scholarly journals Current State and Evolution of Russians Publication for Computer Science Flow

Author(s):  
Alexey Glushanovskiy ◽  
Svetlana Vlasova

This article describes some aspects of Russian computer science publications flow analyzes. This analyzes holds by bibliometric methods for Web of Science data base Russian publications flow. The analyzes done shows the increasing of Russian flow for 2010 to 2019, outstripping the world this thermostatics publications flow. For this reason, Russia rises from 34 to 15 position in this scientific area world publication rating. But that is not enough for the national project «Science» goal achievement, which is fifth position in this classification, The list of document types was determined for further analyzes. This list concludes two main types: journals articles and conferences proceeding papers and, additionally, a little quantity of some other types documents. Further analyzes holds for two main types separately. All journals have been additionally dissipated to WoS journals quartiles. The Citation of published Documents was same way separately calculated for every from two main document types. Calculations shows, that the journals articles citing is in times more that Conference proceedings papers citing. This fact demonstrates clearly the very less interest for the scientific society to proceeding conference papers then to journal articles. “Quality Coefficient”, according the Russian Science Ministry Methodic, have been calculated for two main document type sets. Such calculation shows that this coefficient is much more for journals articles set, than for conference proceedings set despite of much less quantity of documents in the journals article set. It underlines the special attention which must be paid in future to this problem.

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/


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Colavizza ◽  
Matteo Romanello

Even large citation indexes such as the Web of Science, Scopus or Google Scholar cover only a small fraction of the literature in the humanities. This coverage sensibly decreases going backwards in time. Citation mining of humanities publications — defined as an instance of bibliometric data mining and as a means to the end of building comprehensive citation indexes — remains an open problem. In this contribution we discuss the results of two recent projects in this area: Cited Loci and Linked Books. The former focused on the domain of classics, using journal articles in JSTOR as a corpus; the latter considered the historiography on Venice and a novel corpus of journals and monographs. Both projects attempted to mine citations of all kinds — abbreviated and not, to all types of sources, including primary sources — and considered a wide time span (19th to 21st century). We first discuss the current state of research in citation mining of humanities publications. We then present the various steps involved into this process, from corpus selection to data publication, discussing the peculiarities of the humanities. The approaches taken by the two projects are compared, allowing us to highlight disciplinary differences and commonalities, as well as shared challenges between historiography and classics on this respect. The resulting picture portrays humanities citation mining as a field with a great, yet mostly untapped potential, and a few still open challenges. The potential lies in using citations as a means to interconnect digitized collections at a large scale, by making explicit the linking function of bibliographic citations. As for the open challenges, a key issue is the existing need for an integrated metadata infrastructure and an appropriate legal framework to facilitate citation mining in the humanities.


Author(s):  
V. V. Lapochkina ◽  
V. N. Dolgova ◽  
K. S. Dikusar ◽  
V. V. Bogatov

The authors develop and substantiate the methods of assessing Russian science journals citation in six domains as specified by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and, based on Web of Science Core Collection data, make recommendations for promoting Russian journals to the international databases. The authors analyze the methods of citing science journals indexed by the international systems and conclude that there was a need for additional indicators of citation assessment with consideration to the national origins of publications. They suggest the methodological approach based on calculating citation coefficient which is a modified version of impact factor. The key distinctions of the method are the following: the number of citing documents are applied instead of the quotation number; only one document type, i.e. academic papers, is used for calculations; citation widows are varied depending on specificity of six OECD science domains. To distribute articles among the domains the authors developed the OECD – Web of Science Core Collection compliance tables.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mattias Jacobsson ◽  
Beata Jałocha

PurposeThe aim of this article is to give an overview of the development and current state of projectification research. The inquiry was driven by a threefold research question: How has projectification been understood and defined over time, what has the trajectory of the development been and what are the main trends and emerging ideas?Design/methodology/approachThe article is an integrative literature review of research done on the notion of projectification to date. An interdisciplinary, integrative literature review was conducted using Scopus and Web of Science as primary sources of data collection. The full data set consists of 123 journal articles, books, book chapters and conference contributions. With the data set complete, a thematic analysis was conducted.FindingsAmong other things, the review outlines the development and scope of projectification research from 1995 until 2021 and discusses four emerging images of projectification: projectification as a managerial approach, projectification as a societal trend, projectification as a human state and projectification as a philosophical issue. These characteristics emphasize some common features of each of the images but also imply that the way projectification is understood changes depending on the paradigmatic perspective taken by the researcher, the time and place in which the observation was made and the level of observation.Originality/valueThe authors have outlined and discussed four images of projectification – projectification as a managerial approach, projectification as a societal trend, projectification as a human state and projectification as a philosophical issue – where each image represents a special take on projectification with some prevalent characteristics. By doing this, the authors provide a systematic categorization of research to date and thus a basis upon which other researchers can build when furthering the understanding of projectification at large.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip J. Purnell

