scholarly journals A Content Analysis of the Research Articles Written on online-counseling

Author(s):  
Eser Ceker

The aim of this study was to examine the research studies conducted between 2000-2017 about “online counseling” with particular attention to the publication year, number of researcher in the researching teams, country of the researching university/researcher, application area researched, publication source, author, affiliation, research document type, and the research model used. According to the results; teams composing from two to three researchers are more common than studies researched by a single person.  Applications focusing on “Analyzing Online Counseling” and “Online Counseling for Health & Medicine” are most preferred researched areas. Results also indicate that, more researchers from USA and Australian Universities studied “online counseling” related problems than others. The total number of research carried out for online counseling seems to have increased from 2007 onwards. It is believed that, these results together with the recommendations and comments may be supportive and helpful especially for the future online counseling research studies in developing countries.

2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 449-456
Author(s):  
James R Rogers ◽  
Hollis Mills ◽  
Lisa V Grossman ◽  
Andrew Goldstein ◽  
Chunhua Weng

Abstract Scientific commentaries are expected to play an important role in evidence appraisal, but it is unknown whether this expectation has been fulfilled. This study aims to better understand the role of scientific commentary in evidence appraisal. We queried PubMed for all clinical research articles with accompanying comments and extracted corresponding metadata. Five percent of clinical research studies (N = 130 629) received postpublication comments (N = 171 556), resulting in 178 882 comment–article pairings, with 90% published in the same journal. We obtained 5197 full-text comments for topic modeling and exploratory sentiment analysis. Topics were generally disease specific with only a few topics relevant to the appraisal of studies, which were highly prevalent in letters. Of a random sample of 518 full-text comments, 67% had a supportive tone. Based on our results, published commentary, with the exception of letters, most often highlight or endorse previous publications rather than serve as a prominent mechanism for critical appraisal.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 98-102
Author(s):  
Senthilkumar R ◽  
Muthukrishnan M

The present study examined scientific publication research productivity in British journal of cancer for a period of selected 11 years between 2005 and 2015.Making  use of various scientometric indicators likethe annual growth rate, research document type, author productivity, Degree of collaboration, country wise Distribution, Institution wise distributionwas also used to analyze the data and interpretation. The study reveals that total 6818records were published in the 264 issues of the journal.


Author(s):  
Arthur Sale

Seven Australian universities have established institutional repositories (containing research articles, also known as eprints) that can be analyzed for content and which were in operation during 2004 and 2005. This short paper analyses their content and shows that a requirement to deposit research output into a repository coupled with effective author support policies works in Australia and delivers high levels of content. Voluntary deposit policies do not, regardless of any author support by the university. This is consistent with international data.


Author(s):  
Deborah A. Lapeyre

Document Type: The core JATS Document Type is a journal article and the ANSI/NISO JATS Tag Sets are journal article tag sets, which define XML elements and attributes to describe the content and/or the metadata of journal articles. Such articles may include: research articles; subject review articles; non-research articles; editorials; letters; product, software, and book reviews; obituaries, and the peer reviews or author responses included with an article. Although originally just for journal articles, JATS-based tag sets have been built for: books (BITS: Book Interchange Tag Suite), standards (NISO STS, ISO STS), technical reports, conference proceedings, magazines and newsletters, and even posters. Purpose: Provides common XML format to preserve the intellectual content of journal articles (independent of format of initial publication) Expected Uses: Conversion target, archival storage, and interchange Expected Users: Publishers, aggregators, vendors, web-hosts, libraries, and archives who produce, interchange, and store journal article content When: ANSI/NISO Z39.96-2019 JATS: Journal Article Tag Suite (current) Customization Mechanism: The JATS Journal Article Tag Sets are distributed in DTD form, XSD form, and RELAX NG form, but they are maintained as DTDs. The customization mechanism for DTDs is modularization and Parameter Entities, with customization-specific information overriding JATS-default information. This paper will describe, explain, and illustrate this mechanism. Specific customization samples are provided in the Appendix Sample JATS Customizations URL: https://jats.nlm.nih.gov/


