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Quantitative Science Studies, Volume 1
Volume 1, Number 1, Winter 2020
Editorial
- Ludo Waltman, Vincent Larivière, Stasa Milojevic, Cassidy R. Sugimoto:
Opening science: The rebirth of a scholarly journal. 1-3
In Memoriam
- Mike Thelwall:
In memoriam Judit Bar-Ilan. 4-5
Research Articles
- Nina Schönfelder:
Article processing charges: Mirroring the citation impact or legacy of the subscription-based model? 6-27 - Kyle Siler, Koen Frenken:
The pricing of open access journals: Diverse niches and sources of value in academic publishing. 28-59 - Hugo Horta, João M. Santos:
The Multidimensional Research Agendas Inventory - Revised (MDRAI-R): Factors shaping researchers' research agendas in all fields of knowledge. 60-93 - Dominik P. Heinisch, Johannes König, Anne Otto:
A supervised machine learning approach to trace doctorate recipients' employment trajectories. 94-116 - Kaare Aagaard, Alexander Kladakis, Mathias Wullum Nielsen:
Concentration or dispersal of research funding? 117-149 - Paul Donner, Christine Rimmert, Nees Jan van Eck:
Comparing institutional-level bibliometric research performance indicator values based on different affiliation disambiguation systems. 150-170 - Lutz Bornmann:
Bibliometrics-based decision trees (BBDTs) based on bibliometrics-based heuristics (BBHs): Visualized guidelines for the use of bibliometrics in research evaluation. 171-182 - Stasa Milojevic:
Practical method to reclassify Web of Science articles into unique subject categories and broad disciplines. 183-206 - Peter Sjögårde, Per Ahlgren:
Granularity of algorithmically constructed publication-level classifications of research publications: Identification of specialties. 207-238 - Qi Wang, Jesper Wiborg Schneider:
Consistency and validity of interdisciplinarity measures. 239-263 - James R. Bradley, Sitaram Devarakonda, Avon Davey, Dmitriy Korobskiy, Siyu Liu, Djamil Lakhdar-Hamina, Tandy J. Warnow, George Chacko:
Co-citations in context: Disciplinary heterogeneity is relevant. 264-276 - Alberto Baccini, Lucio Barabesi, Mahdi Khelfaoui, Yves Gingras:
Intellectual and social similarity among scholarly journals: An exploratory comparison of the networks of editors, authors and co-citations. 277-289 - Mike Thelwall:
Large publishing consortia produce higher citation impact research but coauthor contributions are hard to evaluate. 290-302 - Maxime B. Sainte-Marie, Philippe Mongeon, Vincent Larivière:
On the topicality and research impact of special issues. 303-319 - Leo Egghe, Ronald Rousseau:
h-Type indices, partial sums and the majorization order. 320-330 - Lutz Bornmann, Christian Ganser, Alexander Tekles, Loet Leydesdorff:
Does the hα-index reinforce the Matthew effect in science? The introduction of agent-based simulations into scientometrics. 331-346 - Mike Thelwall:
Mendeley reader counts for US computer science conference papers and journal articles. 347-359
Special Issue: Editorial
- Ludo Waltman, Vincent Larivière:
Special issue on bibliographic data sources. 360-362
Special Issue: Articles
- Caroline Birkle, David A. Pendlebury, Joshua Schnell, Jonathan Adams:
Web of Science as a data source for research on scientific and scholarly activity. 363-376 - Jeroen Baas, Michiel Schotten, Andrew M. Plume, Grégoire Côté, Reza Karimi:
Scopus as a curated, high-quality bibliometric data source for academic research in quantitative science studies. 377-386 - Christian Herzog, Daniel W. Hook, Stacy R. Konkiel:
Dimensions: Bringing down barriers between scientometricians and data. 387-395 - Kuansan Wang, Zhihong Shen, Chiyuan Huang, Chieh-Han Wu, Yuxiao Dong, Anshul Kanakia:
Microsoft Academic Graph: When experts are not enough. 396-413 - Ginny Hendricks, Dominika Tkaczyk, Jennifer Lin, Patricia Feeney:
Crossref: The sustainable source of community-owned scholarly metadata. 414-427 - Silvio Peroni, David M. Shotton:
OpenCitations, an infrastructure organization for open scholarship. 428-444
Volume 1, Number 2, Spring 2020
- Chun-Kai (Karl) Huang, Cameron Neylon, Chloe Brookes-Kenworthy, Richard Hosking, Lucy Montgomery, Katie Wilson, Alkim Ozaygen:
Comparison of bibliographic data sources: Implications for the robustness of university rankings. 445-478 - Kayvan Kousha, Mike Thelwall:
Google Books, Scopus, Microsoft Academic, and Mendeley for impact assessment of doctoral dissertations: A multidisciplinary analysis of the UK. 479-504 - Gustaf Nelhans, Theo Bodin:
Methodological considerations for identifying questionable publishing in a national context: The case of Swedish Higher Education Institutions. 505-524 - Tobias Weber, Dieter Kranzlmüller, Michael Fromm, Nelson Tavares de Sousa:
Using supervised learning to classify metadata of research data by field of study. 525-550 - Paul Donner:
A validation of coauthorship credit models with empirical data from the contributions of PhD candidates. 551-564 - Valeria Aman:
Transfer of knowledge through international scientific mobility: Introduction of a network-based bibliometric approach to study different knowledge types. 565-581 - Adèle Paul-Hus, Philippe Mongeon, Maxime B. Sainte-Marie, Vincent Larivière:
Who are the acknowledgees? An analysis of gender and academic status. 582-598 - Mike Thelwall:
Gender differences in citation impact for 27 fields and six English-speaking countries 1996-2014. 599-617 - Nicholas Fraser, Fakhri Momeni, Philipp Mayr, Isabella Peters:
The relationship between bioRxiv preprints, citations and altmetrics. 618-638 - Manolis Antonoyiannakis:
Impact factor volatility due to a single paper: A comprehensive analysis. 639-663 - Erjia Yan, Zheng Chen, Kai Li:
The relationship between journal citation impact and citation sentiment: A study of 32 million citances in PubMed Central. 664-674 - Charles Crothers, Lutz Bornmann, Robin Haunschild:
Citation concept analysis (CCA) of Robert K. Merton's book Social Theory and Social Structure: How often are certain concepts from the book cited in subsequent publications? 675-690 - Ludo Waltman, Kevin W. Boyack, Giovanni Colavizza, Nees Jan van Eck:
A principled methodology for comparing relatedness measures for clustering publications. 691-713 - Per Ahlgren, Yunwei Chen, Cristian Colliander, Nees Jan van Eck:
Enhancing direct citations: A comparison of relatedness measures for community detection in a large set of PubMed publications. 714-729 - Mike Thelwall, Amalia Más-Bleda:
How common are explicit research questions in journal articles? 730-748 - Asura Enkhbayar, Stefanie Haustein, Germana Barata, Juan Pablo Alperin:
How much research shared on Facebook happens outside of public pages and groups? A comparison of public and private online activity around PLOS ONE papers. 749-770 - Rodrigo Costas, Philippe Mongeon, Márcia Ferreira, Jeroen van Honk, Thomas Franssen:
Large-scale identification and characterization of scholars on Twitter. 771-791 - Omar Kassab, Lutz Bornmann, Robin Haunschild:
Can altmetrics reflect societal impact considerations?: Exploring the potential of altmetrics in the context of a sustainability science research center. 792-809 - Eliza Harrison, Paige Martin, Didi Surian, Adam G. Dunn:
Recommending research articles to consumers of online vaccination information. 810-823 - Lokman I. Meho:
Highly prestigious international academic awards and their impact on university rankings. 824-848 - Andreas Kjær Stage, Kaare Aagaard:
National policies as drivers of organizational change in universities: A string of reinforcing reforms. 849-871 - Emanuele Rabosio, Lorenzo Righetto, Alessandro Spelta, Fabio Pammolli:
Connected from the outside: The role of U.S. regions in promoting the integration of the European research system. 894-917
Volume 1, Number 3, Summer 2020
Special Issue: Editorial
- Loet Leydesdorff, Ismael Ràfols, Stasa Milojevic:
Bridging the divide between qualitative and quantitative science studies. 918-926
Special Issue: Articles
- Geoffrey C. Bowker:
Numbers or no numbers in science studies. 927-929 - Donghyun Kang, James A. Evans:
Against method: Exploding the boundary between qualitative and quantitative studies of science. 930-944 - Harriet Zuckerman:
Is "the time ripe" for quantitative research on misconduct in science? 945-958 - Yong Zhao, Jian Du, Yishan Wu:
The impact of J. D. Bernal's thoughts in the science of science upon China: Implications for today's quantitative studies of science. 959-968 - Diana Hicks, Kimberley R. Isett:
Powerful numbers: Exemplary quantitative studies of science that had policy impact. 969-982 - Thomas Heinze, Arlette Jappe:
Quantitative science studies should be framed with middle-range theories and concepts from the social sciences. 983-992 - Christine L. Borgman:
Whose text, whose mining, and to whose benefit? 993-1000 - Mary Frank Fox:
Gender, science, and academic rank: Key issues and approaches. 1001-1006 - Koen Frenken:
Geography of scientific knowledge: A proximity approach. 1007-1016 - Alberto Cambrosio, Jean-Philippe Cointet, Alexandre Hannud Abdo:
Beyond networks: Aligning qualitative and computational science studies. 1017-1024 - Henry Small:
Past as prologue: Approaches to the study of confirmation in science. 1025-1040 - Noortje Marres, Sarah de Rijcke:
From indicators to indicating interdisciplinarity: A participatory mapping methodology for research communities in-the-making. 1041-1055
Research Articles
- Serge P. J. M. Horbach:
Pandemic publishing: Medical journals strongly speed up their publication process for COVID-19. 1056-1067 - Kayvan Kousha, Mike Thelwall:
COVID-19 publications: Database coverage, citations, readers, tweets, news, Facebook walls, Reddit posts. 1068-1091 - Caroline S. Armitage, Marta Lorenz, Susanne Mikki:
Mapping scholarly publications related to the Sustainable Development Goals: Do independent bibliometric approaches get the same results? 1092-1108 - Friso Selten, Cameron Neylon, Chun-Kai Huang, Paul Groth:
A longitudinal analysis of university rankings. 1109-1135 - Iris Wanzenböck, Rafael Lata, Doga Ince:
Proposal success in Horizon 2020: A study of the influence of consortium characteristics. 1136-1158 - Emil Bargmann Madsen, Kaare Aagaard:
Concentration of Danish research funding on individual researchers and research topics: Patterns and potential drivers. 1159-1181 - Jonathan Adams, Gordon Rogers, Warren Smart, Martin Szomszor:
Longitudinal variation in national research publication portfolios: Steps required to index balance and evenness. 1182-1202 - Mignon Wuestman, Jarno Hoekman, Koen Frenken:
A typology of scientific breakthroughs. 1203-1222 - Sitaram Devarakonda, James R. Bradley, Dmitriy Korobskiy, Tandy J. Warnow, George Chacko:
Frequently cocited publications: Features and kinetics. 1223-1241 - Lutz Bornmann, Sitaram Devarakonda, Alexander Tekles, George Chacko:
Are disruption index indicators convergently valid? The comparison of several indicator variants with assessments by peers. 1242-1259 - Mike Thelwall, Amalia Más-Bleda:
A gender equality paradox in academic publishing: Countries with a higher proportion of female first-authored journal articles have larger first-author gender disparities between fields. 1260-1282 - Mike Thelwall, Pardeep Sud:
Greater female first author citation advantages do not associate with reduced or reducing gender disparities in academia. 1283-1297 - Filipi Nascimento Silva, Aditya Tandon, Diego Raphael Amancio, Alessandro Flammini, Filippo Menczer, Stasa Milojevic, Santo Fortunato:
Recency predicts bursts in the evolution of author citations. 1298-1308 - Mark C. Wilson, Zhou Tang:
Noncumulative measures of researcher citation impact. 1309-1320 - Giovanni Abramo, Ciriaco Andrea D'Angelo, Giovanni Felici:
Informed peer review for publication assessments: Are improved impact measures worth the hassle? 1321-1333 - Mike Thelwall, Ruth Fairclough:
All downhill from the PhD? The typical impact trajectory of U.S. academic careers. 1334-1348
Volume 1, Number 4, Fall 2020
Research Articles
- Giovanni Colavizza:
COVID-19 research in Wikipedia. 1349-1380 - Mike Thelwall:
Coronavirus research before 2020 is more relevant than ever, especially when interpreted for COVID-19. 1381-1395 - Janne Pölönen, Mikael Laakso, Raf Guns, Emanuel Kulczycki, Gunnar Sivertsen:
Open access at the national level: A comprehensive analysis of publications by Finnish researchers. 1396-1428 - Anthony J. Olejniczak, Molly J. Wilson:
Who's writing open access (OA) articles? Characteristics of OA authors at Ph.D.-granting institutions in the United States. 1429-1450 - Erjia Yan, Yongjun Zhu, Jiangen He:
Analyzing academic mobility of U.S. professors based on ORCID data and the Carnegie Classification. 1451-1467 - Helena Mihaljevic, Lucía Santamaría:
Authorship in top-ranked mathematical and physical journals: Role of gender on self-perceptions and bibliographic evidence. 1468-1492 - Christian Zingg, Vahan Nanumyan, Frank Schweitzer:
Citations driven by social connections? A multi-layer representation of coauthorship networks. 1493-1509 - Alexander Tekles, Lutz Bornmann:
Author name disambiguation of bibliometric data: A comparison of several unsupervised approaches. 1510-1528 - René van Bevern, Christian Komusiewicz, Hendrik Molter, Rolf Niedermeier, Manuel Sorge, Toby Walsh:
h-Index manipulation by undoing merges. 1529-1552 - Lutz Bornmann:
How can citation impact in bibliometrics be normalized? A new approach combining citing-side normalization and citation percentiles. 1553-1569 - Kevin W. Boyack, Richard Klavans:
A comparison of large-scale science models based on textual, direct citation and hybrid relatedness. 1570-1585 - Gérard Chevalier, Christine Chomienne, Nicolas Guetta Jeanrenaud, Julia Lane, Matthew B. Ross:
A new approach for estimating research impact: An application to French cancer research. 1586-1600 - Mikaël Héroux-Vaillancourt, Catherine Beaudry, Constant Rietsch:
Using web content analysis to create innovation indicators - What do we really measure? 1601-1637 - Mike Thelwall:
Pot, kettle: Nonliteral titles aren't (natural) science. 1638-1652
Erratum
- Erratum. 1653
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