default search action
Quantitative Science Studies, Volume 2
Volume 2, Number 1, Winter 2021
- Harshdeep Singh, Robert West, Giovanni Colavizza:
Wikipedia citations: A comprehensive data set of citations with identifiers extracted from English Wikipedia. 1-19 - Martijn S. Visser, Nees Jan van Eck, Ludo Waltman:
Large-scale comparison of bibliographic data sources: Scopus, Web of Science, Dimensions, Crossref, and Microsoft Academic. 20-41 - Renaud Fabre, Daniel Egret, Joachim Schöpfel, Otmane Azeroual:
Evaluating the scientific impact of research infrastructures: The role of current research information systems. 42-64 - Linda Sile, Raf Guns, Frédéric Vandermoere, Gunnar Sivertsen, Tim C. E. Engels:
Tracing the context in disciplinary classifications: A bibliometric pairwise comparison of five classifications of journals in the social sciences and humanities. 65-88 - Joshua Eykens, Raf Guns, Tim C. E. Engels:
Fine-grained classification of social science journal articles using textual data: A comparison of supervised machine learning approaches. 89-110 - Vincent Larivière, David Pontille, Cassidy R. Sugimoto:
Investigating the division of scientific labor using the Contributor Roles Taxonomy (CRediT). 111-128 - Hugo Horta, Sebastian Birolini, Mattia Cattaneo, Wenqin Shen, Stefano Paleari:
Research network propagation: The impact of PhD students' temporary international mobility. 129-154 - Yi Bu, Ludo Waltman, Yong Huang:
A multidimensional framework for characterizing the citation impact of scientific publications. 155-183 - Shreya Chandrasekharan, Mariam Zaka, Stephen A. Gallo, Wenxi Zhao, Dmitriy Korobskiy, Tandy J. Warnow, George Chacko:
Finding scientific communities in citation graphs: Articles and authors. 184-203 - Frank Havemann:
Topics as clusters of citation links to highly cited sources: The case of research on international relations. 204-223
- Ludo Waltman:
Understanding gender differences in science requires a diversity of perspectives, including controversial ones. 224
- Alessandro Strumia:
Gender issues in fundamental physics: A bibliometric analysis. 225-253
- Jens Peter Andersen, Mathias Wullum Nielsen, Jesper W. Schneider:
Selective referencing and questionable evidence in Strumia's paper on "Gender issues in fundamental physics". 254-262 - Philip Ball, T. Benjamin Britton, Erin Hengel, Philip J. Moriarty, Rachel A. Oliver, Gina Rippon, Angela Saini, Jessica Wade:
Gender issues in fundamental physics: Strumia's bibliometric analysis fails to account for key confounders and confuses correlation with causation. 263-272 - Sabine Hossenfelder:
Analyzing data is one thing, interpreting it another. 273-274 - Mike Thelwall:
Female contributions to high-energy physics in a wider context: Commentary on an article by Strumia. 275-276 - Alessandro Strumia:
Reply to commentaries about "Gender issues in fundamental physics: A bibliometric analysis". 277-287
- Li Tang, Liying Yang, Lin Zhang:
Understanding Chinese science: New scientometric perspectives. 288-291
- Xiaomin Liu:
An analysis of the development of Chinese STM journals in the past 30 years. 292-299 - Ying Huang, Ruinan Li, Lin Zhang, Gunnar Sivertsen:
A comprehensive analysis of the journal evaluation system in China. 300-326 - Fei Shu, Cassidy R. Sugimoto, Vincent Larivière:
The institutionalized stratification of the Chinese higher education system. 327-334 - Wenyu Chen, Zhangqian Zhu, Tao Jia:
The rank boost by inconsistency in university rankings: Evidence from 14 rankings of Chinese universities. 335-349 - Linlin Liu, Jianfei Yu, Junming Huang, Feng Xia, Tao Jia:
The dominance of big teams in China's scientific output. 350-362 - Yongjun Zhu, Donghun Kim, Erjia Yan, Meen Chul Kim, Guanqiu Qi:
Analyzing China's research collaboration with the United States in high-impact and high-technology research. 363-375 - Lin Zhang, Yuanyuan Shang, Ying Huang, Gunnar Sivertsen:
Toward internationalization: A bibliometric analysis of the social sciences in Mainland China from 1979 to 2018. 376-408 - Yi Zhang, Mengjia Wu, Zhengyin Hu, Robert Ward, Xue Zhang, Alan L. Porter:
Profiling and predicting the problem-solving patterns in China's research systems: A methodology of intelligent bibliometrics and empirical insights. 409-432
