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Journal of Informetrics, Volume 11
Volume 11, Number 1, February 2017
- Jose Fernandez Donoso:
A simple index of innovation with complexity. 1-17 - Marcelo S. Perlin, André Alves Portela Santos, Takeyoshi Imasato, Denis Borenstein, Sergio Da Silva:
The Brazilian scientific output published in journals: A study based on a large CV database. 18-31 - Antonio Perianes-Rodríguez, Javier Ruiz-Castillo:
A comparison of the Web of Science and publication-level classification systems of science. 32-45 - Henry Small, Hung Tseng, Mike Patek:
Discovering discoveries: Identifying biomedical discoveries using citation contexts. 46-62 - Lixin Chen:
Do patent citations indicate knowledge linkage? The evidence from text similarities between patents and their citations. 63-79 - Adèle Paul-Hus, Philippe Mongeon, Maxime B. Sainte-Marie, Vincent Larivière:
The sum of it all: Revealing collaboration patterns by combining authorship and acknowledgements. 80-87 - Tanya Araújo, Elsa Fontainha:
The specific shapes of gender imbalance in scientific authorships: A network approach. 88-102 - Rodrigo Sánchez Jiménez, Vicente P. Guerrero-Bote, Félix de Moya-Anegón:
The role of guarantor in scientific collaboration: The neighbourhood matters. 103-116 - Loet Leydesdorff, Han Woo Park:
Full and fractional counting in bibliometric networks. 117-120 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
Does your surname affect the citability of your publications? 121-127 - Mike Thelwall:
Three practical field normalised alternative indicator formulae for research evaluation. 128-151 - Alberto Martín-Martín, Enrique Orduña-Malea, Anne-Wil Harzing, Emilio Delgado López-Cózar:
Can we use Google Scholar to identify highly-cited documents? 152-163 - Lutz Bornmann, Loet Leydesdorff:
Skewness of citation impact data and covariates of citation distributions: A large-scale empirical analysis based on Web of Science data. 164-175 - John McLevey, Reid McIlroy-Young:
Introducing metaknowledge: Software for computational research in information science, network analysis, and science of science. 176-197 - George Panagopoulos, George Tsatsaronis, Iraklis Varlamis:
Detecting rising stars in dynamic collaborative networks. 198-222 - Stasa Milojevic, Filippo Radicchi, Judit Bar-Ilan:
Citation success index - An intuitive pair-wise journal comparison metric. 223-231 - Julio González-Álvarez, Teresa Cervera-Crespo:
Research production in high-impact journals of contemporary neuroscience: A gender analysis. 232-243 - Cherng G. Ding, Wen-Chi Hung, Meng-Che Lee, Hung-Jui Wang:
Exploring paper characteristics that facilitate the knowledge flow from science to technology. 244-256 - Yuxian Liu, Ronald Rousseau, Leo Egghe:
Partial orders for zero-sum arrays with applications to network theory. 257-274 - Mohammad Tariqur Rahman, Joe Mac Regenstein, Noor Lide Abu Kassim, Nazmul Haque:
The need to quantify authors' relative intellectual contributions in a multi-author paper. 275-281 - Emanuel Kulczycki, Marcin Korzen, Przemyslaw Korytkowski:
Toward an excellence-based research funding system: Evidence from Poland. 282-298 - Rasmus A. X. Persson:
Bibliometric author evaluation through linear regression on the coauthor network. 299-306 - Tehmina Amjad, Ying Ding, Jian Xu, Chenwei Zhang, Ali Daud, Jie Tang, Min Song:
Standing on the shoulders of giants. 307-323 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo, Anastasiia Soldatenkova:
An investigation on the skewness patterns and fractal nature of research productivity distributions at field and discipline level. 324-335
Volume 11, Number 2, May 2017
- Fiorenzo Franceschini, Domenico A. Maisano:
Critical remarks on the Italian research assessment exercise VQR 2011-2014. 337-357 - Tolga Yuret:
An analysis of the foreign-educated elite academics in the United States. 358-370 - Tahereh Dehdarirad, Stefano Nasini:
Research impact in co-authorship networks: a two-mode analysis. 371-388 - Peter Haddawy, Saeed-Ul Hassan, Craig W. Abbey, Lee Inn Beng:
Uncovering fine-grained research excellence: The global research benchmarking system. 389-406 - Jiancheng Guan, Yan Yan, Jingjing Zhang:
The impact of collaboration and knowledge networks on citations. 407-422 - Tolga Yuret:
Do researchers pay attention to publication subsidies? 423-434 - Andrea Bonaccorsi, Peter Haddawy, Tindaro Cicero, Saeed-Ul Hassan:
The solitude of stars. An analysis of the distributed excellence model of European universities. 435-454 - Jens Peter Andersen:
An empirical and theoretical critique of the Euclidean index. 455-465 - Houqiang Yu, Shenmeng Xu, Tingting Xiao, Bradley M. Hemminger, Siluo Yang:
Global science discussed in local altmetrics: Weibo and its comparison with Twitter. 466-482 - José Osvaldo De Sordi, Wanderlei Lima de Paulo, Manuel Meireles, Marcia Carvalho de Azevedo, Luis Hernan Contreras Pinochet:
Proposal of indicators for the structural analysis of scientific articles. 483-497 - Edilson Anselmo Corrêa Júnior, Filipi Nascimento Silva, Luciano da F. Costa, Diego R. Amancio:
Patterns of authors contribution in scientific manuscripts. 498-510 - Hyun Jin Jang, Han-Gyun Woo, Changyong Lee:
Hawkes process-based technology impact analysis. 511-529 - Mike Thelwall, Ruth Fairclough:
The accuracy of confidence intervals for field normalised indicators. 530-540 - Orestis-Stavros Loizides, Polychronis Koutsakis:
On evaluating the quality of a computer science/computer engineering conference. 541-552 - Hamed Alhoori, Richard Furuta:
Recommendation of scholarly venues based on dynamic user interests. 553-563 - Luciano Rossi, Igor Leite Freire, Jesús P. Mena-Chalco:
Genealogical index: A metric to analyze advisor-advisee relationships. 564-582 - Ronald Rousseau, Raf Guns, A. I. M. Jakaria Rahman, Tim C. E. Engels:
Measuring cognitive distance between publication portfolios. 583-594 - Loet Leydesdorff:
In Praise of Bibliometrics. 595-597 - Menghui Li, Liying Yang, Huina Zhang, Zhesi Shen, Chensheng Wu, Jinshan Wu:
Do mathematicians, economists and biomedical scientists trace large topics more strongly than physicists? 598-607 - Yian Yin, Dashun Wang:
The time dimension of science: Connecting the past to the future. 608-621 - Sergio Benedetto, Daniele Checchi, Andrea Graziosi, Marco Malgarini:
Comments on the paper "Critical remarks on the Italian assessment exercise", Journal of Informetrics, 11 (2017) and pp. 337-357. 622-624 - Pedro Albarrán, Carmen Herrero, Javier Ruiz-Castillo, Antonio Villar:
The Herrero-Villar approach to citation impact. 625-640 - Yongjun Zhu, Erjia Yan:
Examining academic ranking and inequality in library and information science through faculty hiring networks. 641-654 - Chaojiang Wu, Erjia Yan, Chelsey Hill:
Disciplinary knowledge diffusion in business research. 655-668 - Xiaojun Hu, Loet Leydesdorff, Ronald Rousseau:
Heterogeneity in an undirected network: Definition and measurement. 669-682
Volume 11, Number 3, August 2017
- Henry Small:
A tribute to Eugene Garfield: Information innovator and idealist. 599-612 - Rüdiger Mutz, Lutz Bornmann, Hans-Dieter Daniel:
Are there any frontiers of research performance? Efficiency measurement of funded research projects with the Bayesian stochastic frontier analysis for count data. 613-628 - Ruizhi Zhang, Jian Wang, Yajun Mei:
Search for evergreens in science: A functional data analysis. 629-644 - Fiorenzo Franceschini, Domenico A. Maisano:
A rejoinder to the comments of Benedetto et al. on the paper "Critical remarks on the Italian research assessment exercise VQR 2011-2014" (Journal of Informetrics, 11(2): 337-357). 645-646 - Guoliang Yang, Per Ahlgren, Liying Yang, Ronald Rousseau, Jie-lan Ding:
Reply to 'Comment on "Using multi-level frontiers in DEA models to grade countries/territories" by G.-l. Yang et al. [Journal of Informetrics 10(1) (2016), 238-253]'. 647-648 - Mohammad Khoveyni, Robabeh Eslami:
Comment on "Using multi-level frontiers in DEA models to grade countries/territories" by G.-l. Yang et al. [Journal of Informetrics 10(1) (2016), 238-253]. 649-654 - Yuandi Wang, Ruifeng Hu, Meijun Liu:
The geotemporal demographics of academic journals from 1950 to 2013 according to Ulrich's database. 655-671 - Marianne Gauffriau:
A categorization of arguments for counting methods for publication and citation indicators. 672-684 - Yew-Kwang Ng:
Counting citations: Generalizing the Perry-Reny index. 685-688 - Tommaso Lando, Lucio Bertoli-Barsotti:
Measuring the citation impact of journals with generalized Lorenz curves. 689-703 - Filippo Radicchi, Alexander Weissman, Johan Bollen:
Quantifying perceived impact of scientific publications. 704-712 - Gabriela F. Nane, Vincent Larivière, Rodrigo Costas:
Predicting the age of researchers using bibliometric data. 713-729 - William H. Walters:
Do subjective journal ratings represent whole journals or typical articles? Unweighted or weighted citation impact? 730-744 - Rasmus A. X. Persson:
Note on the theory of the w-index. 745-747 - Gabriel-Alexandru Vîiu:
Disaggregated research evaluation through median-based characteristic scores and scales: a comparison with the mean-based approach. 748-765 - Giacomo Vaccario, Matús Medo, Nicolas Wider, Manuel Sebastian Mariani:
Quantifying and suppressing ranking bias in a large citation network. 766-782 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
On tit for tat: Franceschini and Maisano versus ANVUR regarding the Italian research assessment exercise VQR 2011-2014. 783-787 - Lutz Bornmann, Richard Williams:
Can the journal impact factor be used as a criterion for the selection of junior researchers? A large-scale empirical study based on ResearcherID data. 788-799 - Robert Lehmann, Klaus Wohlrabe:
Who is the 'Journal Grand Master'? A new ranking based on the Elo rating system. 800-809 - Yi Bu, Shaokang Ni, Win-Bin Huang:
Combining multiple scholarly relationships with author cocitation analysis: A preliminary exploration on improving knowledge domain mappings. 810-822 - Gali Halevi, Henk F. Moed, Judit Bar-Ilan:
Suitability of Google Scholar as a source of scientific information and as a source of data for scientific evaluation - Review of the Literature. 823-834 - Matthias Weber:
Comment on "Does your surname affect the citability of your publications". 835-837 - Sergio Benedetto, Daniele Checchi, Andrea Graziosi, Marco Malgarini:
Comments on the correspondence "On tit for tat: Franceschini and Maisano versus ANVUR regarding the Italian research assessment exercise VQR 2011-2014", J. Informetr., 11 (2017), 783-787. 838-840 - Nicolás Robinson-García, Philippe Mongeon, Wei Jeng, Rodrigo Costas:
DataCite as a novel bibliometric source: Coverage, strengths and limitations. 841-854 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
Response to comments on: "Does your surname affect the citability of your publications?". 855-858 - Koen Frenken, Gaston Heimeriks, Jarno Hoekman:
What drives university research performance? An analysis using the CWTS Leiden Ranking data. 859-872 - Yujia Zhai, Shaojing Sun, Fang Wang, Ying Ding:
Multiplicity and uncertainty: Media coverage of autism causation. 873-887 - Gjalt-Jorn Ygram Peters:
Why not to use the journal impact factor as a criterion for the selection of junior researchers: A comment on Bornmann and Williams (2017). 888-891 - Raf Guns, Lili Wang:
Detecting the emergence of new scientific collaboration links in Africa: A comparison of expected and realized collaboration intensities. 892-903
- Ludo Waltman:
Special section on performance-based research funding systems. 904 - Peter van den Besselaar, Ulf Heyman, Ulf Sandström:
Perverse effects of output-based research funding? Butler's Australian case revisited. 905-918 - Linda Butler:
Response to van den Besselaar et al.: What happens when the Australian context is misunderstood. 919-922 - Kaare Aagaard, Jesper W. Schneider:
Some considerations about causes and effects in studies of performance-based research funding systems. 923-926 - Jochen Gläser:
A fight on epistemological quicksand: Comment on the dispute between van den Besselaar et al. and Butler. 927-932 - Diana Hicks:
What year? Difficulties in identifying the effect of policy on university output. 933-936 - Ben R. Martin:
When social scientists disagree: Comments on the Butler-van den Besselaar debate. 937-940 - Peter van den Besselaar, Ulf Heyman, Ulf Sandström:
Do observations have any role in science policy studies? A reply. 941-944
Volume 11, Number 4, November 2017
- Lutz Bornmann, Richard Williams:
Use of the journal impact factor as a criterion for the selection of junior researchers: A rejoinder on a comment by Peters (2017). 945-947 - Zhigang Hu, Gege Lin, Taian Sun, Haiyan Hou:
Understanding multiply mentioned references. 948-958 - Massimo Aria, Corrado Cuccurullo:
bibliometrix: An R-tool for comprehensive science mapping analysis. 959-975 - Kai Li, Erjia Yan, Yuanyuan Feng:
How is R cited in research outputs? Structure, impacts, and citation standard. 989-1002 - Abdellatif Agouzal, Thierry Lafouge:
A remarkable example in three-dimensional informetrics. The geometric law: Distribution of use or distribution of structure? 1003-1015 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo, Gianluca Murgia:
The relationship among research productivity, research collaboration, and their determinants. 1016-1030 - Laurent R. Bergé, Thomas Scherngell, Iris Wanzenböck:
Bridging centrality as an indicator to measure the 'bridging role' of actors in networks: An application to the European Nanotechnology co-publication network. 1031-1042 - Loet Leydesdorff:
The positive side of discursive disagreements in the social sciences. 1043 - Dalibor Fiala, Gabriel Tutoky:
PageRank-based prediction of award-winning researchers and the impact of citations. 1044-1068 - Mike Thelwall:
Confidence intervals for normalised citation counts: Can they delimit underlying research capability? 1069-1079 - Fei Shu, Jesse David Dinneen, Banafsheh Asadi, Charles-Antoine Julien:
Mapping science using Library of Congress Subject Headings. 1080-1094 - Lorenzo Cassi, Agenor Lahatte, Ismael Ràfols, Pierre Sautier, Elisabeth de Turckheim:
Improving fitness: Mapping research priorities against societal needs on obesity. 1095-1113 - Stanislaw Drozdz, Andrzej Kulig, Jaroslaw Kwapien, Artur Niewiarowski, Marek Stanuszek:
Hierarchical organization of H. Eugene Stanley scientific collaboration community in weighted network representation. 1114-1127 - Massimo Franceschet, Giovanni Colavizza:
TimeRank: A dynamic approach to rate scholars using citations. 1128-1141 - Mike Thelwall, Ruth Fairclough:
The research production of nations and departments: A statistical model for the share of publications. 1142-1157 - Richard Klavans, Kevin W. Boyack:
Research portfolio analysis and topic prominence. 1158-1174 - Baitong Chen, Satoshi Tsutsui, Ying Ding, Feicheng Ma:
Understanding the topic evolution in a scientific domain: An exploratory study for the field of information retrieval. 1175-1189 - Kyle W. Higham, Michele Governale, Adam B. Jaffe, Ulrich Zülicke:
Unraveling the dynamics of growth, aging and inflation for citations to scientific articles from specific research fields. 1190-1200 - Mike Thelwall:
Microsoft Academic: A multidisciplinary comparison of citation counts with Scopus and Mendeley for 29 journals. 1201-1212 - Mathias Wullum Nielsen:
Gender and citation impact in management research. 1213-1228 - Aurelio Patelli, Giulio Cimini, Emanuele Pugliese, Andrea Gabrielli:
The scientific influence of nations on global scientific and technological development. 1229-1237
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