(Seattle, WA, 23 October 2013) The University of Tokyo Library in Japan recently selected the Summon® discovery service from Serials Solutions®, a ProQuest® business. The powerful navigation and contextual guidance features in the Summon service significantly advance the research experience for both novice and experienced researchers. Librarians at the University of Tokyo will now have a better way to connect with more users, customize the discovery experience and lead users to better research outcomes.
According to Hiroko Yamazki, librarian at the University of Tokyo Library, “We chose Summon because the single search box powered by the underlying single unified index enables users to find a variety of resources across our collection, simply and easily. We are counting on Summon to provide a discovery experience that meets our users’ expectations.”
The Summon service supports discovery of content regardless of where the library purchased the resource or which provider hosts it. Unlike other discovery services, the Summon service leverages a unique match and merge technology that combines different types of metadata and information from multiple sources creating a single record optimized for discovery. This unique approach exposes resources to more users, directs researchers to full text when available, and maximizes the value and usage of a library’s collections.
“The Summon service is a built-for-purpose discovery engine that revolves around a single, unified index of content and relies on sophisticated relevance ranking algorithms that are continuously refined to meet changing user expectations. It’s a differentiator that customers like University of Tokyo value,” said Kevin Stehr, vice president, global sales for technology solutions, ProQuest.
The University of Tokyo Library includes the General Library on the Hongo Campus, the Komaba Library on the Komaba Campus, the Kashiwa Library on the Kashiwa Campus, and 32 departmental libraries at the university’s graduate schools, faculties, and institutes. The entire collection includes more than 9.2 million books, nearly 25,000 serials, and various digital resources, such as databases, eJournals, and eBooks.
Read more in the press release.