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Journal of Informetrics, Volume 12
Volume 12, Number 1, February 2018
- Mike Thelwall:
Microsoft Academic automatic document searches: Accuracy for journal articles and suitability for citation analysis. 1-9 - Guoliang Yang, Hirofumi Fukuyama, Yao-yao Song:
Measuring the inefficiency of Chinese research universities based on a two-stage network DEA model. 10-30 - Susana Sánchez-Gil, Juan Gorraiz, David Melero-Fuentes:
Reference density trends in the major disciplines. 42-58 - Kevin W. Boyack, Nees Jan van Eck, Giovanni Colavizza, Ludo Waltman:
Characterizing in-text citations in scientific articles: A large-scale analysis. 59-73 - Yaniv Reingewertz, Carmela Lutmar:
Academic in-group bias: An empirical examination of the link between author and journal affiliation. 74-86 - Kai Li, Erjia Yan:
Co-mention network of R packages: Scientific impact and clustering structure. 87-100 - Giangiacomo Bravo, Mike Farjam, Francisco Grimaldo Moreno, Aliaksandr Birukou, Flaminio Squazzoni:
Hidden connections: Network effects on editorial decisions in four computer science journals. 101-112 - Nadine Rons:
Bibliometric approximation of a scientific specialty by combining key sources, title words, authors and references. 113-132 - Peter Sjögårde, Per Ahlgren:
Granularity of algorithmically constructed publication-level classifications of research publications: Identification of topics. 133-152 - Zhesi Shen, Liying Yang, Jinshan Wu:
Lognormal distribution of citation counts is the reason for the relation between Impact Factors and Citation Success Index. 153-157 - Chaomei Chen, Min Song, Go Eun Heo:
A scalable and adaptive method for finding semantically equivalent cue words of uncertainty. 158-180 - Daniel T. Citron, Samuel F. Way:
Network assembly of scientific communities of varying size and specificity. 181-190 - Zohreh Zahedi, Stefanie Haustein:
On the relationships between bibliographic characteristics of scientific documents and citation and Mendeley readership counts: A large-scale analysis of Web of Science publications. 191-202 - Iman Tahamtan, Lutz Bornmann:
Core elements in the process of citing publications: Conceptual overview of the literature. 203-216 - Jaehyeong An, Kyuwoong Kim, Letizia Mortara, Sungjoo Lee:
Deriving technology intelligence from patents: Preposition-based semantic analysis. 217-236 - Mike Thelwall, Tamara Nevill:
Could scientists use Altmetric.com scores to predict longer term citation counts? 237-248 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
Who benefits from a country's scientific research? 249-258 - Chung-Huei Kuan, Mu-Hsuan Huang, Dar-Zen Chen:
Missing links: Timing characteristics and their implications for capturing contemporaneous technological developments. 259-270 - Chao Yang, Cui Huang, Jun Su:
An improved SAO network-based method for technology trend analysis: A case study of graphene. 271-286 - Kayvan Kousha, Mike Thelwall, Mahshid Abdoli:
Can Microsoft Academic assess the early citation impact of in-press articles? A multi-discipline exploratory analysis. 287-298 - Li Zhai, Xiangbin Yan, Guojing Zhang:
Bi-directional h-index: A new measure of node centrality in weighted and directed networks. 299-314 - Ricardo Brito, Alonso Rodríguez-Navarro:
Research assessment by percentile-based double rank analysis. 315-329 - Paul Donner:
Effect of publication month on citation impact. 330-343 - Meijun Liu, Xiao Hu, Yuandi Wang, Dongbo Shi:
Survive or perish: Investigating the life cycle of academic journals from 1950 to 2013 using survival analysis methods. 344-364 - Ulf Sandström, Peter van den Besselaar:
Funding, evaluation, and the performance of national research systems. 365-384 - Weiwei Yan, Yin Zhang:
Research universities on the ResearchGate social networking site: An examination of institutional differences, research activity level, and social networks formed. 385-400
Volume 12, Number 2, May 2018
- Gabriel-Alexandru Vîiu:
The lognormal distribution explains the remarkable pattern documented by characteristic scores and scales in scientometrics. 401-415 - Andrey Subochev, Fuad Aleskerov, Vladimir Pislyakov:
Ranking journals using social choice theory methods: A novel approach in bibliometrics. 416-429 - Mike Thelwall:
Dimensions: A competitor to Scopus and the Web of Science? 430-435 - Robin Haunschild, Hermann Schier, Werner Marx, Lutz Bornmann:
Algorithmically generated subject categories based on citation relations: An empirical micro study using papers on overall water splitting. 436-447 - Dengsheng Wu, Jing Li, Xiaoli Lu, Jianping Li:
Journal editorship index for assessing the scholarly impact of academic institutions: An empirical analysis in the field of economics. 448-460 - Henry Small:
Characterizing highly cited method and non-method papers using citation contexts: The role of uncertainty. 461-480 - Xuelian Pan, Erjia Yan, Ming Cui, Weina Hua:
