Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology |
| Discipline | Information Science |
| Formernames | Journal of the American Society for Information Science |
| Abbreviation | JASIST |
| Publisher | American Society for Information Science and Technology |
| Country | United States |
| History | 1950–2013 |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Issn | 0000-0000 |
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology was a peer-reviewed periodical associated with the American Society for Information Science and Technology that published research on Library of Congress-related cataloging, Harvard University-style information retrieval, and applied studies linked to institutions such as National Institutes of Health, Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California, Berkeley, and Cornell University. The journal served as a forum connecting scholars from University of Michigan, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Columbia University, University of Toronto, and University College London with practitioners at organizations including Smithsonian Institution, British Library, Library of Congress, National Library of Medicine, and Oxford University Press.
The journal originated in the postwar era alongside organizations such as United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, American Library Association, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the Association for Computing Machinery, reflecting influences from figures connected to Vannevar Bush, Claude Shannon, Norbert Wiener, Herbert Simon, and Melvil Dewey. Early editorial decisions intersected with policies from National Science Foundation and debates led by scholars affiliated with Princeton University, Yale University, Brown University, and Dartmouth College. Over decades the journal documented developments contemporaneous with events like the rise of ARPANET, the founding of World Wide Web Consortium, the launch of Google, and initiatives at Microsoft Research, IBM Research, Bell Labs, and AT&T. Organizational changes involved partnerships with publishers such as Wiley-Blackwell, interactions with societies including Special Libraries Association, and discussions at conferences like SIGIR, ASIST Annual Meeting, CHI, and ISWC.
Topics covered ranged from bibliometrics engaging with work from Eugene Garfield, Derek de Solla Price, and Paul Otlet to information retrieval influenced by Gerard Salton, Hans Peter Luhn, Karen Spärck Jones, and Stephen Robertson. Articles addressed metadata practices used at Library of Congress, Dublin Core, International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions, and cited protocols such as HTTP, Z39.50, and OAI-PMH. Research intersected with projects at European Organization for Nuclear Research, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and case studies from New York Public Library, British Museum, and Vatican Library. The journal published studies referencing methods popularized by John Tukey, Bradford, Lotka, and Zipf, and analyses that built on theories from Michel Foucault, Thomas Kuhn, and Bruno Latour in sociotechnical contexts linked to Council on Library and Information Resources initiatives.
Published monthly, the journal's editorial leadership featured editors and advisory board members from University of Maryland, University of Washington, University of Illinois Chicago, Indiana University Bloomington, Rutgers University, University of Pennsylvania, and Syracuse University. The publisher coordinated production with partners such as Wiley-Blackwell and engaged peer reviewers drawn from Institute of Information Scientists, British Computer Society, American Association for the Advancement of Science, and university departments at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Carnegie Mellon University, and Johns Hopkins University. Special issues were organized around themes tied to initiatives at European Commission, National Endowment for the Humanities, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and collaborations with centers like Oxford Internet Institute and Berkman Klein Center.
The journal influenced policy discussions at United States Congress briefings and informed standards bodies including International Organization for Standardization, National Information Standards Organization, and World Wide Web Consortium. Its citation network connected with Nobel laureate-associated institutions such as University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Caltech, and Princeton University, and with influential works disseminated through Science, Nature, Communications of the ACM, and IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. Reviews and commentaries appeared in venues like Times Higher Education, The New York Times, The Guardian, and disciplinary newsletters from American Library Association and Association for Information Science and Technology.
The journal was abstracted and indexed in major services including Web of Science, Scopus, EBSCOhost, ProQuest, JSTOR, and subject-specific databases curated by National Library of Medicine and ERIC. Library cataloging records appeared in systems maintained by OCLC, WorldCat, and national bibliographies such as those of Library and Archives Canada and British Library.
Notable contributions included bibliometric analyses building on methodologies by Eugene Garfield and Derek de Solla Price, information retrieval experiments following paradigms from Gerard Salton and Karen Spärck Jones, and interdisciplinary studies engaging theories from Bruno Latour and Michel Foucault. Influential case studies came from collaborations with National Institutes of Health, European Organization for Nuclear Research, Library of Congress, British Library, and Google Research, while methodological innovations referenced work at MIT Media Lab, Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, IBM Research, and Microsoft Research. The journal's legacy persists in citation classics cited alongside publications from Science, Nature, Communications of the ACM, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, and monographs from MIT Press and Oxford University Press.
Category:Academic journals