scholarly journals A Scientometric Analysis of Highly Cited Publications and a Summary of Top 25 Articles Regarding Covid-19

Author(s):  
Ali Kemal Erenler ◽  
Mehmet Oguzhan Ay ◽  
Ahmet BAYDIN
Bibliosphere ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 101-107
Author(s):  
A. I. Terekhov

The article presents a scientometric analysis of the development of the carbon nanotechnology (NT) direction for 2000-2015 with the participation of 30 most active countries. It shows shifting the world research center to the Asian region, both on volume and quality indicators. Using the concept of a national research portfolio gives deep characteristics of different countries behavior in the course of scientific rivalry. Due to the strong skewness of the citation distributions, preference is given to the percentile-based indicators, such as: the contribution of a country to the world top-10% (top-1%) of the most highly cited publications, the share of such publications in the country's total output, the highly cited papers index, etc. Relying on them, the author fully discloses the scientific «offensive» of the «newcomer» countries on the «incumbents» ones (e.g. China on the USA, South Korea on Germany, Iran on Russia), the phenomenon of Singapore as an effective producer of highly cited publications on the carbon nanostructures, and international co-authorship in the top-1% segment of the most cited articles. Russia's positions are studied in detail, the main domestic research participants are established, and based on bibliometric criteria the center of scientific excellence in the field of graphene is identified. The paper characterizes the supporting role of a number of national science foundations in the NT carbon direction development using data of WoS. The author used the Science Citation Index Expanded database for the initial bibliographic sampling; information of science foundations of Russia and the USA, as well as patent organizations of Russia (Rospatent) and the world (WIPO) for additional comparison.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-100
Author(s):  
J. Arumugam ◽  
R. Balasubramani

Material Science is a discipline which elevates the properties of matter and its applications to various areas of science and engineering. This science investigates the relationship between the structure of material and its properties. The researcher has made an attempt to highlight quantitatively and qualitatively the growth and development of scholarly publications by Indian Scientists and researchers on Materials Science during 2009-2018 as reflected in Scopus. This study describes and focuses the various factors such as chronology wise distribution; country wise distribution; ranking of highly cited authors; ranking of highly cited institutions; highly cited journals on Material Science; and predominant funding agencies. The results revealed that the highest number of (16.7%) papers published in 2018 and Journal of Materials Science Materials in Electronics is the predominantly used source for the scholarly publication in Material Science research in India. Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore has the highest number of publications in the Material Science research.


1985 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 165-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subbiah Arunachalam ◽  
Udai N. Singh

Small countries practising science rarely graduate to the level of performing quality research in sophisticated areas. Viewed on this background, an analysis of 130 papers on superconductivity published by Israeli researchers and indexed in Physics Abstracts 1971-1982 reveal that Israel does pretty well in this area. Prolific institutions and authors have been identified as well as journals most often used, highly cited papers, etc. Many of the papers appeared in high impact international journals, with Physical Review B (26), Journal of Low Temperature Physics (11) and Solid State Communications (10) leading the field. Among the five institutions active in the area, Tel Aviv University (68) accounts for more than half of Israel's publication output. Hebrew University (32) and Tech nion Institute of Technology (22) are the other major centres of research in superconductivity. Five of the 130 papers have won more than 20 citations each up to 1982, and 22 papers more than 10 citations. Israeli papers in superconductivity seem to belong to the mainstream literature in the area as seen from their decent citation record, which is better than that of Canada and almost close to that of the USA. Most of these papers are theoretical/computational and about 30% of them are experi mental.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Zacharia Mbaidjol ◽  
Jens Rothenberger ◽  
Rajesh Chetany

Background. Lower extremity reconstruction has always been a challenge. Some of the published articles had a major impact on the field but are often not considered as classics because they have fewer citations. We therefore conducted a scientometric analysis of the most cited articles with a focus solely on the lower limb. Methods. A search was conducted on Medline, the Web of Science database, Google Scholar, and Scopus identifying articles relevant to reconstructive surgery of the lower limb. All journals were included with no time frames. Articles relating solely to orthopedics or vascular reconstruction were excluded. The number of citations obtained were then plotted and compared between the different search engines. The mean citation number was calculated by taking into consideration the total number of years since the article’s first year of publication. Articles were then ranked and classified according to their authors, their years of publications, and their countries. They were furthermore categorized and analyzed. Results. Highly cited articles were easily retrieved with Google Scholar, mostly published in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (n = 37) and were mainly authored by American Medical Centers (n = 22). Fifty-four percent (54%) of these classic articles discussed the design of new flaps or were anatomical studies. Conclusions. We were not able to find a correlation between the year of citation and the number of citations. The citation pattern of a paper cannot be predicted, but a majority of highly cited article allowed the design of new reconstructive techniques.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 00070
Author(s):  
Valentina Rykova ◽  
Maria Voronkova

The article presents a scientometric analysis of documentary arrays selected of the world science citation databases Scopus and Web of Science on the topic “Plant flow cytometry”. The analysis of documentary arrays shows their positive dynamics and especially active growth currently. It names countries and organizations actively carrying on research in the area, and leading in the publication amount; rating journals with high publication activity, authors who work productively on the topic. The paper reveals thematic structure of the studied corpus of documents and highly cited publications.