Examining the usage, citation, and diffusion patterns of bibliometric mapping software: A comparative study of three tools. 481-493 - Alberto Martín-Martín, Enrique Orduña-Malea, Emilio Delgado López-Cózar:
Author-level metrics in the new academic profile platforms: The online behaviour of the Bibliometrics community. 494-509 - Casilda Lasso de la Vega, Oscar Volij:
Ranking scholars: A measure representation. 510-517 - Jonas Lindahl:
Predicting research excellence at the individual level: The importance of publication rate, top journal publications, and top 10% publications in the case of early career mathematicians. 518-533 - Paul Wouters:
The failure of a paradigm. 534-540 - Henk F. Moed:
Towards a multi-paradigmatic, value free informetrics: A reply to Paul Wouters' book review "The failure of a paradigm". 541-546 - György Csomós:
A spatial scientometric analysis of the publication output of cities worldwide. 547-566
Volume 12, Number 3, August 2018
- Carlos García-Zorita, Ronald Rousseau, Sergio Marugan-Lazaro, Elías Sanz-Casado:
Ranking dynamics and volatility. 567-578 - José Luis Ortega:
The life cycle of altmetric impact: A longitudinal study of six metrics from PlumX. 579-589 - Giovanni Abramo:
Revisiting the scientometric conceptualization of impact and its measurement. 590-597 - Lutz Bornmann, Werner Marx:
Critical rationalism and the search for standard (field-normalized) indicators in bibliometrics. 598-604 - Houqiang Yu, Shenmeng Xu, Tingting Xiao:
Is there Lingua Franca in informal scientific communication? Evidence from language distribution of scientific tweets. 605-617 - Ling (Alice) Jiang, Nibing Zhu, Zhilin Yang, Shen Xu, Minjoon Jun:
The relationships between distance factors and international collaborative research outcomes: A bibliometric examination. 618-630 - Marcel Dunaiski, Jaco Geldenhuys, Willem Visser:
How to evaluate rankings of academic entities using test data. 631-655 - Raj Kumar Pan, Alexander M. Petersen, Fabio Pammolli, Santo Fortunato:
The memory of science: Inflation, myopia, and the knowledge network. 656-678 - Marcel Dunaiski, Jaco Geldenhuys, Willem Visser:
Author ranking evaluation at scale. 679-702 - Peter Ingwersen:
Becoming Metric-Wise: A Bibliometric Guide for Researchers, Ronald Rousseau, Leo Egghe and Raf Guns, Elsevier/Chandos Publishing (2018) 385 pages. 703-705 - Qing Ke:
Comparing scientific and technological impact of biomedical research. 706-717 - Lawrence J. Smolinsky, Brian D. Marx:
Odds ratios, risk ratios, and Bornmann and Haunschild's new indicators. 732-735 - Zhiya Zuo, Kang Zhao:
The more multidisciplinary the better? - The prevalence and interdisciplinarity of research collaborations in multidisciplinary institutions. 736-756 - Darko Hric, Kimmo Kaski, Mikko Kivelä:
Stochastic block model reveals maps of citation patterns and their evolution in time. 757-783 - Xi Xiong, Guoliang Yang, Zhong-cheng Guan:
Assessing R&D efficiency using a two-stage dynamic DEA model: A case study of research institutes in the Chinese Academy of Sciences. 784-805 - Benedetto Lepori, Michael Thelwall, Bareerah Hafeez Hoorani:
Which US and European Higher Education Institutions are visible in ResearchGate and what affects their RG score? 806-818 - Alberto Martín-Martín, Rodrigo Costas, Thed N. van Leeuwen, Emilio Delgado López-Cózar:
Evidence of open access of scientific publications in Google Scholar: A large-scale analysis. 819-841 - Xiaojun Hu, Ronald Rousseau:
A new approach to explore the knowledge transition path in the evolution of science & technology: From the biology of restriction enzymes to their application in biotechnology. 842-857 - Jue Wang, Liwei Zhang:
Proximal advantage in knowledge diffusion: The time dimension. 858-867 - Javier Ruiz-Castillo, Rodrigo Costas:
Individual and field citation distributions in 29 broad scientific fields. 868-892 - Yanhua Lv, Ying Ding, Min Song, Zhiguang Duan:
Topology-driven trend analysis for drug discovery. 893-905 - Iman Tahamtan, Lutz Bornmann:
Creativity in science and the link to cited references: Is the creative potential of papers reflected in their cited references? 906-930 - Lutz Bornmann, Jonathan Adams, Loet Leydesdorff:
The negative effects of citing with a national orientation in terms of recognition: National and international citations in natural-sciences papers from Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK. 931-949 - Jens Peter Andersen, Mathias Wullum Nielsen:
Google Scholar and Web of Science: Examining gender differences in citation coverage across five scientific disciplines. 950-959 - Fereshteh Didegah, Niels Mejlgaard, Mads Peter Sørensen:
Investigating the quality of interactions and public engagement around scientific papers on Twitter. 960-971 - Kayvan Kousha, Mike Thelwall:
Can Microsoft Academic help to assess the citation impact of academic books? 972-984 - Weishu Liu, Guangyuan Hu, Li Tang:
Missing author address information in Web of Science - An explorative study. 985-997 - Lutz Bornmann, Robin Haunschild:
Normalization of zero-inflated data: An empirical analysis of a new indicator family and its use with altmetrics data. 998-1011 - Lutz Bornmann, Robin Haunschild, Rüdiger Mutz:
MHq indicators for zero-inflated count data - A response to Smolinsky and Marx (2018). 1012-1014
Volume 12, Number 4, November 2018
- Ruben Miranda, Esther García-Carpintero:
Overcitation and overrepresentation of review papers in the most cited papers. 1015-1030 - Mike Thelwall:
Do females create higher impact research? Scopus citations and Mendeley readers for articles from five countries. 1031-1041 - Luciano Rossi, Rafael J. P. Damaceno, Igor Leite Freire, Etelvino J. H. Bechara, Jesús P. Mena-Chalco:
Topological metrics in academic genealogy graphs. 1042-1058 - Peter van den Besselaar, Ulf Sandström:
Quantity matters, but how does it work?: A comment on Lindahl. 1059-1062 - Jonathan Adams:
Information and misinformation in bibliometric time-trend analysis. 1063-1071 - Manolis Antonoyiannakis:
Impact Factors and the Central Limit Theorem: Why citation averages are scale dependent. 1072-1088 - Guoyan Wang, Guangyuan Hu, Chuanfeng Li, Li Tang:
Long live the scientists: Tracking the scientific fame of great minds in physics. 1089-1098 - Yi Zhang, Jie Lu, Feng Liu, Qian Liu, Alan L. Porter, Hongshu Chen, Guangquan Zhang:
Does deep learning help topic extraction? A kernel k-means clustering method with word embedding. 1099-1117 - Eustache Mêgnigbêto:
Modelling the Triple Helix of university-industry-government relationships with game theory: Core, Shapley value and nucleolus as indicators of synergy within an innovation system. 1118-1132 - Zhigang Hu, Wencan Tian, Shenmeng Xu, Chunbo Zhang, Xianwen Wang:
Four pitfalls in normalizing citation indicators: An investigation of ESI's selection of highly cited papers. 1133-1145 - Zhifeng Yin, Zheng Liang, Qiang Zhi:
Does the concentration of scientific research funding in institutions promote knowledge output? 1146-1159 - Alberto Martín-Martín, Enrique Orduña-Malea, Mike Thelwall, Emilio Delgado López-Cózar:
Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus: A systematic comparison of citations in 252 subject categories. 1160-1177 - Kun Chen, Yao-yao Song, Guoliang Yang:
Quality and quantity are not always positively correlated: A case study of Chinese economics journals. 1178-1181 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo, Lin Zhang:
A comparison of two approaches for measuring interdisciplinary research output: The disciplinary diversity of authors vs the disciplinary diversity of the reference list. 1182-1193 - Jonas Lindahl:
Predicting research excellence at the individual level with bibliometric indicators: A rejoinder on a comment by Van den Besselaar and Sandström (2018). 1194-1198 - Inchae Park, Byungun Yoon:
Technological opportunity discovery for technological convergence based on the prediction of technology knowledge flow in a citation network. 1199-1222 - Jordan A. Comins, Stephanie A. Carmack, Loet Leydesdorff:
Patent citation spectroscopy (PCS): Online retrieval of landmark patents based on an algorithmic approach. 1223-1231 - Thed N. van Leeuwen:
Measuring Research: What Everyone Needs to Know, Cassidy R. Sugimoto, Vincent Larivière, Oxford University Press (2018). 1232-1234 - Samira El Gibari, Trinidad Gómez, Francisco Ruiz:
Evaluating university performance using reference point based composite indicators. 1235-1250 - Félix de Moya-Anegón, Vicente P. Guerrero-Bote, Carmen López-Illescas, Henk F. Moed:
Statistical relationships between corresponding authorship, international co-authorship and citation impact of national research systems. 1251-1262 - Armando Calabrese, Guendalina Capece, Roberta Costa, Francesca Di Pillo, Stefania Giuffrida:
A 'power law' based method to reduce size-related bias in indicators of knowledge performance: An application to university research assessment. 1263-1281 - Rüdiger Mutz, Hans-Dieter Daniel:
The bibliometric quotient (BQ), or how to measure a researcher's performance capacity: A Bayesian Poisson Rasch model. 1282-1295 - Selcuk Besir Demir:
Predatory journals: Who publishes in them and why? 1296-1311 - Dengsheng Wu, Lili Yuan, Ruoyun Li, Jianping Li:
Decomposing inequality in research funding by university-institute sub-group: A three-stage nested Theil index. 1312-1326 - Jonas Lindahl:
Erratum to "Predicting research excellence at the individual level: The importance of publication rate, top journal publications, and top 10% publications in the case of early career mathematicians" [J. Informetr. 12 (2) (2018) 518-533]. 1327-1329
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