A Scientometric Assessment on Growth of Nanobiotechnology Research Output

2020 ◽  
pp. 17-1-17-11
Author(s):  
R. Karpagam
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (S1) ◽  
pp. 72-76
Author(s):  
Jyothi G. Nair ◽  
S. Raja ◽  
P. Devapattabiraman

This paper provides a quantitative assessment of the scientific literature for mapping the intellectual structure of Renewable Biomass research in India and its scientific development over 20 years (1999-2018). A total of 691 publications were subjected to examination. The study characterizes top (cited and downloaded) papers, citation patterns, most frequent topic clusters, and keywords, and social mentions by country, discipline, and professional status. The results highlight some areas of improvement in this field of study. This study also reveals a lot of well-established topics which are changing gradually with impact on citations and downloads. Statistical models and analysis give the result that the field is predominantly influenced by fundamental and highly recognized scientists and papers. The analysis was conducted using HistCite software.


Author(s):  
Ashok Kumar ◽  
Ritu Gupta ◽  
B.M. Gupta

The present paper attempts to study the performance of India in RFID research using a series of bibliometric indicators. As seen from SCOPUS database, India’s research output cumulated to 632 publications in 10 years during 2006-15. Indiais ranked13thtop country in the world in RFID research; it accounted for 2.58 % global publication. India showed faster growth rate of 20.69 % CAGR compared to -0.42 % by the world in RFID research during 2006-15. India’s citation impact was low, 1.32 citations per paper; its output in terms of international collaborative publications was also low, accounting for just 9.81 % during 2006-15.The top 15 most productive Indian organisations in RFID research together contributed 35.60 % publications share and 38.18 % citation share during 2006-15. The top 15 most productive journals together accounted for 47.44% share of total country output in RFID research during 2006-15. Computer science accounted for the largest publication share (57.44 %) in RFID research output, followed by engineering (49.21 %), social sciences (7.28 %), mathematics (6.01 %), materials science (5.85 %), business, management & accounting (5.54 %) and physics & astronomy (4.75 %) during 2006-15.


2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 55-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lonneke Dubbelt ◽  
Sonja Rispens ◽  
Evangelia Demerouti

Abstract. Women have a minority position within science, technology, engineering, and mathematics and, consequently, are likely to face more adversities at work. This diary study takes a look at a facilitating factor for women’s research performance within academia: daily work engagement. We examined the moderating effect of gender on the relationship between two behaviors (i.e., daily networking and time control) and daily work engagement, as well as its effect on the relationship between daily work engagement and performance measures (i.e., number of publications). Results suggest that daily networking and time control cultivate men’s work engagement, but daily work engagement is beneficial for the number of publications of women. The findings highlight the importance of work engagement in facilitating the performance of women in minority positions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
pp. 333-336
Author(s):  
P. Kanagavel P. Kanagavel ◽  
◽  
Dr. S. Gomathinayagam Dr. S. Gomathinayagam ◽  
Dr. S.Srinivasaragavan Dr. S.Srinivasaragavan ◽  
Dr. R.U. Ramasamy Dr. R.U. Ramasamy

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