Microsoft Word - ital_december_gerrity_final.docx   Editor’s Comments Bob Gerrity     INFORMATION  TECHNOLOGIES  AND  LIBRARIES  |  SEPTEMBER  2013   3     This  Month’s  Issue   We  have  an  eclectic  mix  of  content  in  this  issue  of  Information  Technology  and  Libraries.   LITA  President  Cindi  Trainor  provides  highlights  of  the  recent  LITA  Forum  in  Louisville  and   planned  LITA  events  for  the  upcoming  ALA  Midwinter  Meeting  in  Philadelphia,  including  the  LITA   Town  Meeting,  the  always-­‐popular  Top  Tech  Trends  panel,  and  the  Association’s  popular   “networking  event”  on  Sunday  evening.     ITAL  Editorial  Board  member  Jerome  Yavarkosky  describes  the  significant  benefits  that   immersive  technologies  can  offer  higher  education.  The  advent  of  Massive  Open  Online  Courses   (MOOCs)  would  seem  to  present  an  ideal  framework  for  the  development  of  immersive  library   services  to  support  learners  who  may  otherwise  lack  access  to  quality  library  resources  and   services.   Responsive  web  design  is  the  topic  of  a  timely  article  by  Hannah  Gascho  Rempel  and  Laurie  M.   Bridges,  who  examine  what  tasks  library  users  actually  carry  out  on  a  library  mobile  website  and   how  this  has  informed  Oregon  State  University  Libraries’  adoption  of  a  responsive  design   approach  for  their  website.   Piotr  Praczyk,  Javier  Nogueras-­‐Iso,  and  Salvatore  Mele  present  a  method  for  automatically     extracting  and  processing  graphical  content  from  scholarly  articles  in  PDF  format  in  the  field  of   high-­‐energy  physics.  The  method  offers  potential  for  enhancing  access  and  search  services  and   bridging  the  semantic  gap  between  textual  and  graphical  content.   Elizabeth  Thorne  Wallington  describes  the  use  of  mapping  and  graphical  information  systems   (GIS)  to  study  the  relationship  between  public  library  locations  in  the  St.  Louis  area  and  the   socioeconomic  attributes  of  the  populations  they  serve.  The  paper  raises  interesting  questions   about  how  libraries  are  geographically  distributed  and  whether  they  truly  provide  universal  and   equal  access.     Vadim  Gureyev  and  Nikolai  Mazov  present  a  method  for  using  bibliometric  analysis  of  the   publication  output  of  two  research  institutes  as  a  collection-­‐development  tool,  to  identify  journals   most  important  for  researchers  at  the  institutes.       Bob  Gerrity  (r.gerrity@uq.edu.au)  is  University  Librarian,  University  of  Queensland,  Australia.       Editor’s Comments Bob Gerrity   EDITOR’S  COMMENTS  |  GERRITY       4