Volume 2, Number 2, Spring 2021
- B. Ian Hutchins:
A tipping point for open citation data. 433-437
- Lutz Bornmann, Raf Guns, Michael Thelwall, Dietmar Wolfram:
Which aspects of the Open Science agenda are most relevant to scientometric research and publishing? An opinion paper. 438-453
- Kathryn A. Kaiser, Michelle Urberg, Maria Johnsson, Jennifer Kemp, Alice Meadows, Laura Paglione:
An international, multistakeholder survey about metadata awareness, knowledge, and use in scholarly communications. 454-473 - Lars Wenaas:
Attracting new users or business as usual? A case study of converting academic subscription-based journals to open access. 474-495 - Vincent A. Traag:
Inferring the causal effect of journals on citations. 496-504 - Rudolf Farys, Tobias Wolbring:
Matthew effects in science and the serial diffusion of ideas: Testing old ideas with new methods. 505-526 - Michael Golosovsky:
Universality of citation distributions: A new understanding. 527-543 - Nabeil Maflahi, Mike Thelwall:
Domestic researchers with longer careers generate higher average citation impact but it does not increase over time. 560-587 - Alesia A. Zuccala, Janne Pölönen, Raf Guns, Vidar Røeggen, Emanuel Kulczycki, Kasper Bruun, Eeva Savolainen:
Performance-based publisher ratings and the visibility/impact of books: Small fish in a big pond, or big fish in a small pond? 588-615 - Henrique Pinheiro, Étienne Vignola-Gagné, David Campbell:
A large-scale validation of the relationship between cross-disciplinary research and its uptake in policy-related documents, using the novel Overton altmetrics database. 616-642 - Sarah Nathan, Leah Haynes, Jessica Meyer, Josh Q. Sumner, Cynthia Hudson-Vitale, Leslie D. McIntosh:
An analysis of form and function of a research article between and within publishers and journals. 643-661 - Philippe Vincent-Lamarre, Vincent Larivière:
Textual analysis of artificial intelligence manuscripts reveals features associated with peer review outcome. 662-677 - Kai Li:
The reinstrumentalization of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) in psychological publications: A citation context analysis. 678-697 - Ziqi Zhang, Winnie Tam, Andrew Cox:
Towards automated analysis of research methods in library and information science. 698-732 - John P. A. Ioannidis, Chara Koutsioumpa, Angeliki Vakka, Georgios Agoranos, Chrysanthi Mantsiou, Maria Kyriaki Drekolia, Nikos Avramidis, Despina G. Contopoulos-Ioannidis, Konstantinos Drosatos, Jeroen Baas:
Comprehensive mapping of local and diaspora scientists: A database and analysis of 63, 951 Greek scientists. 733-752 - Aliakbar Akbaritabar:
A quantitative view of the structure of institutional scientific collaborations using the example of Berlin. 753-777 - Mathieu P. A. Steijn:
Improvement on the association strength: Implementing a probabilistic measure based on combinations without repetition. 778-794
Volume 2, Number 3, Summer 2021
- R. Stuart Geiger, Dominique Cope, Jamie Ip, Marsha Lotosh, Aayush Shah, Jenny Weng, Rebekah Tang:
"Garbage in, garbage out" revisited: What do machine learning application papers report about human-labeled training data? 795-827 - Teresa Auch Schultz:
All the research that's fit to print: Open access and the news media. 828-844 - Clara Boothby, Dakota S. Murray, Anna Polovick Waggy, Andrew Tsou, Cassidy R. Sugimoto:
Credibility of scientific information on social media: Variation by platform, genre and presence of formal credibility cues. 845-863 - Kayvan Kousha, Mike Thelwall, Mahshid Abdoli:
Which types of online evidence show the nonacademic benefits of research? Websites cited in UK impact case studies. 864-881 - Josh M. Nicholson, Milo Mordaunt, Patrice Lopez, Ashish Uppala, Domenic Rosati, Neves P. Rodrigues, Peter Grabitz, Sean C. Rife:
scite: A smart citation index that displays the context of citations and classifies their intent using deep learning. 882-898 - Michael Golosovsky, Vincent Larivière:
Uncited papers are not useless. 899-911 - Marzieh Shahmandi, Paul Wilson, Mike Thelwall:
A Bayesian hurdle quantile regression model for citation analysis with mass points at lower values. 912-931 - Marianne Gauffriau:
Counting methods introduced into the bibliometric research literature 1970-2018: A review. 932-975 - Lokman I. Meho:
The gender gap in highly prestigious international research awards, 2001-2020. 976-989 - Daniel J. Hicks:
Productivity and interdisciplinary impacts of Organized Research Units. 990-1022 - Jamal El-Ouahi, Nicolás Robinson-García, Rodrigo Costas:
Analyzing scientific mobility and collaboration in the Middle East and North Africa. 1023-1047 - Marie-Pierre Bès, Jérôme Lamy, Marion Maisonobe:
Peer-making: The interconnections between PhD thesis committee membership and copublishing. 1048-1070 - Paul Donner:
Identifying constitutive articles of cumulative dissertation theses by bilingual text similarity. Evaluation of similarity methods on a new short text task. 1071-1091 - Peter Persoon, Rudi Bekkers, Floor Alkemade:
How cumulative is technological knowledge? 1092-1118
- Kyle Siler:
L'Affaire Strumia reveals troubling gatekeeping values and outcomes at Quantitative Science Studies. 1119-1122
Volume 2, Number 4, Fall 2021
- Audrey Culver Smith, Leandra Merz, Jesse B. Borden, Chris K. Gulick, Akhil R. Kshirsagar, Emilio Bruna:
Assessing the effect of article processing charges on the geographic diversity of authors using Elsevier's "Mirror Journal" system. 1123-1143 - Tzu-Kun Hsiao, Jodi Schneider:
Continued use of retracted papers: Temporal trends in citations and (lack of) awareness of retractions shown in citation contexts in biomedicine. 1144-1169 - Suchetha N. Kunnath, Drahomira Herrmannova, David Pride, Petr Knoth:
A meta-analysis of semantic classification of citations. 1170-1215 - Rhodri Ivor Leng:
Diversity in citations to a single study: A citation context network analysis of how evidence from a prospective cohort study was cited. 1216-1245 - Felix Bittmann, Alexander Tekles, Lutz Bornmann:
Applied usage and performance of statistical matching in bibliometrics: The comparison of milestone and regular papers with multiple measurements of disruptiveness as an empirical example. 1246-1270 - Junwen Luo, Thomas Feliciani, Martin Reinhart, Judith Hartstein, Vineeth Das, Olalere Alabi, Kalpana Shankar:
Analyzing sentiments in peer review reports: Evidence from two science funding agencies. 1271-1295
- Paolo Manghi, Andrea Mannocci, Francesco Osborne, Dimitris Sacharidis, Angelo A. Salatino, Thanasis Vergoulis:
New trends in scientific knowledge graphs and research impact assessment. 1296-1300
- Aline Menin, Franck Michel, Fabien Gandon, Raphaël Gazzotti, Elena Cabrio, Olivier Corby, Alain Giboin, Santiago Marro, Tobias Mayer, Serena Villata, Marco Winckler:
Covid-on-the-Web: Exploring the COVID-19 scientific literature through visualization of linked data from entity and argument mining. 1301-1323 - Michael Färber, David Lamprecht:
The data set knowledge graph: Creating a linked open data source for data sets. 1324-1355 - Simone Angioni, Angelo A. Salatino, Francesco Osborne, Diego Reforgiato Recupero, Enrico Motta:
AIDA: A knowledge graph about research dynamics in academia and industry. 1356-1398 - Peter Buneman, Dennis Dosso, Matteo Lissandrini, Gianmaria Silvello:
Data citation and the citation graph. 1399-1422 - Aidan Kelley, Daniel Garijo:
A framework for creating knowledge graphs of scientific software metadata. 1423-1446 - Thanasis Vergoulis, Ilias Kanellos, Serafeim Chatzopoulos, Danae Pla Karidi, Theodore Dalamagas:
BIP4COVID19: Releasing impact measures for articles relevant to COVID-19. 1447-1465 - Liane Rothenberger, Muhammad Qasim Pasta, Daniel M. Mayerhoffer:
Mapping and impact assessment of phenomenon-oriented research fields: The example of migration research. 1466-1485 - Robin Haunschild, Lutz Bornmann, Devendra Potnis, Iman Tahamtan:
Investigating dissemination of scientific information on Twitter: A study of topic networks in opioid publications. 1486-1510 - Tirthankar Ghosal, Piyush Tiwary, Robert M. Patton, Christopher G. Stahl:
Towards establishing a research lineage via identification of significant citations. 1511-1528 - Serafeim Chatzopoulos, Thanasis Vergoulis, Ilias Kanellos, Theodore Dalamagas, Christos Tryfonopoulos:
Further improvements on estimating the popularity of recently published papers. 1529-1550
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.