Measuring Research output - Delhi University Library
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Transcript Measuring Research output - Delhi University Library
Measuring
Research Output
Rajesh Singh
Deputy Librarian
University of Delhi
[email protected]
Introduction
”A professor may ask, ”Who is citing my articles? How
many times have I been cited? What is my h-index
score?”
A student may enquire, ”How do I know if this article is
important?”
A scholar may ask, ”Which journal should I publish in?”
A different scholar asks, ”What are the best journals in
the field of Anthropology?”
Robin Kear & Danielle Colbert-Lewis 2011, "Citation searching and bibliometric
measures: Resources for ranking and tracking", College & Research Libraries News,
vol. 72, no. 8
Citation Analysis
What is it?
Citation analysis is the study of the impact and assumed quality of an article, an
author or an institution based on the number of times works and/or authors have
been cited by others.
Counting citations is often called "citation analysis."
In your scholarly research, you may need to gauge the importance of a
publication by counting the number of times it has been cited by other scholars.
When you count the number of times an article has been cited in published
research, you gain information about that article's impact on its discipline.
If an article has a high number of citations, you may conclude that it has been the
subject of discussion or criticism in its discipline.
"Counting citations" sounds simple; however, citation analysis tools count citations
from different sets of publications.
When you are performing a citation analysis, you may wish to use several
resources to count citations in order to fully capture an article's impact.
Introduction to citation analysis
Citation Analysis - Why use it?
To find out how much impact a particular article has had, by showing
which other authors based some work upon it or cited it as an example
within their own papers.
To find out more about a field or topic; i.e. by reading the papers that
cite a seminal work in that area.
To determine how much impact a particular author has had by looking
at his/her total number of citations.
Several tools can help you to find out how many times a specific article,
author, or journal has been cited. These tools are referred as citation
indexes/databases.
Introduction to citation analysis
Definition of citation index:
”A citation index is a kind of
bibliographic database, an index of
citations between publications, allowing
the user to easily establish which later
documents
cite
which
earlier
documents”.
Introduction to citation analysis
Cited references
are always retrospective in nature
pointing to documents in the past
Citing references
are always prospective in nature
referring to previously published documents
used by subsequent authors writing at a
future time
Introduction to citation analysis
Kinds of Citation Data
Articles
Citation Impact
Authors
Number of papers (Quantity)
Number of Citations (Quality)
Average number of citations/article
h-index (Quantity & Quality Both)
Journals
Journal Impact Factor
h-index
Citation Databases
Web of Science
Scopus
Google Scholar
Web of Science
Since 1963, formerly produced by ISI
Covers over 11,500 journal titles and 120,000 conference proceedings
Consists of:
Science Citation Index - 1970 to present
Social Sciences Citation Index - 1970 to present
Arts & Humanities Citation Index - 1975 to present
Very good coverage of sciences compared to social sciences and arts and
humanities.
US and English-language biased. Limited coverage of non-English language
titles.
Does not include books, book chapters or theses
Full coverage of citations.
Limited downloading options.
Scopus
Launched by Elsevier in 2004. Positioning itself as an alternative to ISI.
More journals from smaller publishers and open access (Covers over 18,000 journal titles and 4.4
million conference papers)
Source data back to 1960.
Excellent for physical and biological sciences compared to social sciences, humanities or arts.
Better international coverage (60% of titles are non-US)
Better coverage of social science titles than Web of Science
Better coverage of non-English language publications from Europe than Web of Science
Citation data only available for papers published from 1996 onwards
Does not include books, book chapters or theses
Easy to use in searching for source publications
Citation tracker works up to 1000 records only.
Limited downloading options.
Google Scholar
Launched in 2004
Better coverage of much wider range of material than Web of Science or
Scopus for all citations as it retrieve web !
More coverage of references also.
Better coverage of non-English language publications from Africa, Asia
and Central and South America than Web of Science or Scopus
No source list or indication of timescale covered. Coverage not clear
Inclusion criteria?
Very limited search options
No separate cited author search
Back to 1990 NOT more !
Free!
Three sources for citation data
Measuring Research Output
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