College and Research Libraries


ROBERT F. CLARKE and HAYDEE GARCIA CLARKE 

Repeat Photocopying of 
Journal Articles 

When viewed in the perspective of total copying, repeated photoco pying 
of articles from fournals published in the United States does not appear 
to be of sufficient volume to warrant special attention from library ad-
ministration. A study of 8,023 photocopies produced by photoduplica-
tion services of three different research libraries reveals that only 178 
(2.2 per cent) represented two or more repeat copies. No article was 
copied more .than four times during the period surveyed. 

LIBRARY -OPERA TED photoduplication 
services are an important means of dis-
seminating information. Some libraries 
have used this means for many years to 
save their patrons from copying informa-
tion by hand. Also, libraries have en-
abled distant patrons and other libraries 
to use their collections by providing 
photocopies through mail service. These 
photoduplication services follow the 
practice of filling individual requests for 
single copies as and when requested. 
Libraries place restrictions on the types 
of material which can be photocopied. 
Requests may remain unfilled for any 
one or more of the following reasons: 
journal issues are too tightly bound for 
photocopying, not yet received, on loan, 
not in the collection, in a deteriorated 
condition, at the bindery, missing, tem-
porarily missing, not identified, in proc-
essing; or the requester fails to use prop-
er request form, wants multiple copies, 
gives an incomplete citation, fails to in-
clude return address; or because of-copy-
right restrictions, length of article, etc. 

Dr. Clarke is Deputy Chief, Technical 
Services Division, National Library of M ed-
icine. Mrs. Clarke is former Chief Medical 
Librarian, Hospital del Nino, Lima, Peru. 

In operating a photoduplication ser-
vice, the question of whether the same 
material is requested and photocopied 
more than once inevitably arises. The 
present paper reports on a survey of re-
peat photocopying of articles from jour-
nal titles published in the United States, 
as performed at three research libraries 
in recent years. 

METHOD 

The survey was conducted by examin-
ing records of three major photoduplica-
tion services located in large research 
libraries in the United States. The di-
rector of one of these requested anonym-
ity for his library, thus all three must re-
main anonymous. Library A is a large re-
search library located in a metropolis on 
the east coast. Library B is a research li-
brary famous for its holdings in science 
and technology. Library C serves a great 
midwestern university. All three photo-
duplication services receive requests 
from around the world. 

All records for two peak months of 
photocopy activity, each one in different 
years, were examined at Library A. At 
Library B, the sample consisted of all 
requests filled in one year for randomly 
selected patrons and covered approxi-

I 389 



390 1 College & Research Libraries • September, 1966 

mately 11 per cent of the year's total. A 
complete year of records was examined 
at Ljbrary C. These three types of sam-
ples were combined to give a rounded 
approach for the examination. 

FINDINGS 
A total of 8,023 photocopies of articles 

was produced from the 1,318 different 
journal titles published in the United 
States. This represents a mean of 6.1 
photocopies produced per journal title. 
The 8,023 photocopies actually repre-
sented 7,845 different articles copied, be-
cause 178 photocopies were repeats of 
articles which had already been copied 
once during the survey. This represents 
a mean of 5.9 articles copied per journal 
title. Only by noting the overlap in jour-
nal titles copied in common by the three 
libraries were the two means this high, 
for if overlap were not taken into ac-
count, the number of journal titles would 
be higher. This would then reduce the 
means. Repeat copies of the same articles 
amounted to 2.2 per cent of the total 
number ( 178 repeat copies from 8,023 
photocopies produced). Clearly, repeat 
photocopying of the same articles from 
journal titles published in the United 
States does occur, and it occurs within 
the time periods of the samples ex-
amined. The 2.2 per cent repeat copying 
is not an impressive amount, and it is 
less so when one considers that it re-
quired totaling the copying from samples 
taken at the three libraries to achieve it. 
Further, the above means of 5.9 and 6.1 
approximate each other, so that the mean 
number of articles photocopied per jour-
nal title approaches the mean number of 
photocopies produced per journal title, 
all for journal titles published in the 
United States. 

Note that repeat copying would be 
greater than reported here, since patrons 
at times do request more than one copy 
of the same article at the same time, but 
the photoduplication services in each in-
stance furnished only one copy, auto-

matically cancelling requests for extra 
copies. 

From the 165 different articles copied 
repeatedly, 154 ( 93.3 per cent) were 
copied twice, nine were copied three 
times ( 5.4 per cent), and two were 
copied four times ( 1.3 per cent). Four 
was the highest frequency of repeat 
copies found, even combining the copy-
ing from the three libraries. Thos~ arti-
cles copied repeatedly appeared 1n 130 
different journal titles from among the 
1,318 ( 9.9 per cent) journal titles photo-
copied. Only eleven journal titles (see 
Table 1) had articles copied more than 
two times; this represents 0.8 per cent of 
the 1,318 journal titles. Note that forty-
four of the 178 ( 24.7 per cent) repeat 
photocopies (not articles) wer~ p.ro-
duced by a different photoduphcatwn 
service than that which produced the 
"first" photocopy. In other words, if the 
other photoduplication service had not 
made the copy, there would have been 
no repeat copy of that article in this sur-
vey. There is a core list of articles in a 
core list of journal titles published in the 
United States which receive repeated 
photocopying. The size of this list of 

TABLE 1. 

