1751-1577

Journal of Informetrics (JOI) - Volume 13, Issue 2 论文列表

本期论文列表
Editorial Board

Can Google Scholar and Mendeley help to assess the scholarly impacts of dissertations?

Predicting citation counts based on deep neural network learning techniques

Are all citations worth the same? Valuing citations by the value of the citing items

Biblioranking fundamental physics

The value and credits of n-authors publications

The rhetorical structure of science? A multidisciplinary analysis of article headings

Authorship analysis of specialized vs diversified research output

Research software citation in the Data Citation Index: Current practices and implications for research software sharing and reuse

Long-term correlations in short, non-stationary time series: An application to international R&D collaborations

Public-private collaboration and scientific impact: An analysis based on Danish publication data for 1995–2013

A refined method for computing bibliographic coupling strengths

Ranking scientific articles based on bibliometric networks with a weighting scheme

Comparison of two article-level, field-independent citation metrics: Field-Weighted Citation Impact (FWCI) and Relative Citation Ratio (RCR)

How to consider fractional counting and field normalization in the statistical modeling of bibliometric data: A multilevel Poisson regression approach

Should citations be counted separately from each originating section?

Measuring scientific contributions with modified fractional counting

Does the public discuss other topics on climate change than researchers? A comparison of explorative networks based on author keywords and hashtags

The “invisible hand” of peer review: The implications of author-referee networks on peer review in a scholarly journal

Discoverers in scientific citation data

Testing for universality of Mendeley readership distributions

An empirical approach based on quantile regression for estimating citation ageing

The effect of open access on research quality

Rooted citation graphs density metrics for research papers influence evaluation