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Wednesday, 20th December 2006

Preprint: A New Era in Citation and Bibliometric Analyses: Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar

Preprint: A New Era in Citation and Bibliometric Analyses: Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar
by Lokman I Meho and Kiduk Yang (Indiana University)
Year: 2006
Source: DLIST
Full Text: 49 pages; PDF

From the abstract:

Academic institutions, federal agencies, publishers, editors, authors, and librarians increasingly rely on citation analysis for making hiring, promotion, tenure, funding, and/or reviewer and journal evaluation and selection decisions. The Institute for Scientific Information’s (ISI) citation databases have been used for decades as a starting point and often as the only tools for locating citations and/or conducting citation analyses. ISI databases (or Web of Science), however, may no longer be adequate as the only or even the main sources of citations because new databases and tools that allow citation searching are now available. Whether these new databases and tools complement or represent alternatives to Web of Science (WoS) is important to explore. Using a group of 15 library and information science faculty members as a case study, this paper examines the effects of using Scopus and Google Scholar (GS) on the citation counts and rankings of scholars as measured by WoS. The paper discusses the strengths and weaknesses of WoS, Scopus, and GS, their overlap and uniqueness, quality and language of the citations, and the implications of the findings for citation analysis. The project involved citation searching for approximately 1,100 scholarly works published by the study group and over 200 works by a test group (an additional 10 faculty members). Overall, more than 10,000 citing and purportedly citing documents were examined. WoS data took about 100 hours of collecting and processing time, Scopus consumed 200 hours, and GS a grueling 3,000 hours.

Source: DLIST

See Also: As ResourceShelf has pointed out in the past, Google Scholar shows only up to 1000 citations for a given paper. Seeing and being able to access all citations might be useful for comprehensive research both online and offline. For example, downloading for offline analysis.


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