AbstractLeading citation databases have made concerted efforts to reflect academic conference contributions in the form of proceedings papers in their databases. We studied global trends and a regional case study to determine the relative representation of conference proceedings in the global scholarly literature using the Web of Science, Scopus, and Dimensions. We designed our case study of ten Southeast Asian countries to uncover conspicuous publishing patterns obscured by global average figures. As a result, we discovered that Indonesia alone has made a recent and remarkable shift towards conference proceedings publishing. This trend was not the result of expanding database coverage but may be linked to a rapid increase in conferences locally hosted in Indonesia. The conclusion suggests that conference proceedings are increasingly indexed by major databases, and that scholars might have found advantage in publishing conference papers that were quicker and easier to publish than journal articles or book chapters. Our study is relevant to policy makers in the area of research evaluation because it highlights potential changes in academic publishing behaviour by those being assessed.


Author(s):  
Richard L. Greatbatch ◽  
Hyungil Kim ◽  
Zachary R. Doerzaph ◽  
Robert Llaneras

New automated driving systems are constantly being developed and integrated into vehicles. At the current state of technology, these features still require drivers to monitor performance and resume control when required by the systems. To cue drivers to take control, a takeover request (TOR) is presented with auditory, visual, and haptic cues. To characterize current TOR practices, a literature review was conducted to review types of human-machine interfaces (HMI’s) and their associated message presentation. Twenty-six articles were identified after searching keywords across journal articles and conference proceedings. HMIs and message types were identified and classified. Results indicated that TORs are more commonly used as general alerts to gain driver attention to driving tasks, rather than to request drivers to engage in a specific action or explain context of the TOR. Literature suggests that future systems may focus more on not only alerting drivers but providing additional context to those alerts.


2013 ◽  
pp. 129-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Kurakova ◽  
L. Tsvetkova ◽  
O. Eremchenko

The paper analyses the publications of Russian authors in various fields of economics indexed in Web of Science and Russian Science Citation Index. The authors claim that the scientometric parameters are only in a limited way applicable in evaluating the performance of expert and thesis boards in economics in Russia. The authors also put forward the approaches in order to improve Russia’s positions in the international citations indexes in economics.


Author(s):  
Nikolay Mazov ◽  
◽  
Vadim Gureyev ◽  
◽  
◽  
...  

Twenty two science Russian periodicals in informatics and library studies are selected for the bibliometrical analysis of key journal indicators, including publication activity of the same journals’ editorial staff. For the first time for domestic journals, the study reveals hidden self-citation when editorial members include links to their journal from other publications. The available instruments of scientometrical databases, including Web of Science and Scopus, and the national system Russian Science Citation Index do not enable to identify this form of self-citation. The mentioned manipulations are aimed at boosting journal rating. In several cases, intensive and unjustified citation by journals’ editorial staff in other periodicals which we consider the violation of publication ethical principles, is revealed.


Mousaion ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 25-54
Author(s):  
Wanyenda Leonard Chilimo

 There is scant research-based evidence on the development and adoption of open access (OA) and institutional repositories (IRs) in Africa, and in Kenya in particular. This article reports on a study that attempted to fill that gap and provide feedback on the various OA projects and advocacy work currently underway in universities and research institutions in Kenya and in other developing countries. The article presents the findings of a descriptive study that set out to evaluate the current state of IRs in Kenya. Webometric approaches and interviews with IR managers were used to collect the data for the study. The findings showed that Kenya has made some progress in adopting OA with a total of 12 IRs currently listed in the Directory of Open Access Repositories (OpenDOAR) and five mandatory self-archiving policies listed in the Registry of Open Access Repositories Mandatory Archiving Policies (ROARMAP). Most of the IRs are owned by universities where theses and dissertations constitute the majority of the content type followed by journal articles. The results on the usage and impact of materials deposited in Kenyan IRs indicated that the most viewed publications in the repositories also received citations in Google Scholar, thereby signifying their impact and importance. The results also showed that there was a considerable interest in Swahili language publications among users of the repositories in Kenya.


NASPA Journal ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Schuh

This article examines foundational literature in student affairs with a focus on selected early books, journal articles, and conference proceedings. An analysis of the contributions of these selections to the field is provided.


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