density equalizing mapping
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PLoS ONE ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. e0261503
Author(s):  
Dörthe Brüggmann ◽  
Kathrin Quinkert-Schmolke ◽  
Jenny M. Jaque ◽  
David Quarcoo ◽  
Michael K. Bohlmann ◽  
...  

Cervical cancer has caused substantial morbidity and mortality for millions of women over the past decades. While enormous progress has been made in diagnosis, prevention and therapy, the disease is still fatal for many women—especially in low-income countries. Since no detailed studies are available on the worldwide research landscape, we here investigated the global scientific output related to this cancer type by an established protocol. The “New Quality and Quantity Indices in Science” platform assessed all relevant cervical cancer research published in the Web of Science since 1900. A detailed analysis was conducted including country-specific research productivity, indicators for scientific quality, and relation of research activity to socioeconomic and epidemiologic figures. Visualization of data was generated by the use of density equalizing map projections. Our approach identified 22,185 articles specifically related to cervical cancer. From a global viewpoint, the United States of America was the dominating country in absolute numbers, being followed by China and Japan. By contrast, the European countries Sweden, Austria, and Norway were positioned first when the research activity was related to the population number. When the scientific productivity was related to annual cervical cancer cases, Scandinavian countries (Finland #1, Sweden #4, Norway #5, Denmark #7), the Alpine countries Austria (#2) and Switzerland (#6), and the Netherlands (#3) were leading the field. Density equalizing mapping visualized that large parts of Africa and South America were almost invisible regarding the global participation in cervical cancer research. Our data documented that worldwide cervical cancer research activity is continuously increasing but is imbalanced from a global viewpoint. Also, the study indicated that global and public health aspects should be strengthened in cervical carcinoma research in order to empower more countries to take part in international research activities.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Doris Klingelhöfer ◽  
Markus Braun ◽  
Dörthe Brüggmann ◽  
David A Groneberg

BACKGROUND SARS-CoV-2 is one of the most threatening pandemics in human history. As of the date of this analysis, it had claimed about 2 million lives worldwide, and the number is rising sharply. Governments, societies, and scientists are equally challenged under this burden. OBJECTIVE This study aimed to map global coronavirus research in 2020 according to various influencing factors to highlight incentives or necessities for further research. METHODS The application of established and advanced bibliometric methods combined with the visualization technique of density-equalizing mapping provided a global picture of incentives and efforts on coronavirus research in 2020. Countries’ funding patterns and their epidemiological and socioeconomic characteristics as well as their publication performance data were included. RESULTS Research output exploded in 2020 with momentum, including citation and networking parameters. China and the United States were the countries with the highest publication performance. Globally, however, publication output correlated significantly with COVID-19 cases. Research funding has also increased immensely. CONCLUSIONS Nonetheless, the abrupt decline in publication efforts following previous coronavirus epidemics should demonstrate to global researchers that they should not lose interest even after containment, as the next epidemiological challenge is certain to come. Validated reporting worldwide and the inclusion of low-income countries are additionally important for a successful future research strategy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-161
Author(s):  
Dörthe Brüggmann ◽  
Matthias Grimstein ◽  
Christine Solbach ◽  
Doris Klingelhöfer ◽  
Michael H. K. Bendels ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dörthe Brüggmann ◽  
Katja Ouassou ◽  
Doris Klingelhöfer ◽  
Michael K. Bohlmann ◽  
Jenny Jaque ◽  
...  

Abstract Background From a global viewpoint, endometrial cancer belongs to the most common female cancers. Despite the heavy burden of diseases and numerous unanswered questions, no detailed pictures of the global structure of endometrial cancer research are available so far. Therefore, this malignancy was reviewed using the New Quality and Quantity Indices in Science (NewQIS) protocol. Methods Using NewQIS, we identified endometrial carcinoma related research published in the Web of Science from 1900–2015 (P1) and from 2016–2020 (P2). Item analysis was performed with regard to research activity. Also, semi-qualitative aspects and socio-economic benchmarks were visualized using density equalizing mapping. Results In total, 9,141 from 1900–2015 and 4,593 from 2016–2020 endometrial cancer related studies were identified with the USA having the largest numbers of publications, citations, institutions, as well as the highest country-specific h-Index concerning endometrial cancer research in both periods. In contrast to other fields of cancer research, the two East Asian countries Japan and China followed concerning total research activities until 2015. From 2016 until 2020, China was found in short distance to the USA and was ranked second. In the socio-economic analysis, European countries were in prominent positions. Greece published 579.83 endometrial carcinoma-related articles per billion US-$ GDP, Finland (527.29), Sweden (494.65), Israel (493.75), and Norway (367.85) followed in the ranking. Density equalizing mapping visualized that large parts of Africa, Asia and South America with a high burden of disease played almost no visible role in the endometrial cancer research activities. Conclusions Endometrial cancer research activity is continuously increasing from a global viewpoint. However, the majority of original articles is published by authors based in high-income countries. Together with the finding that the research field of public health does only play a minimal role, our study points to the necessity that global health aspects should be introduced to endometrial cancer research.


2020 ◽  
Vol 93 (8) ◽  
pp. 995-1006
Author(s):  
David A. Groneberg ◽  
Hannah Braumann ◽  
Stefan Rolle ◽  
David Quarcoo ◽  
Doris Klingelhöfer ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Needlestick injuries have caused a deleterious effect on the physical and mental health of millions of health-care workers over the past decades, being responsible for occupational infections with viruses such as HIV or hepatis C. Despite this heavy burden of disease, no concise studies have been published on the global research landscape so far. Methods We used the New Quality and Quantity Indices in Science platform to analyze global NSI research (n = 2987 articles) over the past 115 years using the Web of Science and parameters such as global versus country-specific research activities, semi-qualitative issues, and socioeconomic figures. Results Density-equalizing mapping showed that although a total of n = 106 countries participated in NSI research, large parts of Africa and South America were almost invisible regarding global participation in NSI research. Average citation rate (cr) analysis indicated a high rate for Switzerland (cr = 25.1), Italy (cr = 23.5), and Japan (cr = 19.2). Socioeconomic analysis revealed that the UK had the highest quotient QGDP of 0.13 NSI-specific publications per bill. US-$ gross domestic product (GDP), followed by South Africa (QGDP = 0.12). Temporal analysis of HIV versus hepatitis research indicated that NSI-HIV research culminated in the early 1990s, whereas NSI-hepatitis research increased over the observed period from the 1980s until the last decade. Conclusion Albeit NSI research activity is generally increasing, the growth is asymmetrical from a global viewpoint. International strategies should be followed that put a focus on NSI in non-industrialized areas of the world.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. e0226305
Author(s):  
David A. Groneberg ◽  
Stefan Rolle ◽  
Michael H. K. Bendels ◽  
Doris Klingelhöfer ◽  
Norman Schöffel ◽  
...  

Oncotarget ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (31) ◽  
pp. 21965-21977 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dörthe Brüggmann ◽  
Luise Kayser ◽  
Jenny Jaque ◽  
Matthias Bundschuh ◽  
Doris Klingelhöfer ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dörthe Brüggmann ◽  
Annahita Allafi ◽  
Jenny Jaque ◽  
Doris Klingelhöfer ◽  
Michael H. Bendels ◽  
...  

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