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Journal of Informetrics, Volume 6
Volume 6, Number 1, January 2012
- Nadine Rons:
Partition-based Field Normalization: An approach to highly specialized publication records. 1-10 - Lutz Bornmann, Hermann Schier, Werner Marx, Hans-Dieter Daniel:
What factors determine citation counts of publications in chemistry besides their quality? 11-18 - Jerome K. Vanclay:
Publication patterns of award-winning forest scientists and implications for the Australian ERA journal ranking. 19-26 - Chien Hsiang Liao, HsiuJu Rebecca Yen:
Quantifying the degree of research collaboration: A comparative study of collaborative measures. 27-33 - Ronald Rousseau, Fred Y. Ye:
A formal relation between the h-index of a set of articles and their I3 score. 34-35 - Dag W. Aksnes, Jesper W. Schneider, Magnus Gunnarsson:
Ranking national research systems by citation indicators. A comparative analysis using whole and fractionalised counting methods. 36-43 - Mike Thelwall, Pardeep Sud:
Webometric research with the Bing Search API 2.0. 44-52 - Jerome K. Vanclay:
What was wrong with Australia's journal ranking? 53-54 - Chan-Yuan Wong, Kim-Leng Goh:
The sustainability of functionality development of science and technology: Papers and patents of emerging economies. 55-65 - José María Sarabia, Faustino Prieto, Carmen Trueba:
Modeling the probabilistic distribution of the impact factor. 66-79 - Gopalan M. Nair, Berwin A. Turlach:
The stochastic h-index. 80-87 - Lin Zhang, Wolfgang Glänzel:
Proceeding papers in journals versus the "regular" journal publications. 88-96 - Hyoungshick Kim, Ji Won Yoon, Jon Crowcroft:
Network analysis of temporal trends in scholarly research productivity. 97-110 - Camille Roth, Jiang Wu, Sergi Lozano:
Assessing impact and quality from local dynamics of citation networks. 111-120 - Filippo Radicchi, Claudio Castellano:
Testing the fairness of citation indicators for comparison across scientific domains: The case of fractional citation counts. 121-130 - Ke-Chiun Chang, Dar-Zen Chen, Mu-Hsuan Huang:
The relationships between the patent performance and corporation performance. 131-139 - Erjia Yan, Ying Ding, Stasa Milojevic, Cassidy R. Sugimoto:
Topics in dynamic research communities: An exploratory study for the field of information retrieval. 140-153
Volume 6, Number 2, April 2012
- Giovanni Abramo, Tindaro Cicero, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
The dispersion of research performance within and between universities as a potential indicator of the competitive intensity in higher education systems. 155-168 - Rüdiger Mutz, Hans-Dieter Daniel:
Skewed citation distributions and bias factors: Solutions to two core problems with the journal impact factor. 169-176 - Ronald Rousseau, Yuxian Liu, Fred Y. Ye:
A preliminary investigation on diffusion through a layered system. 177-191 - Giovanni Abramo, Tindaro Cicero, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
A sensitivity analysis of researchers' productivity rankings to the time of citation observation. 192-201 - Hsin-Ning Su, Pei-Chun Lee:
Framing the structure of global open innovation research. 202-216 - Stefan Hennemann, Diego Rybski, Ingo Liefner:
The myth of global science collaboration - Collaboration patterns in epistemic communities. 217-225 - Mu-Hsuan Huang, Huei-Ru Dong, Dar-Zen Chen:
Globalization of collaborative creativity through cross-border patent activities. 226-236 - Daifeng Li, Ying Ding, Xin Shuai, Johan Bollen, Jie Tang, Shanshan Chen, Jiayi Zhu, Guilherme Rocha:
Adding community and dynamic to topic models. 237-253 - Peter Vinkler:
The case of scientometricians with the "absolute relative" impact indicator. 254-264 - Flaminio Squazzoni, Claudio Gandelli:
Saint Matthew strikes again: An agent-based model of peer review and the scientific community structure. 265-275 - Jeppe Nicolaisen, Tove Faber Frandsen:
Consensus formation in science modeled by aggregated bibliographic coupling. 276-284 - Lutz Bornmann, Werner Marx:
HistCite analysis of papers constituting the h index research front. 285-288 - Edoardo Magnone:
An analysis for estimating the short-term effects of Japan's triple disaster on progress in materials science. 289-297 - Giovanni Abramo, Tindaro Cicero, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
A sensitivity analysis of research institutions' productivity rankings to the time of citation observation. 298-306 - Leo Egghe:
Averages of ratios compared to ratios of averages: Mathematical results. 307-317 - Loet Leydesdorff, Ismael Ràfols:
Interactive overlays: A new method for generating global journal maps from Web-of-Science data. 318-332 - Lutz Bornmann, Félix de Moya-Anegón, Loet Leydesdorff:
The new Excellence Indicator in the World Report of the SCImago Institutions Rankings 2011. 333-335 - Lutz Bornmann, Loet Leydesdorff:
Which are the best performing regions in information science in terms of highly cited papers? Some improvements of our previous mapping approaches. 336-345
Volume 6, Number 3, July 2012
- M. Schreiber, Chrisovaladis Malesios, Stelios Psarakis:
Exploratory factor analysis for the Hirsch index, 17 h-type variants, and some traditional bibliometric indicators. 347-358 - Bing He, Ying Ding, Erjia Yan:
Mining patterns of author orders in scientific publications. 359-367 - Marek Kosmulski:
Modesty-index. 368-369 - Dalibor Fiala:
Time-aware PageRank for bibliographic networks. 370-388 - Christian Seiler, Klaus Wohlrabe:
Ranking economists on the basis of many indicators: An alternative approach using RePEc data. 389-402 - Alireza Abbasi, Liaquat Hossain, Loet Leydesdorff:
Betweenness centrality as a driver of preferential attachment in the evolution of research collaboration networks. 403-412 - Ronald Rousseau, Liying Yang:
Reflections on the activity index and related indicators. 413-421 - Leo Egghe:
Five years "Journal of Informetrics". 422-426 - Diego R. Amancio, Osvaldo N. Oliveira Jr., Luciano da Fontoura Costa:
Three-feature model to reproduce the topology of citation networks and the effects from authors' visibility on their h-index. 427-434 - Marco Seeber, Benedetto Lepori, Alessandro Lomi, Isidro F. Aguillo, Vitaliano Barberio:
Factors affecting web links between European higher education institutions. 435-447 - Daniel Sirtes:
Finding the Easter eggs hidden by oneself: Why Radicchi and Castellano's (2012) fairness test for citation indicators is not fair. 448-450 - Marek Kosmulski:
Calibration against a reference set: A quantitative approach to assessment of the methods of assessment of scientific output. 451-456
Volume 6, Number 4, October 2012
- Mu-Hsuan Huang, Han-Wen Chang, Dar-Zen Chen:
The trend of concentration in scientific research and technological innovation: A reduction of the predominant role of the U.S. in world research & technology. 457-468 - Pedro Albarrán, Ignacio Ortuño, Javier Ruiz-Castillo:
Corrigendum to "High- and low-impact citation measures: Empirical applications" [J. Informetrics 5 (2011) 122-145]. 469 - Giovanni Abramo, Tindaro Cicero, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
Revisiting the scaling of citations for research assessment. 470-479 - András Schubert:
Jazz discometrics - A network approach. 480-484 - Sifei Zhang, Chien-Chung Yuan, Ke-Chiun Chang, Yun Ken:
Exploring the nonlinear effects of patent H index, patent citations, and essential technological strength on corporate performance by using artificial neural network. 485-495 - John S. Liu, Louis Y. Y. Lu, Mei Hsiu-Ching Ho:
Total influence and mainstream measures for scientific researchers. 496-504 - Lutz Bornmann, Adam Ozimek:
Stata commands for importing bibliometric data and processing author address information. 505-512 - Loet Leydesdorff:
McCall's area transformation versus the integrated impact indicator (I3). 513-514 - Pedro Albarrán, Ignacio Ortuño, Javier Ruiz-Castillo:
Corrigendum to "The measurement of low- and high-impact in citation distributions: Technical results" [J. Informetrics 5 (2011) 48-63]. 515 - Fereshteh Didegah, Mike Thelwall, Ali Gazni:
An international comparison of journal publishing and citing behaviours. 516-531 - Ruimin Ma:
Author bibliographic coupling analysis: A test based on a Chinese academic database. 532-542 - Neus Herranz, Javier Ruiz-Castillo:
Sub-field normalization in the multiplicative case: Average-based citation indicators. 543-556 - Xuan Zhen Liu, Hui Fang:
Modifying h-index by allocating credit of multi-authored papers whose author names rank based on contribution. 557-565 - Marek Gagolewski, Radko Mesiar:
Aggregating different paper quality measures with a generalized h-index. 566-579 - Peter van den Besselaar:
Selection committee membership: Service or self-service. 580-585 - Ming-Yang Wang, Guang Yu, Jianzhong Xu, Hui-Xin He, Daren Yu, Shuang An:
Development a case-based classifier for predicting highly cited papers. 586-599 - Jiuchang Wei, Bing Bu, Liang Liang:
Estimating the diffusion models of crisis information in micro blog. 600-610 - Marek Kosmulski:
Nemo iudex in causa sua? 611-614 - Filippo Radicchi, Claudio Castellano:
Why Sirtes's claims (Sirtes, 2012) do not square with reality. 615-618 - Star X. Zhao, Fred Y. Ye:
Exploring the directed h-degree in directed weighted networks. 619-630 - Ping Zhou, Yongfeng Zhong:
The citation-based indicator and combined impact indicator - New options for measuring impact. 631-638 - Marek Kosmulski:
The order in the lists of authors in multi-author papers revisited. 639-644 - Giovanni Abramo, Tindaro Cicero, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo:
How important is choice of the scaling factor in standardizing citations? 645-654 - Xianwen Wang, Shenmeng Xu, Lian Peng, Zhi Wang, Chuanli Wang, Chunbo Zhang, Xianbing Wang:
Exploring scientists' working timetable: Do scientists often work overtime? 655-660 - Terttu A. K. Kortelainen, Mari Katvala:
"Everything is plentiful - Except attention". Attention data of scientific journals on social web tools. 661-668 - Fiorenzo Franceschini, Maurizio Galetto, Domenico A. Maisano, Luca Mastrogiacomo:
Further clarifications about the success-index. 669-673 - Vicente P. Guerrero-Bote, Félix de Moya-Anegón:
A further step forward in measuring journals' scientific prestige: The SJR2 indicator. 674-688 - Miguel A. García-Pérez:
An extension of the h index that covers the tail and the top of the citation curve and allows ranking researchers with similar h. 689-699 - Ludo Waltman:
An empirical analysis of the use of alphabetical authorship in scientific publishing. 700-711 - Maja Pohar Perme, Janez Stare, Rok Zaucer, Matjaz Zaucer:
Comparison of the citation distribution and h-index between groups of different sizes. 712-720 - Alberto Baccini, Lucio Barabesi, Marzia Marcheselli, Luca Pratelli:
Statistical inference on the h-index with an application to top-scientist performance. 721-728
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