Annotation: from paper books to the digital library
DL '97 Proceedings of the second ACM international conference on Digital libraries
Communications of the ACM
"Of course it's true; I saw it on the Internet!": critical thinking in the Internet era
Communications of the ACM - Wireless networking security
Online treasures: is the reference librarian real or virtual?
Computers in Libraries
Trends in transforming scholarly communication and their implications
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
An examination of the physical and the digital qualities of humanities research
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
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The arrival and proliferation of electronic resources and digital libraries have a number of significant impacts on the use of print resources and traditional libraries. This study explores the extent to which graduate students in a metropolitan university setting use print and electronic resources. Reading preferences and use of print and electronic resources vary among different disciplines. Graduate students seem to expect a hybrid of print and electronic resources. They desire to meet their information needs through a mix of print and online resources, even though reasons for supplementing another type of resource differ. Circumstances that affect the selection of use between digital libraries and traditional libraries are also discussed.