1751-1577

Journal of Informetrics (JOI) - Volume 11, Issue 1 论文列表

本期论文列表
Inside Front Cover: Editorial Board

A simple index of innovation with complexity

The Brazilian scientific output published in journals: A study based on a large CV database

A comparison of the Web of Science and publication-level classification systems of science

Discovering discoveries: Identifying biomedical discoveries using citation contexts

Do patent citations indicate knowledge linkage? The evidence from text similarities between patents and their citations

The sum of it all: Revealing collaboration patterns by combining authorship and acknowledgements

The specific shapes of gender imbalance in scientific authorships: A network approach

The role of guarantor in scientific collaboration: The neighbourhood matters

Full and fractional counting in bibliometric networks

Does your surname affect the citability of your publications?

Three practical field normalised alternative indicator formulae for research evaluation

Can we use Google Scholar to identify highly-cited documents?

Skewness of citation impact data and covariates of citation distributions: A large-scale empirical analysis based on Web of Science data

Introducing metaknowledge: Software for computational research in information science, network analysis, and science of science

Detecting rising stars in dynamic collaborative networks

Citation success index − An intuitive pair-wise journal comparison metric

Research production in high-impact journals of contemporary neuroscience: A gender analysis

Exploring paper characteristics that facilitate the knowledge flow from science to technology

Partial orders for zero-sum arrays with applications to network theory

The need to quantify authors’ relative intellectual contributions in a multi-author paper

Toward an excellence-based research funding system: Evidence from Poland

Bibliometric author evaluation through linear regression on the coauthor network

Standing on the shoulders of giants

An investigation on the skewness patterns and fractal nature of research productivity distributions at field and discipline level