Author(s):  
Qasim Ali Qureshi ◽  
Nor Azila Bt Mohd Noor ◽  
Shahizan Bin Hassan ◽  
Muhammad Imran Qureish

Role of moderator in research is significant. Many researchers consider moderator in terms of control factors or constants; however, moderator can significantly increase value of research model. In this article, a review is made of recent literature to identify potential moderators for in-app advertisements adoption models. In-app advertisements is an evolving technology which is spreading at varying speed across the globe. There is scope of research in this field. Recent research articles are reviewed to identify potential moderators. Their proposed relationships in various scenarios are presented. At the end of the review, relevant moderators for in-app advertisement adoption models are presented with examples how researchers can find relevant moderators in a scenario.


Author(s):  
Terhi Kärpänen

The purpose of this study was to review the qualitative literature on cognitive accessibility in a digital environment and areas of inquiry for future qualitative research in this context. The focus of this literature review was to identify qualitative research in the cognitive accessibility field and how commonly this term is mentioned in qualitative research articles. In this study, a literature review was conducted on selected qualitative research studies performed globally related to cognitive accessibility. This literature review analysed through meta-synthesis. Based on the results of the literature review, an understanding of existing qualitative research was obtained in the cognitive accessibility field, as well as topics for further qualitative research in the cognitive accessibility field.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (03) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marleen van der Haar ◽  
Mieke Verloo

With this article we are contributing to a conversation about Critical Frame Analysis (CFA) as a feminist research method. CFA was developed within the context of two collaborative and comparative research studies of gender equality policies in the European context, MAGEEQ (www.mageeq.net) and QUING (www.quing.eu). Since the introduction of CFA in these projects, many scholars have used the method—some affiliated with these projects as well as others. This contribution is a first reflection on CFA and a call for more extensive reflections on methodologies developed in feminist work. We use reflection on CFA's origins, mixed with illustrations taken from research articles by authors who have been affiliated with the projects and others, and self-criticism based on two of our own studies. These reflections underpin our conclusions about the ongoing potential of CFA and the necessity and urgency of more thorough attention to methodological issues related to the use of CFA.


Author(s):  
Karendra Devroop

Performing Arts Medicine has developed into a highly specialised field over the past three decades. The Performing Arts Medical Association (PAMA) has been the leading proponent of this unique and innovative field with ground-breaking research studies, symposia, conferences and journals dedicated specifically to the medical problems of performing artists. Similar to sports medicine, performing arts medicine caters specifically for the medical problems of performing artists including musicians and dancers. In South Africa there is a tremendous lack of knowledge of the field and unlike our international counterparts, we do not have specialised clinical settings that cater for the medical problems of performing artists. There is also a tremendous lack of research on performance-related medical problems of performing artists in South Africa. Accordingly the purpose of this paper is to present an overview of the field of performing arts medicine, highlight some of the significant findings from recent research studies and present a model for conducting research into the field of performing arts medicine. It is hoped that this research model will lead to increased research on the medical problems of performing artists in South Africa.


2003 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 123-131
Author(s):  
Darfiana Nur ◽  
Kerrie Mengersen

In the past decade there has been strong interest in the special needs of overseas students attending Australian universities, with respect to teaching and learning. This paper reports on three action research studies that address the question of whether such issues remain in the teaching and learning of statistics in particular.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Sandro Serpa ◽  
Carlos Miguel Ferreira ◽  
Ana Isabel Santos

Currently, the journals in the field of social sciences seem to emphasize the preference that authors submit for evaluation and publication manuscripts in the form of research articles with empirical data, following the model of exact sciences and, preferably, with the possibility of research replication. The scholarly publication based on reasoned logical argumentation seems to be increasingly relegated to the sidelines. This letter argues that questioning preconceived ideas and contributing to thinking is critical and that its publication, after the quality and relevance of personal argumentation is assessed, should take place even without respecting the replication of the research model.


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