TITLE OF JOURNALS PUBLISHED IN THE U.S. 
HAVING ARTICLES PHoTocoPIED MoRE 

THAN TwiCE DURING THE PERIOD 
SURVEYED 

Journal0 

Chern. Eng. Science 
Elect. Merchandising . 
Electronics Design 
Glass Ind. . 
J. Arner. Oil Chern. Soc. 
J. Applied Mechanics . 
J. Audio Eng. Soc. 
J. Meteorology 
Official Digest Fed. Paint 

& Varnish 
Radio Electronics . 
Senior Scholastic . 

No. Times 
Article Copied 

3 
3 
3 
3 
3 
3 
4 
3 

3 
3 
4 

o Combined samples from three libraries. 



Repeat Photocopying of Journal Articles 1 391 

articles and journal titles decreases with 
an increase in repeated photocopying. 
These articles are copied at more than 
one photocopy service. 

Since 134 ( 75.3 per cent) of the 178 
repeat copies were produced in the same 
library that made the first copy during 
this survey, the same photoduplication 
service tends to recopy the same article 
within the same time period more than 
another photoduplication service tends 
to copy that same article during its time 
period examined. Note that the holdings 
of the different libraries and their pol-
icies and practices can influence repe-
tition; for example, having material at 
the bindery, with the associated practices 
and schedules. All libraries do not hold 
the same journals in common, nor do all 
libraries offer photoduplication services, 
nor are all photoduplication services 
major ones, like those examined. All 
these factors tend to reduce the proba-
bility of repeated copying. 

The age of the articles copied repeat-
edly is also of interest (see Table 2). 
The ages ranged from less than one year 
since publication to a maximum of sixty-
three years at the time of copying. Their 
mean and median ages were 8.0 and 6.5 
years respectively, with the mode occur-
ring between one and two years of age 
when a total of twenty-eight articles 
were repeatedly copied. Not enough in-
formation is available to state whether 
the same articles in journals published 
in the United States are repeatedly 
copied down through the years, but it is 
a possibility which might be investi-
gated. Clearly, there is repeated interest 
today in articles published in journals in 
the United States ranging back through 
many decades, as well as in those pub-
lished in recent years. 

IMPLICATIONS 

Repeated photocopying of articles 
from journals published in the United 
States occurs in library photoduplication 

services. When viewed in the perspective 
of total copying, however, it doe not 
appear to be of sufficient volume to war-
rant special attention by library adminis-
tration. This seems even more nearly true 
in considering the volume of this repeti-
tion involving producing more than a 
second copy. Copyright would restrict 
production of multiple copies of articles 
thus protected, particularly the produc-
tion of more than one copy at one time. 

TABLE 2. 

AcE OF ARTICLEs CoPIED MoRE THAN ONCE 
DURI G THE PERIOD SURVEYED, WHICH 

APPEARED IN JoURNAL TITLES 

PUBLISHED IN THE U.S. I) 

Age in No. of 
Years Articles 

0 4 
1 28 
2 24 
3 5 
4 6 
5 13 
6 11 
7 8 
8 7 
9 6 

10 10 
11 6 
12 1 
13 3 
14 7 
15 1 
16 1 
17 4 
18 5 
19 1 
20 1 
21 2 
22 1 
23 2 
24 1 
28 2 
32 1 
34 1 
36 1 
41 1 
63 1 

Total 165 articles 
° Combined samples from three libraries. 



3921 College & Research Libraries • September, 1966 

Stockpiling of extra copies of noncopy-
righted journal articles which have been 
photocopied once, or more likely more 
than once, might be studied. This exami-
nation should be from the viewpoint of 
considering storage costs for items which 

OPTIMUM SIZE .•. 
( Continued from page 357) 

areas. These libraries will depend upon 
the centers for their published output 
as an important device for aiding in 
the evaluation, digestion, and manage-
able assimilation of the literature for 
which they are responsible. 

In such a development, all libraries 
could approach the problems of opti-
mum size and of division of subject re-
sponsibility confidently and rationally. 

There is considerable evidence that 
the great research libraries-government, 
university, and private-are already mak-
ing tentative shifts to prepare themselves 
for their proper roles in the network of 
collections and services which must 
eventually evolve if we are to solve our 
problems. The nationallibr.aries of medi-
cine, of agriculture, and other remarka-
ble concentrations of subject strengths in 
various government departmental librar-
ies are becoming accepted as true na-
tional resource centers, as indeed they 
have long tacitly been. There is much 
talk about the establishment of regional 
branches throughout the country. The 
Department of Agriculture has had so-
called branches for many years, but not 
on the scale suggested here. The Library 
of Congress, which established a science 
and technology division only after World 
War II, and of course has tremendous 
resources and capabilities, is a central 

may never be asked for again, as well as 
production costs, and relating them to 
the present practice of photocopying 
only on demand, albeit if sometimes re-
peatedly. 

•• 

point in this shift and will spearhead 
many of the costly e~periments and pro-
grams necessary to achieve it. 

University libraries, for the first time, 
are separating their research functions in 
separate buildings, foreshadowing com-
ing changes in function. At least one of 
them, Yale University, is separating its 
science research materials and will con-
centrate them in a p.ew building. 

The former Midwest Inter-Library 
Center has changed its name, and, from 
all indications, its future role in the re-
search library picture in the nation. 
John Crerar and the Linda Hall libraries 
are becoming increasingly national re-
sources, rather than limited local or re-
gional library features. In Great Britain, 
the national lending library of science is 
a well established, working entity, and 
plans for a national science reference li-
brary are well along. 

In conclusion, it might be said that 
«optimum size" techniques may need to 
be related to a situation in the scien-
tific literature and in scientific libraries, 
which show every indication of radical 
and extensive changes ahead. These 
changes will come very quickly, for the 
pace of achievements in new knowledge 
and in new literature, which demands 
these changes, give us very little time. 

••