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2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 210-217
Author(s):  
Tupan Tupan ◽  
◽  
Retno Asihanti Setiorini

Libraries must play a role in knowledge management created by all academicians so that it can be used by anyone. This study analyzes publications about the role of libraries in supporting knowledge management. The data were obtained from the Scopus database. The retrieval technique is by entering the keywords "Knowledge Management" and "Library" with a publication year limitation between 1992-2020. The data obtained were then grouped based on the year of publication, publication source and type of literature. For keyword mapping, this study used VosViewer. The results of the analysis showed that research publications on the role of libraries in supporting knowledge management were mostly carried out in 2013 and 2016. Library Management is the journal that publishes the most literature related to this research object, there were 11 documents with a total of 185 citations, was in the form of articles. From the VosViewer mapping, it showed that there were four clusters. Research topics that were mostly carried out were knowledge management systems, knowledge management, libraries and information science, academic libraries, knowledge sharing, knowledge management models, librarians, research development management, information science, innovation, library services, and university libraries.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (19) ◽  
pp. 8217
Author(s):  
Miguel Ángel Reyes-Belmonte

In this paper, a bibliometric analysis was performed in order to analyze the state of the art and publication trends on the topic of ISCC (Integrated Solar Combined Cycles) for the period covering 1990 to July 2020. The Web of Science (WOS) database was consulted, and 1277 publications from 3157 different authors and 1102 different institutions, distributed among 78 countries, were retrieved as the corpus of the study. The VOSViewer software tool was used for the post-processing of the WOS corpus, and for the network data mapping. Multiple bibliometric indicators, such as the number of citations, keyword occurrences, the authors’ affiliations, and the authors, among others, were analysed in this paper in order to find the main research trends on the ISCC topic. The analysis performed in this paper concluded that the main publication source for ISCC research was Energy Conversion and Management, in terms of the total number of publications (158), but Solar Energy had the highest number of citations on the ISCC topic (4438). It was also found that China was the most productive country in terms of ISCC publications (241), and the Chinese Academy of Sciences was the most productive institution (52). Nevertheless, the author with the most publications on ISCC was I. Dincer, from Ontario Tech University (24). Based on publication keywords, a series of recommendations for future developments in the ISCC topic were derived, as well as the ways in which those ideas are connected to the global state of solar energy research.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-111
Author(s):  
Dian Perwitasari ◽  
Raras Kirana Wandira ◽  
An Nurrahmawati

This study assessed the development of research publications on earnings management. The main aim of this study is to orient researches in creating a theoretical framework and to guide researchers who are new in earnings management research so that they know which journals and authors can be used as references when studying this phenomenon. This study uses several bibliometric indicators. All research publications related to the earnings management in the Scopus database are analysed. The authorship, number of citations, year of publication, source of articles and the publisher, institutions and countries, document types and categories, language, and author keywords are identified. The results of these analyses showed that research on earnings management is still considered an interesting and relevant issue to be studied.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amit Kumar Patil ◽  
Gunjan Soni

: This paper represents a bibliometric analysis of additive manufacturing throughout the history. In this paper, major statistical insights regarding the publications associated with additive manufacturing are presented. These insights are categorized on the basis of authors, publication source titles, country, document types, research areas, etc. Moreover, some future aspects regarding additive manufacturing are also discussed in conclusion.


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.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-87
Author(s):  
Cerys Willoughby ◽  
Jeremy G. Frey

Workflows processing data from research activities and driving in silico experiments are becoming an increasingly important method for conducting scientific research. Workflows have the advantage that not only can they be automated and used to process data repeatedly, but they can also be reused – in part or whole – enabling them to be evolved for use in new experiments. A number of studies have investigated strategies for storing and sharing workflows for the benefit of reuse. These have revealed that simply storing workflows in repositories without additional context does not enable workflows to be successfully reused. These studies have investigated what additional resources are needed to facilitate users of workflows and in particular to add provenance traces and to make workflows and their resources machine-readable. These additions also include adding metadata for curation, annotations for comprehension, and including data sets to provide additional context to the workflow. Ultimately though, these mechanisms still rely on researchers having access to the software to view and run the workflows. We argue that there are situations where researchers may want to understand a workflow that goes beyond what provenance traces provide and without having to run the workflow directly; there are many situations in which it can be difficult or impossible to run the original workflow. To that end, we have investigated the creation of an interactive workflow visualization that captures the flow chart element of the workflow with additional context including annotations, descriptions, parameters, metadata and input, intermediate, and results data that can be added to the record of a workflow experiment to enhance both curation and add value to enable reuse. We have created interactive workflow visualisations for the popular workflow creation tool KNIME, which does not provide users with an in-built function to extract provenance information that can otherwise only be viewed through the tool itself. Making use of the strengths of KNIME for adding documentation and user-defined metadata we can extract and create a visualisation and curation package that encourages and enhances curation@source, facilitating effective communication, collaboration, and reuse of workflows.


2016 ◽  
Vol 117 (6) ◽  
pp. 861-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vikram M. Narayan ◽  
Kristin Chrouser ◽  
Robert B. Haynes ◽  
Rick Parrish ◽  
Philipp Dahm

2004 ◽  
Vol 60 (a1) ◽  
pp. s112-s112
Author(s):  
S. Coles ◽  
J. Frey ◽  
M. Hursthouse ◽  
L. Carr ◽  
C. Gutteridge

1986 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 235-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen-Lin C. Kulik ◽  
James A. Kulik ◽  
Barbara J. Shwalb

A meta-analysis of findings from twenty-four controlled evaluations showed that computer-based education (CBE) usually has positive effects on adult learners. CBE raised the examination scores of such students by 0.42 standard deviations in the average study—a moderate-size but statistically significant effect. Two study features appeared to be related to the size of achievement effect reported in the studies: type of use of CBE and publication source for the studies. CBE also reduced substantially the amount of time needed for instruction. Reliable conclusions could not be reached about affective or long-term cognitive effects of CBE because of the small number of studies that investigated such effects.


1968 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 66
Author(s):  
Richard E. Chapin ◽  
Dale H. Pretzer

A study at Michigan State University Library compared the costs of three different methods of conversion: keypunching, paper-tape typewriting, and optical scanning by a service bureau. The record converted included call number, copy number, first 39 letters of the author's name, first 43 letters of the title, and date of publication. Source documents were all of the shelf list cards at the Library. The end products were a master book tape of the library collections and a machine readable book card for each volume to be used in an automated circulation system.


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