Bibliosphere ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 69-76
Author(s):  
A. I. Terekhov

The article presents a scientometric analysis of the development of the carbon nanotechnology (NT) direction for 2000-2015 with the participation of 30 most active countries. It shows shifting the world research center to the Asian region, both on volume and quality indicators. Using the concept of a national research portfolio gives deep characteristics of different countries behavior in the course of scientific rivalry. Due to the strong skewness of the citation distributions, preference is given to the percentile-based indicators, such as: the contribution of a country to the world top-10% (top-1%) of the most highly cited publications, the share of such publications in the country's total output, the highly cited papers index, etc. Relying on them, the author fully discloses the scientific «offensive» of the «newcomer» countries on the «incumbents» ones (e.g. China on the USA, South Korea on Germany, Iran on Russia), the phenomenon of Singapore as an effective producer of highly cited publications on the carbon nanostructures, and international co-authorship in the top-1% segment of the most cited articles. Russia's positions are studied in detail, the main domestic research participants are established, and based on bibliometric criteria the center of scientific excellence in the field of graphene is identified. The paper characterizes the supporting role of a number of national science foundations in the NT carbon direction development using data of WoS. The author used the Science Citation Index Expanded database for the initial bibliographic sampling; information of science foundations of Russia and the USA, as well as patent organizations of Russia (Rospatent) and the world (WIPO) for additional comparison.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashok Agarwal ◽  
Manesh Kumar Panner Selvam ◽  
Saradha Baskaran ◽  
Renata Finelli ◽  
Kristian Leisegang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jedidiah Carlson ◽  
Kelley Harris

"The Apportionment of Human Diversity" (1972) is the most highly cited research article published by geneticist Richard Lewontin in his career. This study's primary result--that most genetic diversity in humans can be accounted for by within-population differences, not between-population differences--along with Lewontin's outspoken, politically-charged interpretations thereof, has become foundational to the scientific and cultural discourse pertaining to human genetic variation. The article has an unusual bibliometric trajectory in that it is much more salient in the bibliographic record today compared to the first 20 years after its publication. Here, we show how the paper's fame was shaped by four factors: 1) citations in influential publications across several disciplines; 2) Lewontin's own popular books and media appearances; 3) the renaissance of population genetics research of the early 1990s; and 4) the serendipitous collision of scientific progress, influential books/papers, and heated controversies in the year 1994. We conclude with an analysis of Twitter data to characterize the communities and conversations that continue to keep this study at the epicenter of discussions about race and genetics, prompting new challenges for scientists who have inherited Lewontin's legacy.


Bibliosphere ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 57-65
Author(s):  
A. I. Terekhov

The article presents a scientometric analysis of the development of the carbon nanotechnology (NT) direction for 2000-2015 with the participation of 30 most active countries. It shows shifting the world research center to the Asian region, both on volume and quality indicators. Using the concept of a national research portfolio gives deep characteristics of different countries behavior in the course of scientific rivalry. Due to the strong skewness of the citation distributions, preference is given to the percentile-based indicators, such as: the contribution of a country to the world top-10% (top-1%) of the most highly cited publications, the share of such publications in the country's total output, the highly cited papers index, etc. Relying on them, the author fully discloses the scientific «offensive» of the «newcomer» countries on the «incumbents» ones (e.g. China on the USA, South Korea on Germany, Iran on Russia), the phenomenon of Singapore as an effective producer of highly cited publications on the carbon nanostructures, and international co-authorship in the top-1% segment of the most cited articles. Russia's positions are studied in detail, the main domestic research participants are established, and based on bibliometric criteria the center of scientific excellence in the field of graphene is identified. The paper characterizes the supporting role of a number of national science foundations in the NT carbon direction development using data of WoS. The author used the Science Citation Index Expanded database for the initial bibliographic sampling; information of science foundations of Russia and the USA, as well as patent organizations of Russia (Rospatent) and the world (WIPO) for additional comparison.


Nature ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 578 (7794) ◽  
pp. 200-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Van Noorden
Keyword(s):  

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