchers use a growing range of sources to find and access scholarly articles and that some reading patterns are changing, such as searching and browsing are decreasing, while researchers are using more social ways to locate articles.